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JP20 said:It doesn’t seem as if one person on this thread can answer the needed questions tbh.
KootK said:Yeah, we're killing you here. Sometimes we get so bunged up in fancy theoretical fun that we forget that we're dealing with a real engineer trying to solve a real problem in an expedient way.
KootK said:Expend your serious mental horsepower on some problems more worthy of it
KootK (from the PDF markup) said:If you want to save a little money on this, I guarantee that one channel will suffice
JP20 said:If I took this approach would this eliminate my unbraced length dilemma?
I suppose you could say the same for a rectangular hollow section. How does it decide whether to use its left web or its right web?Agent666 said:Load in channel can resolve through the channel web and doesn't necessarily need to go through the plate.
Flitch beams are usually made from stocky elements in the direction that matters. This channel-plate section has the slender channel flanges. I think it will make a noticeable difference (shear lag and section distortion).Agent666 said:It's fundamentally no different than making a flitch plate out of timber/steel/timber plies.
JP20 said:Can someone break down how you convert a moment to longitudinal shear?
CANPRO said:This right here makes me want to give up - I think it is has been made clear in this thread that you don't need the moment to calculate longitudinal shear.
steveh49 said:Different people think and understand differently
JP20 said:With that being said, what do you suggest to make the beam fully-braced?
Craig_H said:I think we've gotten quite caught up in semantics around shear flow here
JP20 said:My username says (Structural) but really I’m construction (took my PE exam in construction). And work for construction company. Maybe if I would have took the Structural exam I would know but I didn’t.