Smjohns78:
I don’t have the benefit of AISC DG2 sitting on my desk, but I’ll take a stab at this. The potential problems with a hole in the web of a beam have to do with the types of, magnitudes of and the orientations of the loads and internal stresses in the vicinity of the web hole. With the double symmetrical WF shape, the eccentricity to the hole, or the location of the hole w.r.t. the max. normal stresses due to bending is conveniently related to the N.A. which is also the centroid of that section, and they have a well defined relationship to the extreme fiber stress location. In your case the centroid and N.A. may not be (probably aren’t) the same, and this is certainly true with a composite section, in its service state. So, the N.A. is not a very good ref. datum, and d/2 seems meaningless to me at the moment also. I would try to understand the derivation of, AISC’s cookbook recipe (formulas), and then convert this to relate the hole location and size to the location of the max. tensile normal stress; and that should be the bot. of the bot. flg.
Some other considerations: with a nominal sized hole you don’t change the section props. much and you might ignore this change; obviously the closer the hole is to the bot. flg. the higher the normal tensile stresses around it will be, alternatively, if the hole is at the N.A. the primary loss is some shear area capacity, almost no bending stress issue; at a given location the shear forces are constant whatever the hole size or height location; the larger the hole is the greater the normal stress concentration factors are around the hole and now add the highest normal stresses (close to bot. flg.) and you might have trouble. What does AISC say about allowable stress magnitudes around the hole? What do they say about this w.r.t. various hole sizes? They are probably actually using “e” to relate normal stress magnitude around the hole to allowable tensile stress (old guy talk) at the extreme fiber. And, this then ties back to stress concentration factors vs. hole size and a potential fracture stress level which acts at the hole center line in the height direction, and this is a combined stress problem. A rough cut hole adds another set of stress raisers to the problem.