haynewp
Structural
- Dec 13, 2000
- 2,328
Can anyone explain why, in the IBC for example, there is not a table for allowable wind drift as there is for seismic?
There is a table showing allowable member deflection under serviceability, but it doesn't address drift specifically. I usually use this table anyway for wind drift (maybe more stringent depending on the cladding) but when I compare it with the seismic drift table, it is much more conservative in general.
For example using the wall deflection of L/240 for an allowable wind drift, the limit of L/240 is about 0.4% of wall height. Where a common seismic drift limit is 0.02(h) or 2% times the story height.
I know an earthquake is considered a catastrophic event and allowed greater deflection as long as the building didn't fail, but it would seem that for hurricane type winds, there would also be a separate wind drift table?
There is a table showing allowable member deflection under serviceability, but it doesn't address drift specifically. I usually use this table anyway for wind drift (maybe more stringent depending on the cladding) but when I compare it with the seismic drift table, it is much more conservative in general.
For example using the wall deflection of L/240 for an allowable wind drift, the limit of L/240 is about 0.4% of wall height. Where a common seismic drift limit is 0.02(h) or 2% times the story height.
I know an earthquake is considered a catastrophic event and allowed greater deflection as long as the building didn't fail, but it would seem that for hurricane type winds, there would also be a separate wind drift table?