AggieYank
Structural
- Mar 9, 2005
- 215
Thanks a lot ahead of time for your responses.
My question is this: Do continuous beams have to be the same widths, and if they don’t, is there a limit on the difference in widths. It seems obvious to me that there is a limit on this type of situation, but I am not familiar with any codes referencing it.
Example: I’m designing a concrete building. I have a joist that needs to be widened to around 20 inches. I’m using 8 inch wide joists at 6’2” o.c., 20” pans, with a 4.75” slab. So basically I have a run of 4 joists, the 1st is 8”, the 2nd is 20”, the 3rd is 8”, and the 4th is 8”. My spans are around 35’ for each. I would design the 20” joist as a simple span, but its carrying CMU, and so deflection just doesn’t work unless it’s a continuous span.
Possible solutions:
1) Make the joists continuous, with steel detailed as such.
2) Make the 20” joist single span and make it deeper as necessary.
3) Something else creative, such as widening the joists on each side, or one side of the 20” joist…..
Thanks guys/girls.
My question is this: Do continuous beams have to be the same widths, and if they don’t, is there a limit on the difference in widths. It seems obvious to me that there is a limit on this type of situation, but I am not familiar with any codes referencing it.
Example: I’m designing a concrete building. I have a joist that needs to be widened to around 20 inches. I’m using 8 inch wide joists at 6’2” o.c., 20” pans, with a 4.75” slab. So basically I have a run of 4 joists, the 1st is 8”, the 2nd is 20”, the 3rd is 8”, and the 4th is 8”. My spans are around 35’ for each. I would design the 20” joist as a simple span, but its carrying CMU, and so deflection just doesn’t work unless it’s a continuous span.
Possible solutions:
1) Make the joists continuous, with steel detailed as such.
2) Make the 20” joist single span and make it deeper as necessary.
3) Something else creative, such as widening the joists on each side, or one side of the 20” joist…..
Thanks guys/girls.