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Originally posted by ANOK
Yes it does.
But what it doesn't confirm unequivocally is that force is enough to cause the columns to be pulled in.
Did you actually read what I quoted from that PDF? How can you still claim it says sagging trusses can pull in columns when clearly it explains how sagging effects only the truss and the connections. It says NOTHING about columns failing.
Here it is again in case you missed it...
In the initial stages of heating the restraint from the surrounding structure tends to resist the expansion of a beam...
As I have been saying, heating of the truss/beam causes it to expand, and push against the columns. It cannot push the columns outwards, because "the surrounding structure tends to resist the expansion of a beam".
Trusses CAN sag but that is all that that says.
If the heating of the truss/beam causes run-away deflection, and the connections survive, the beam fails, not the columns.
www.fire-research.group.shef.ac.uk...
Do you not understand what that is saying? Obviously not.
Originally posted by exponent
So please state this explicitly so I can save the link for future reference. You are saying here that fire affected trusses in the WTC can fall into tension and exert an inward pulling force on the columns, yes?
The problem here is that you are not quoting from a study that investigates the effects you are talking about. The study is of a steel beam, not a truss. They are radically different structures and that is why the paper I linked you to is a study of representative trusses from the WTC, a much more specific study and conducted in part by the same firm (Arup, who are pretty well reputed).
This is a woeful misunderstanding of the beam study. It does not purport to investigate the conditions of columns or a representative structure. It is a technical paper on improvements in simplified simulations. This seems to have escaped you.
Luckily there's a way we can easily resolve this. You've referenced this paper as a reliable source and imbued it with authority which inherently transfers to its authors. In this case I happen to know of another paper produced by Ian Burgess and Roger Plank. It is designed to study trusses not beams and is an investigation into their behaviour, not a simplified model.
You can find it here: www.sciencedirect.com...
I believe it can also be found online for free as a PDF.
A numerical investigation of the structural behaviour of long-span composite truss systems, typically used in multi-storey floor construction, under fire conditions is presented. The non-linear finite element program, Vulcan, which has been specifically developed at the University of Sheffield for the analysis of structures at elevated temperatures, has been used extensively throughout. The in-fire performance of both restrained and unrestrained composite trusses is determined. The contribution of each group of members (i.e. top chord and slab, web members, bottom chord and supporting column) is investigated whilst considering various parameters such as the level of fire protection, structural modifications and deflection patterns. It is shown that, for a truss which is restrained against horizontal movement at its ends, the load-carrying mechanism undergoes a transition from bending to catenary action. Furthermore, at elevated temperatures there is a possibility of progressive buckling in the compressive web elements, which may not have been the identified failure mechanism in design. This is seen to be initiated by a significant rise of the thermal stress in the web members located within the high-shear zones towards the ends of the truss. The knowledge obtained is suitable for use when implementing performance-based design.
Originally posted by ANOK
Originally posted by exponent
So please state this explicitly so I can save the link for future reference. You are saying here that fire affected trusses in the WTC can fall into tension and exert an inward pulling force on the columns, yes?
No, the trusses do not sag into tension when they are SAGGING. How can truss be both sagging from heat and fall into tension? That would be an oxymoron.
The PDF PLB supplied explains quite well what happens, but you have to read and understand it.
...
But wait, that PDF was perfectly fine when PLB tried to use it to prove the hypothesis. So now I have shown he was wrong, suddenly it's no good because it says beam instead of truss? Hilarious.
That is truss deflection, I have already said trusses can deflect, that is not the argument. What can't happen is that deflection pulls in columns. You are making an uneducated assumption.
Yes it does. So why did PLB try to use it then? Maybe you should be debating him and his claim?
LOL OK then find a paper that says trusses and not beams eh? I didn't bring up these papers, you guys did.
All science tests use simplified models, now you are just making lame excuses to ignore, and deflect my points.
BTW you didn't go though all my quotes, you addressed one, which you are wrong about.
Originally posted by ANOK
reply to post by exponent
Please refer back to this reply for your answer...
www.abovetopsecret.com...
That PDF explains quite clearly what centenary action does when a beam, OR TRUSS, heats up and expands when pined between two columns. Thank you PLB for pointing it out to me.
Surely the PDF is still valid right, or is it not valid now I have explained it doesn't say what you all want it to?
I can't help it if you can't, or you refuse, to understand it.
Originally posted by ANOK
reply to post by exponent
www.abovetopsecret.com...
www.abovetopsecret.com...
Originally posted by ANOK
reply to post by exponent
www.abovetopsecret.com...
www.abovetopsecret.com...
Originally posted by DeeKlassified
Originally posted by ANOK
reply to post by exponent
www.abovetopsecret.com...
www.abovetopsecret.com...
You're fighting a losing battle Anok, 'exponent' will never listen. They have fixed ideas and will not deviate from those ideas, whether they are right or wrong.
Originally posted by DeeKlassified
You're fighting a losing battle Anok, 'exponent' will never listen. They have fixed ideas and will not deviate from those ideas, whether they are right or wrong.