member, 6-16mm diameter bolt is used to connect the member attached to each flange as shown: a. Determine its allowable strength based on yielding b. Determine its design strength based on rupture c. Determine its ultimate strength based on block shear Principles of Steel Design Module 6 Block Shear and staggered connection
Properties of W10x12 Determine the safe load P that the member
could carry if the allowable tensile stress is A=2284 mm2 148 MPa. Diameter of bolt = 20mm. The tf=5.33 mm diameter of the hole = is 22mm. tw=4.83 mm bf=100.58 mm d=250.70 mm y=34.53 mm
From the figure shown, determine the
maximum tensile force that the member could carry if the allowable tensile stress is 140 MPa. Rivet diameter is 20mm. Rivet hole = 23mm. Thickness - 12mm, Width - 350mm. a. Evaluate the ultimate tensile force that the member could carry if Fu = 400 MPa. Use phi = 0.75 b. If the shorter leg of the angle bar is not connected, determine the nominal tensile strength. F u =400 MPa.
A 20 mm thick plate (Fy = 250 MPa, Fu =
415 MPa), has 20 mm nominal bolt holes. Using ASD and LRFD (NSCP 2015), the following apply: For tensile yielding on gross section: Pn=FyAg Ø= 0.90 (LRFD); 𝛀= 1.67 (ASD) For tensile rupture in the net section: Determine the tension-yielding capacity and Pn FuAe tension rupture capacity of the connection. Ø=0.75 (LRFD); 𝛀 = 2.00 (ASD)
From the figure shown is an L 150 * 100 * 6
connected to a larger angular bar. Assume that the tensile force P passes through the centroid such that there is no eccentricity.