JJOO
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 31, 2007
- 6
Could anyone enlighten me on the difference between proof load and ultimate load?
I have a contractor claiming that the allowable bolt tension capacity as per ASCE48-05 is 0.83Fu*Ab. I've found this specification, and here is the Section 9.3.1:
The tensile, proof-load, and yield stresses shall be specified minimum values determined according to the ASTM specification for the material involved.
Bolts shall be designed so that the sum of the tensile stresses caused by the applied external load and any tensile stress resulting from prying action does not exceed the tensile stress permitted, Ft, as follows:
1. For bolts having a specified proof-load stress, Ft, shall equal the lowest value of ASTM proof-load stress by the length-measurement method or 0.83Fu, where Fu is the specified minimum tensile stress of the bolt.
2. For bolts with no specified proof-load stress but a specified yield stress, Ft, shall equal the lowest value of Fy, where Fy is the specified yield stress, or 0.83Fu, where Fu is the specified minimum tensile stress of the bolt.
3. For bolts with no specified proof-load stress or yield stress, Ft shall equal 0.60Fu.
Based on this, this contractor believes that the allowable tension capacity of 2" dia. F1554 Gr.105 anchor rod would be (0.83)*(125ksi)*(3.14 sq.in.)=326 kips!! Well, that seems really high to me.
The nominal tensile stress of 2" dia. F1554 Gr.105 anchor rod is 0.75Fu as per AISC Design Guide 1 Table 2.2, and the tension capacity would be (0.75)*(125ksi)*(3.14 sq.in.)/(omega=2)=147 kips [ASD], (phi=0.75)*(0.75)*(125ksi)*(3.14 sq.in.)=221 kips [LRFD].
What is "proof load"? I think I need to understand better of what "proof load" means to convince these guys that a 2" dia. anchor rod (F1554 Gr.105) does not have that much allowable tension capacity. Anyone familiar with transmission tower design? Please help!
I have a contractor claiming that the allowable bolt tension capacity as per ASCE48-05 is 0.83Fu*Ab. I've found this specification, and here is the Section 9.3.1:
The tensile, proof-load, and yield stresses shall be specified minimum values determined according to the ASTM specification for the material involved.
Bolts shall be designed so that the sum of the tensile stresses caused by the applied external load and any tensile stress resulting from prying action does not exceed the tensile stress permitted, Ft, as follows:
1. For bolts having a specified proof-load stress, Ft, shall equal the lowest value of ASTM proof-load stress by the length-measurement method or 0.83Fu, where Fu is the specified minimum tensile stress of the bolt.
2. For bolts with no specified proof-load stress but a specified yield stress, Ft, shall equal the lowest value of Fy, where Fy is the specified yield stress, or 0.83Fu, where Fu is the specified minimum tensile stress of the bolt.
3. For bolts with no specified proof-load stress or yield stress, Ft shall equal 0.60Fu.
Based on this, this contractor believes that the allowable tension capacity of 2" dia. F1554 Gr.105 anchor rod would be (0.83)*(125ksi)*(3.14 sq.in.)=326 kips!! Well, that seems really high to me.
The nominal tensile stress of 2" dia. F1554 Gr.105 anchor rod is 0.75Fu as per AISC Design Guide 1 Table 2.2, and the tension capacity would be (0.75)*(125ksi)*(3.14 sq.in.)/(omega=2)=147 kips [ASD], (phi=0.75)*(0.75)*(125ksi)*(3.14 sq.in.)=221 kips [LRFD].
What is "proof load"? I think I need to understand better of what "proof load" means to convince these guys that a 2" dia. anchor rod (F1554 Gr.105) does not have that much allowable tension capacity. Anyone familiar with transmission tower design? Please help!