abusementpark
Structural
- Dec 23, 2007
- 1,086
For a wood diaphragm, at what aspect ratio would you argue that the chord member requirement becomes negligible? It seems to me at some point the behavior will become largely shear dominated and that you shouldn't have to worry about designing and detailing a reliable chord member. I was thinking that maybe this is true for aspect ratios of 1:1 or better.
Does anyone know of any publication or articles which address this issue? I'm curious what others opinions are.
I've seen a lot of wood diaphragms built with no reliable chord member that still remain standing. The sheathing alone must have some ability to resolve a certain amount of tension force. It is common for the diaphragm nailing pattern required at the location of the highest shear to be used for the entire roof deck. So, maybe that is a factor since there are extra nails that can be used for tension transfer at the center of the diaphragm span, where the diaphragm shear force is very low.
Does anyone know of any publication or articles which address this issue? I'm curious what others opinions are.
I've seen a lot of wood diaphragms built with no reliable chord member that still remain standing. The sheathing alone must have some ability to resolve a certain amount of tension force. It is common for the diaphragm nailing pattern required at the location of the highest shear to be used for the entire roof deck. So, maybe that is a factor since there are extra nails that can be used for tension transfer at the center of the diaphragm span, where the diaphragm shear force is very low.