You can be so pedantic at timesSlenderness ratio?
small-area reduction?
Partial safety factor?
Characteristic compressive strength? (Won't be 7)
You can be so pedantic at timesSlenderness ratio?
small-area reduction?
Partial safety factor?
Characteristic compressive strength? (Won't be 7)
Pedantic!? No; it's called not being reckless when it comes to applying safety factorsYou can be so pedantic at times
Fortunately I didn't apply any safety factors so I cannot be accused of being reckless of applying any, now being accused of being reckless for not applying any safety factors now thats a different storey. Pedantic or whatPedantic!? No; it's called not being reckless when it comes to applying safety factors
Fortunately I didn't apply any safety factors so I cannot be accused of being reckless of applying any, now being accused of being reckless for not applying any safety factors now thats a different storey. Pedantic or what
The PI reference wasn't aimed at you. In order to specify a pier - or know if a specified pier is sufficient - I would normally start at the load it is expected to take + factors for safety and design etc.Well it's it's our own house so I'm not sure if Pl is any good. Although it would help with the hire in plant insurance. I was thinking of starting a thread on another forum for suggestions as to what insurances are suitable.The house insurance is is about £150 extra as I declared there's building works going on. I don't think that covers us from the start of this wall down business until it's signed off by the BCO. And I doubt any damage caused during works is covered either.
So, its not an isolated pier but attached, and so needs to be bonded to the wall it's attached to.
However you need to check if the engineer was high on red oxide, as it seems to be a completely pointless pier never mind attached
If the short wall next to the 'X' is load-bearing - is it possible to use that? You could get a longer beam and padstone, and use the whole of that length (is it around 900mm long?) to support the beam, though you'd need to slip a loose steel plate underneath the beam to centralize the load on the wall.
In this way, you would be spreading the load over a greater area of foundation and so avoid building a pier and pad. If the short wall is bonded into the main wall going across, so much the better as the load will be spread more widely.
He's designed a massive pier to support one of the smallest beams you can get, and there just seems no logic to it when there are wall there which can hold that beam and any loads that will be on that beam.
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