jochav5280
Structural
- Apr 21, 2008
- 79
Good Day!
I would greatly appreciate if you could provide me with some help in identifying the best practices for reporting steel connections loads to a connection engineer. On our most recent project, simplifying/shortcut methods such as 50% UDL was used for determining the required shear force to use at Beam-to-Beam connections, but this led to a lot of ridiculously expensive/beefy connections that were far too conservative. I'd like to eliminate this.
Is it possible to just give the connection engineer your structural model in order for them to withdrawal the forces themselves as well as calculate the transfer forces? I'm not a fan of putting loads on our drawings as it complicates them and makes reading them difficult.
I'd appreciate any ideas and references that I could follow. Thank you very much!
jochav5280
I would greatly appreciate if you could provide me with some help in identifying the best practices for reporting steel connections loads to a connection engineer. On our most recent project, simplifying/shortcut methods such as 50% UDL was used for determining the required shear force to use at Beam-to-Beam connections, but this led to a lot of ridiculously expensive/beefy connections that were far too conservative. I'd like to eliminate this.
Is it possible to just give the connection engineer your structural model in order for them to withdrawal the forces themselves as well as calculate the transfer forces? I'm not a fan of putting loads on our drawings as it complicates them and makes reading them difficult.
I'd appreciate any ideas and references that I could follow. Thank you very much!
jochav5280