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The Structural Engineer

A limit state design method is recommended for rigid beam-to-unstiffened-column extended endplate connections, with four high strength bolts, positioned symmetrically around the tension flange. The design procedure for the bolt size, endplate thickness, unstiffened column flange thickness, and slip, ensures that sufficient strength, stiffness and adequate rotation capacity are achieved. In a connection where the endplate thickness is not less than the unstiffened column flange and where the bolt diameter is not less than the endplate thickness, the design moment and rotation capacity of the joint are governed by both the strength and stiffness of the unstiffened flange. Simple equations to determine the size of the individual joint elements are recommended, which will ensure that rotations are within two or three times the relative rotation that would arise owing to elastic deformation in the adjoining structure. The recommended design method given in Appendix A is based on previously published experimental evidence and from the results of full-size specimens tested to failure by the author. The recommended design procedure is compared with design methods given by other investigators, and conclusions are made as to their suitability. J. Graham

The Structural Engineer

The collapse of the Hotel New World at 11.15am on 15 March 1986 was sudden and complete, with no part of the structure left upstanding. T.W. Hulme, H.S. Parmar, K.H. Hou and P. Scripathy

The Structural Engineer

‘Engineering our status’ Colin Pountney’s viewpoint on this subject (3 November last) and the subsequent letter to Verulam from Carlo Dinardo (19 January) have prompted such a wide response that we make no apology in devoting the whole of this month’s column to this issue. Despite its undoubted ‘yet again’ connotation, it just will not, it appears, ‘go away’! Verulam