Well
J1D,
what you state is not fully exact.
In fact when both the torsional and bending restraints are present at the supports, both load characteristics develop at supports, and BTW both will be present in intermediate sections anyway, unless the beam is torsionally very flexible (I section) or very flexible in bending (a tight spiral?).
Now, as the relative values of the two load characteristics will depend on the relative stiffnesses of beam sections in torsion and bending,
and also on the relative compliance of the support restraints, the question may be: what is the correct choice of the designer concerning the adopted support restraints ? (assuming of course there is no doubt about how to model beam properties)
The most conservative procedure is to analyze the two limiting cases (no torsion at supports, no bending at supports) and then take the maximum envelope of the two cases for both torsion and bending.
However this doesn't seem to be a big deal. I tested as an experiment the two limiting cases for a beam with 30 deg as the subtended angle and a 2:1 solid rectangular section:
- with bending restraint only, the maximum bending moment is less than 1% higher than that of a straight clamped beam (with same length), but the maximum torsional moment is 15 times lower than the one calculated with the simple procedure recalled by
waytsh in the first post
- with torsional restraint only, the maximum bending moment is 3% higher than for a straight simply supported beam and the maximum torsional moment is 3 times lower than the simplified one (but 5 times higher than in the former case)
It seems to me that a safe procedure is to always assume that there is no torsional stiffness in both the end supports and the beam sections (provided of course the supports can resist in bending), unless there are service limits (e.g. concrete cracks) to be satisfied.
prex
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