rharting
Structural
- Dec 17, 2007
- 41
I'm working on the foundation design for various industrial storage tanks with some significant uplift/moments (some are 60' tall and about 12' in diameter) and a tall exhaust stack which is about 6' in diameter and over 100' tall. As you can imagine, uplift is a significant concern. The equipment manufacturer wants to use a pipe as a sleeve (full depth) to create a space to install an epoxy grout. In normal drilled epoxy grouted systems, the load path would go from the anchor rod to the grout and then from the grout to the concrete surface. In this instance, the load path would go from the anchor rod to the grout, from the grout to the pipe sleeve, and then from the pipe sleeve to the concrete. They want to do this for ease of installation (adjustability) however I have some concerns about whether this would meet ACI appendix D. I'm going to call Hilti, but I was wondering if anyone had any experience with this.
I looked into using the Deco adjustable anchor rods and while I think it's a neat solution, I have large concerns over where they got their numbers from. They have a chart which lists the "safe Load" (what engineer who knows anything about appendix D would list a safe load) and when I called and requested where they got the values, the very nice woman responded 'I'm not an engineer and we don't have an engineer on staff. However, those numbers did come from an engineer and that's about all I can tell you'. That's not good enough for me to specify your product when the loads are so large.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
I looked into using the Deco adjustable anchor rods and while I think it's a neat solution, I have large concerns over where they got their numbers from. They have a chart which lists the "safe Load" (what engineer who knows anything about appendix D would list a safe load) and when I called and requested where they got the values, the very nice woman responded 'I'm not an engineer and we don't have an engineer on staff. However, those numbers did come from an engineer and that's about all I can tell you'. That's not good enough for me to specify your product when the loads are so large.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.