DMWWEngr
Structural
- Dec 2, 2001
- 74
Background:
I'm designing a concrete member (door jamb - 8' tall) to support a flood gate. The concrete door jamb will be oreinted vertically and will be doweled into an adjacent wall. Then, so I could sleep at night, I was also going to notch the top and the bottom of the support (into the floor and ceiling) as well as put a "healthy" amount of reinforcement into the floor and ceiling.
Problem:
The problem that I'm having is that I can't get enough embedment into the adjacent wall to get adquate support for the dowels. I've been trying to epoxy the dowels in.
FYI: Shear=3800 lbs and Pull-out=4100lbs at the critical dowel - 7" spacing, 7/8" dowel, 4" Edge distance (opposite the direction of applied load).
Does anyone have any ideas as to how I could get adequate embedment?? Top and bottom dowels recieve too large a load to be effective on their own....plus the floor and ceiling are inadequate for the forces.
One idea that was suggested at work (not by a structrual engineer), was to thicken the adjacent wall to the point where I would have adequate embedment. Can you do this or does the "slip plane" between the walls significatnly weaken the embemdent?? This idea scares me!!
Any ideas on how to get adequate embedment OR change the design to make the dowels less critical?? All comments welcome!! ---
Andrew
I'm designing a concrete member (door jamb - 8' tall) to support a flood gate. The concrete door jamb will be oreinted vertically and will be doweled into an adjacent wall. Then, so I could sleep at night, I was also going to notch the top and the bottom of the support (into the floor and ceiling) as well as put a "healthy" amount of reinforcement into the floor and ceiling.
Problem:
The problem that I'm having is that I can't get enough embedment into the adjacent wall to get adquate support for the dowels. I've been trying to epoxy the dowels in.
FYI: Shear=3800 lbs and Pull-out=4100lbs at the critical dowel - 7" spacing, 7/8" dowel, 4" Edge distance (opposite the direction of applied load).
Does anyone have any ideas as to how I could get adequate embedment?? Top and bottom dowels recieve too large a load to be effective on their own....plus the floor and ceiling are inadequate for the forces.
One idea that was suggested at work (not by a structrual engineer), was to thicken the adjacent wall to the point where I would have adequate embedment. Can you do this or does the "slip plane" between the walls significatnly weaken the embemdent?? This idea scares me!!
Any ideas on how to get adequate embedment OR change the design to make the dowels less critical?? All comments welcome!! ---
Andrew