anominal
Structural
- Jul 10, 2009
- 40
The topic structure is a RR bridge that has been in service for 100+ years. The bridge is best described as a continuous ballasted concrete deck slab (please see attached). Until recently the controlling normal rating for the bridge had been acceptable to the owner. In 2010 a new firm performed a finer analysis of the bridge, cutting sections and calculating stresses at locations not considered before.
The controlling normal rating suffered. The owner was not pleased. Their "O.K. for normal use" bridge turned into a "Maybe you shouldn't run those ballast cars..." bridge.
This most recent load rating and analysis uses a number of simplifying assumptions that are in agreement with AREMA. It models LL effects using a suitable computer program. It calculates stresses at appropriate locations. In all respects, the new load rating and analysis seems theoretically correct.
However, it does not match reality.
Engineers who have worked with a contractor have probably heard this before: "It ain't goin' nowhere". This bridge ain't goin'. Aside from deficiencies addressed in a rehabilitation during the 90s, the bridge has purportedly had few maintenance concerns.
My task is to reconcile the new unsatisfactory load rating (from a respectable firm that performed a reasonable analysis) with the observed satisfactory condition of a bridge that has been in service for decades. Where to begin...
The controlling normal rating suffered. The owner was not pleased. Their "O.K. for normal use" bridge turned into a "Maybe you shouldn't run those ballast cars..." bridge.
This most recent load rating and analysis uses a number of simplifying assumptions that are in agreement with AREMA. It models LL effects using a suitable computer program. It calculates stresses at appropriate locations. In all respects, the new load rating and analysis seems theoretically correct.
However, it does not match reality.
Engineers who have worked with a contractor have probably heard this before: "It ain't goin' nowhere". This bridge ain't goin'. Aside from deficiencies addressed in a rehabilitation during the 90s, the bridge has purportedly had few maintenance concerns.
My task is to reconcile the new unsatisfactory load rating (from a respectable firm that performed a reasonable analysis) with the observed satisfactory condition of a bridge that has been in service for decades. Where to begin...