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1
- #1
luftweg
Chemical
- Jun 6, 2006
- 8
I was reading some posts on some other forum, and I noticed the following discussion, arguing for the use of strips of steel to be afixed to the bottom flange of wooden joists, in order to increase capacity or decrease deflection.
From what I gather, this seems theoretically okay, although practically, I'm wondering about a fastener schedule and the field success for such an undertaking.
I've searched posts on THIS forum and haven't found anything that talks about this...
What do you think?
Here are the important excerpts from this discourse:
"... strapping the bottom of the joists with steel after jacking out the sag can produce a very rigid floor.
Steel strips cut from #10 steel (about 1/8 inch thick) 1.5 inches wide are fastened to the bottom of the joists using screws at about 8 inch centers.
...
The straps do not have to go under the bearing surface of the joist at each end, but can stop a few inches away. A 1/8 inch thick by 1.5 inch wide strap is the equivalent of adding a massive timber to the bottom edge of the joist..."
"...For the joist to sag from the straight position the steel strap will need to increase in length, and that is not going to happen. The steel strap performs the same function as the bottom flange of an I-beam. It is loaded strictly in tension.
Attaching the steel to the side of the joist will produce a buckling failure and result in loading of the fasteners in withdrawal (the weakest direction) as they try to prevent the steel from buckling away from the joist. The fasteners holding the strap on the bottom are loaded completely in shear, the strongest direction..."
"...I am an engineer and have designed and installed a number of steel strap systems to stiffen floors. The first time took a bunch of calculations to determine fastener schedules and such, but wood is a nice material to place nails and screws into. Unlike metal to metal joints were deformation occurs in the fasteners weakening them, deformation in pinned (the engineering term for nailed or screwed) joints, the wood deforms and increase in bearing capacity from any slight crushing that occurs since the load is spread out in the wood over a larger area...
It is that ‘slight deformation’ that allow an I-beam made from wood, metal, or a combination of the two to bear loads.
...Even a flitch design (a steel plate between 2 pieces of lumber) requires as a minimum clenched nails, and I would never allow those. I require through bolted fasteners in tightly drilled holes. A reliable flitch beam con only be made by clamping all the layers together, and then drilling the fastener holes. This eliminates any tolerance stack up in the drilled holes.
It is possible to fasten steel to one side of a lumber section and through bolt, but the number of fasteners required to prevent buckling often results in weakening of the beam. The loads under each and every fastener on the wood side must be examined for bearing pressure and held to below about 30-70 PSI (depending on the actual wood species used). These joints also have a greater problem with loosening of the fasteners from dimensional changes in the wood weakening the beam. This effect is present I a full flitch, but is not as serious since the wood itself acts to spread out the loading and prevent buckling over the entire area of the flitch, instead of being concentrated strictly at the fasteners..."
"...If the headspace is available I prefer wood, if headspace is tight #10 steel straps 1.5 inches wide by 90% of the span attached with 2 inch screws every 6-8 inches (holes for the screws in the steel must be very close to screw shank diameter and staggered slightly) prduces a very stiff floor..."
thanx,
K
From what I gather, this seems theoretically okay, although practically, I'm wondering about a fastener schedule and the field success for such an undertaking.
I've searched posts on THIS forum and haven't found anything that talks about this...
What do you think?
Here are the important excerpts from this discourse:
"... strapping the bottom of the joists with steel after jacking out the sag can produce a very rigid floor.
Steel strips cut from #10 steel (about 1/8 inch thick) 1.5 inches wide are fastened to the bottom of the joists using screws at about 8 inch centers.
...
The straps do not have to go under the bearing surface of the joist at each end, but can stop a few inches away. A 1/8 inch thick by 1.5 inch wide strap is the equivalent of adding a massive timber to the bottom edge of the joist..."
"...For the joist to sag from the straight position the steel strap will need to increase in length, and that is not going to happen. The steel strap performs the same function as the bottom flange of an I-beam. It is loaded strictly in tension.
Attaching the steel to the side of the joist will produce a buckling failure and result in loading of the fasteners in withdrawal (the weakest direction) as they try to prevent the steel from buckling away from the joist. The fasteners holding the strap on the bottom are loaded completely in shear, the strongest direction..."
"...I am an engineer and have designed and installed a number of steel strap systems to stiffen floors. The first time took a bunch of calculations to determine fastener schedules and such, but wood is a nice material to place nails and screws into. Unlike metal to metal joints were deformation occurs in the fasteners weakening them, deformation in pinned (the engineering term for nailed or screwed) joints, the wood deforms and increase in bearing capacity from any slight crushing that occurs since the load is spread out in the wood over a larger area...
It is that ‘slight deformation’ that allow an I-beam made from wood, metal, or a combination of the two to bear loads.
...Even a flitch design (a steel plate between 2 pieces of lumber) requires as a minimum clenched nails, and I would never allow those. I require through bolted fasteners in tightly drilled holes. A reliable flitch beam con only be made by clamping all the layers together, and then drilling the fastener holes. This eliminates any tolerance stack up in the drilled holes.
It is possible to fasten steel to one side of a lumber section and through bolt, but the number of fasteners required to prevent buckling often results in weakening of the beam. The loads under each and every fastener on the wood side must be examined for bearing pressure and held to below about 30-70 PSI (depending on the actual wood species used). These joints also have a greater problem with loosening of the fasteners from dimensional changes in the wood weakening the beam. This effect is present I a full flitch, but is not as serious since the wood itself acts to spread out the loading and prevent buckling over the entire area of the flitch, instead of being concentrated strictly at the fasteners..."
"...If the headspace is available I prefer wood, if headspace is tight #10 steel straps 1.5 inches wide by 90% of the span attached with 2 inch screws every 6-8 inches (holes for the screws in the steel must be very close to screw shank diameter and staggered slightly) prduces a very stiff floor..."
thanx,
K