The trusses truss design results are shown and the shortage of steel trusses are displayed in the Trusses dialog. In the Trusses dialog, the axial compressive strength ratio, slenderness control and design ratio of the truss elements are displayed.
Location of the Trusses Dialog
After the analysis is done, you can access it by clicking the Truss command under the Steel Design heading in the ribbon menu Analysis and Design tab .
...
Trusses
...
Specifications |
---|
ID It is the name of the trusses in the plan. |
Element The elements included in the trusses are listed. |
Section It is the section used in truss elements. |
Material It is the material used in truss elements. |
Combination It is the load combination that produces the most unfavorable axial capacity ratio. |
Pr It is the largest axial force calculated by using load coefficients among the elements forming the trusses. |
Pn/Omega Among the elements that make up the trusses, the most negative is the safe axial strength. |
Ratio It is the axial capacity ratio. |
Strength check It is an information box whose sign changes according to the presence or absence of negativity in the section. |
Slenderness It is the delicacy value of the truss elements. |
Limit value The maximum permitted slenderness of the truss elements |
Slenderness check It is an information box whose sign changes according to whether the delicacy limit is exceeded or not. |
Previous The cursor moves to the previous line. |
Next The cursor goes to the next line. |
OK It saves the changes made and closes the dialog. |
Cancel Closes the dialog without saving the changes made. |
Summary Information The summary information about the line where the cursor is located is given in the name of the dialog in story, pose format. For example, BASE STORY, TRS001 |
Using the Shift key In this tab, you can select more than one row with the Shift key, enter a value by double-clicking any cell whose value is open to change, and make that value apply to all selected rows. |
Using the Ctrl key Ctrl key selects the lines in between one by one. |
...
Next Topic
Related Topics