elliottpj
Structural
- Sep 16, 2002
- 7
I was considering reinforcing timber floor joists by bonding a steel plate to the bottom surface of the joist between its bearings. As the joist is already loaded, this situation is different to designing a composite steel and timber beam. The joist will be subject to bending and shear stresses. If a steel plate was bonded to the bottom of the joist would this have a considerable effect on the joist's load capacity or would the joist just fail in compression?
If the steel plate was placed on the bottom of the timber joist, and the joist was then jacked to its original position of no deflection, or even a negative camber, before the plate was fixed, surely this would make better use of the steel plate. You could prestress the timber.
Has anyone seen any research in this area?
If the steel plate was placed on the bottom of the timber joist, and the joist was then jacked to its original position of no deflection, or even a negative camber, before the plate was fixed, surely this would make better use of the steel plate. You could prestress the timber.
Has anyone seen any research in this area?