Kom3
Structural
- Nov 20, 2019
- 37
Hello all,
Should the seismic forces on directional anchors be combined with thermal forces if there are loops that allows the pipes to expand in the direction away from the anchor?
Per PIP STC01015 "Friction loads shall be considered temporary and shall not be combined with wind or earthquake loads. However, anchor and guide loads (excluding their friction component) shall be combined with wind or earthquake loads"
Based on my interpretation of the sentence above, the answer is no. The way I see it, all thermal forces on a directional anchor disappears once the pipe on the supports without anchors overcome friction and slides away from the directional anchor. Hence the "excluding their friction component" refers to this scenario. Am I interpreting this correctly? If this is the case, I would then only be combining the non-thermal operating load with the seismic load at directional anchors.
Thanks.
Should the seismic forces on directional anchors be combined with thermal forces if there are loops that allows the pipes to expand in the direction away from the anchor?
Per PIP STC01015 "Friction loads shall be considered temporary and shall not be combined with wind or earthquake loads. However, anchor and guide loads (excluding their friction component) shall be combined with wind or earthquake loads"
Based on my interpretation of the sentence above, the answer is no. The way I see it, all thermal forces on a directional anchor disappears once the pipe on the supports without anchors overcome friction and slides away from the directional anchor. Hence the "excluding their friction component" refers to this scenario. Am I interpreting this correctly? If this is the case, I would then only be combining the non-thermal operating load with the seismic load at directional anchors.
Thanks.