garrettk
Geotechnical
- Jan 23, 2004
- 57
If you have a large diameter drilled shaft foundation (7 to 8 feet) which is properly embedded in the overlying concrete cap, you have a 'fixed head condition'. This I am comfortable with.
The structural engineer has provided us with axial, shear and moment forces for this pier. By having a 'fixed head condition', can you still have a moment force on the top of the pier? There is a debate in our office right now as to whether you can or cannot have this force. Everyone agrees you can have axial and shear, the question is on moment.
In L-Pile there are 6 options for Data-Boundary Conditions and Loading. The user's manual is not the most friendly to use and I need to know which of the options models the "fixed head condition".
I think the Shear & Slope (option 2) boundary condtion is the fixed head. If this is the case, how do you convert a moment (kip-ft) into radians (provided you can have a moment on a fixed head)?
Thanks for you help.
The structural engineer has provided us with axial, shear and moment forces for this pier. By having a 'fixed head condition', can you still have a moment force on the top of the pier? There is a debate in our office right now as to whether you can or cannot have this force. Everyone agrees you can have axial and shear, the question is on moment.
In L-Pile there are 6 options for Data-Boundary Conditions and Loading. The user's manual is not the most friendly to use and I need to know which of the options models the "fixed head condition".
I think the Shear & Slope (option 2) boundary condtion is the fixed head. If this is the case, how do you convert a moment (kip-ft) into radians (provided you can have a moment on a fixed head)?
Thanks for you help.