cve60069
Civil/Environmental
- May 1, 2010
- 84
Dear Engineers
I have been asked by a local builder to design a post to support his house.
The builder had built a single-storey extension on the rear of the house and then taken all the walls out from inside the ground-floor except for a couple of partitions. To support the upper-floor, the builder had two 203x203uc welded together which he supported off the end-walls and a brick-pier approximately mid-span. The ends of the beam sat upon concrete-padstones built into a cavity-wall with a 140-mm inner-leaf: no piers!
Building-control has 'failed' his design and asked for a remedy, namely a moment-resisting 'goal-post' frame but the builder has asked if I could design a wind-post; I said I would give it a go and I am in the process of calculating the moments. The plan is to cut a steel-post into the existing cavity-wall and to support the beam off the post and to make the foot of the post moment resisting. The top of the post will be pinned and the load is directly over the post: no eccentricity. Hopefully, the post will sit within the wall leaving the surface flush.
My question is concerning the sway, particularly the mass being supported. I attach a sketch of the problem. How do I 'factor in' the mass, please? I apply my wind-load to the side of the house and I restrict the deflection of the top of the wind-post to 1/300 (8-mm). I am assuming the deflection is small enough so as not to allow the mass being supported from moving beyond the point of no return. Do I need to design the post for moment caused through the wind-force combined with the axial-force to support the upper-floor only or is there an 'Inertia' I should be taking into account?
Hope I made sense.
Regards
I have been asked by a local builder to design a post to support his house.
The builder had built a single-storey extension on the rear of the house and then taken all the walls out from inside the ground-floor except for a couple of partitions. To support the upper-floor, the builder had two 203x203uc welded together which he supported off the end-walls and a brick-pier approximately mid-span. The ends of the beam sat upon concrete-padstones built into a cavity-wall with a 140-mm inner-leaf: no piers!
Building-control has 'failed' his design and asked for a remedy, namely a moment-resisting 'goal-post' frame but the builder has asked if I could design a wind-post; I said I would give it a go and I am in the process of calculating the moments. The plan is to cut a steel-post into the existing cavity-wall and to support the beam off the post and to make the foot of the post moment resisting. The top of the post will be pinned and the load is directly over the post: no eccentricity. Hopefully, the post will sit within the wall leaving the surface flush.
My question is concerning the sway, particularly the mass being supported. I attach a sketch of the problem. How do I 'factor in' the mass, please? I apply my wind-load to the side of the house and I restrict the deflection of the top of the wind-post to 1/300 (8-mm). I am assuming the deflection is small enough so as not to allow the mass being supported from moving beyond the point of no return. Do I need to design the post for moment caused through the wind-force combined with the axial-force to support the upper-floor only or is there an 'Inertia' I should be taking into account?
Hope I made sense.
Regards