I know typically deflection limits for LL is L/360 and for D+L it is L/240 in general for stell framed construction(offices, apartments, etc...).I have always used a rule of thumb of limiting deflection to 1/2" total, which usually causes a ratio in the neighborhood of L/500 or so and gives me much heavier sections.
Am I being too conservative limiting to 1/2"?
Replies continue below
Recommended for you
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
DaveAtkins(Structural)
Yes, you are too conservative, unless there is a special reason for limiting deflection to 1/2", such as being above a window, or something like that.
DaveAtkins
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
jike(Structural)
I generally agree with Dave. When a beam is above a window, curtain wall or non-load bearing wall, you might want to coordinate with the architect to make sure that the slip track at the window head or wall is sufficient to accomodate the expected deflection. I suggest allowing some additional for construction tolerance.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
COEngineeer(Structural)
I usualy use L/480 for live load and L/240 for TL.Unless I will have tiles then I bump it up to L/600.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
BurgoEng(Structural)
(OP)
So if you are allowing for L/240 for Total, then you are allowing a 1" deflection on a 20ft beam, 1.5" on 30ft?It seems like too much to me.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
MiketheEngineer(Structural)
L/480 seems to keep floors under control...vibration, etc. L/600 for masonry or tile floors L/360 for wood floors is OK....
If you have walls or partitions on the floor in question - these help a LOT in killing vibrations and bounce.
30' x 30' great rooms without any walls are murder.A 250 lb man walking across that will cause havoc unless you have at least L/480.All the dishes in the hutch will rattle!!!
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
BurgoEng(Structural)
(OP)
I am dealing with a 4story apartment above 3 story parking.Framing is Steel beam & column, with a few masonry bearing walls, a few masonry partition (fire) walls, brick exterior facing.The residential floors are 4" conc slab, and the parking is 6"conc.I'm using 50ksi steel to hopefully reduce section size and floor to floor height is limited.
After the discussion here, I am considering just using L/360 as the limit for D+L deflection, that way I know I have L/360 for LL alone, and it will cut down on my calcs (I am having to do this all by hand & spreadsheets I've made).Also, I will adjust my numerical deflection to 1" allowable.
Sound Ok?
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
COEngineeer(Structural)
well, it seems a lot but really.. in order to get 40 psf in a room, you have to cramp people in the room like sardines plus it has to snow at the same time.So your live load will probably never reach 40psf on the floor.
Plus, you will also add 3/4" plywood and nail it to the joists.You are creating a composite section so your joists are actually stiffer.I would just worry about the defelction ratio instead of the actual deflection unless you are sizing a header above a huge window or something.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
whyun(Structural)
Keeping the precomposite dead load deflection of 1/2" to 3/4" is done to possibly avoid cambering of the beam.Sometimes cambering can be more economical.
Total deflection is important, but for floor elements, live load only deflection limits also shall be checked per code limits.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
twinnell(Structural)
BurgoEng,
Your building sounds large to be designing by hand.If you plan on doing many of these buildings, you might want to look at purchasing RAM Structural System.Very easy to use, very fast, and not that expensive.No need to buy all of the modules though.Just a thought.Make some money.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
BurgoEng(Structural)
(OP)
twinnell, Believe me, you dont need to tell me we need some software.Our office is not equipped to be doing designs like this and i think we sort of got talked into taking this project on as "favor".Being that i am the only one with structural experience in the office, it has fallen to me.I have made it pretty clear to those in charge that if we are going to be getting more of these, we MUST buy something.It's a lot of number crunching and a lot of guestimating to carry all the loads downward to support network below....and a lot of my time.
While we're on the subject, any opinions on RAM vs RISA vs STAAD?I've used STAAD in the past at a previous job, but it'd be rather pricey for this office to absorb.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
COEngineeer(Structural)
Burgo, twinnell is right.Buy a structural calc program.Even the cheap ones that only do multi spans beams (no 3d or 2d frame).
You are suggesting eliminating calculation of live load deflection and do L/360 for TL.This doesnt always work.Where I work I have scenario where the live load is very big (80+ psf snow) so Probably the L/480 live load will control.I also size beams to support walls with heavy stone veneer, roof with some roof load.With this scenario my Total load L/240 will probably control.I just think using excel is not very effective especially if you have multiple point load at various locations, distributed load that only go half the way.This is very time consuming to do it by hand and especially to find deflection!!!
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
COEngineeer(Structural)
We use struc calc and it is pretty cheap.It doesnt do 2d, 3d framing, plate, etc. but it will do 90% of calc I do in residential design.www.strucalc.com .I think it is pretty cheap too.But you still have to carry the loads down to foundation but thats what pen and paper are for.I usually write down the Live Load and Dead Load seperately.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
twinnell(Structural)
BurgoEng,
I have experience with Staad Pro, RAM, Risa 3d.For buidling design, no question, RAM is the one.Designs are very fast and if you set up the exports correctly, your plan work and elevations are created for you, just add notes and pretty it up.
Call them up and ask for a free demo cd.Tech support is great also.
Staad tech support is horrible.
Risa 3d is a good product for finite analysis, tech suupport is great.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
COEngineeer(Structural)
But I must say Risa 3d is pretty complicated.I wouldnt use unless you spend the time to really learn it.Plus their library of materials are mostly geared toward commercial buildings.If I want to put LVL I have to manually enter the properties.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
twinnell(Structural)
Risa 3d, Staad, and RAM Advanse should not be purchased just to design beams or continuous beams.They should be used for frames or "other" structures.If you looking for a good component design software, try Enercalc.Download it from thier website for free.It is the demo version, but it is the full package (When you print it says Demo).It does wood, steel, concrete, beams, footings, columns, retaining walls, embeded posts, etc.Very handy for single component design.
RAM should be purchased for the design of the entire building.Does not do wood unless you purchase RAM Advanse.RAM does steel, concrete and joists.Or you can add the properties of other materials.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
twinnell(Structural)
BurgoEng,
What state are you located?
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
WillisV(Structural)
To get back to the OP, AISC offers Design Guide 3:Serviceability Design Considerations for Steel Buildings(second edition) which contains in-depth discussions of deflection limits including those for various facade types etc.
RE: Deflection limits...not just L/360
UcfSE(Structural)
A good limit for live load deflection is 3/4-inch.You don't want to squash your interior partitions either, besides just the windows and such in the exterior walls.Some manufacturers have products designed to go allow more than 3/4 inches of deflection but it isn't the norm.Plus your finishes will have to be designed to move quite a bit.It's nice to save money by not considering these things but cracked drywall is no fun for anyone.You can come up with custom details but that represents more $$, the very thing you were trying to save.
Red Flag Submitted
Thank you for helping keep Eng-Tips Forums free from inappropriate posts. The Eng-Tips staff will check this out and take appropriate action.
Reply To This Thread
Posting in the Eng-Tips forums is a member-only feature.
Click Here to join Eng-Tips and talk with other members! Already a Member? Login
News
Close Box
Join your peers on the Internet's largest technical engineering professional community. It's easy to join and it's free.
Address: 359 Kelvin Stream, Lake Eldonview, MT 33517-1242
Phone: +577037762465
Job: Product Hospitality Supervisor
Hobby: Gardening, Web surfing, Video gaming, Amateur radio, Flag Football, Reading, Table tennis
Introduction: My name is Manual Maggio, I am a thankful, tender, adventurous, delightful, fantastic, proud, graceful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
We notice you're using an ad blocker
Without advertising income, we can't keep making this site awesome for you.