By swnorris
Date 10-17-2007 17:31
Edited 10-17-2007 17:44
Section J1.9 of the AISC Steel Construction Manual states that a connection with bolts designed as slip critical high strength bolts are permitted to share loads with welds.... but it is advisable to fully tension the bolts before the weld is made. As I've previously posted, if the weld is placed first, angular distortion from the heat of the weld might prevent the faying action required for development of the slip critical force. When the bolts are fully tensioned before the weld is made, the slip critical bolts and the weld may be assumed to share the load on a common shear plane. So, if welding is done first, faying action cannot be assured and slipping of bolts may occur followed by premature cracking of welds. Then, bolts must be conservatively considered in bearing action, not sharing loads, and welds designed to support the whole load, due to their inherent stiffness.
Also, as I have previously posted, there are connections involving bolts and welds in combination but with more than one connection plane, where welding should be done first. An example of this would be the moment connection of a wide flange beam to a column, where the flanges are complete penetration welded to the column face in the field, and the beam web is connected by means of a shear plate or angle (having short horizontal slots) that is shop welded to the column and field bolted to the beam web. In this case, the bolts are placed first and snug tightened, and basically serve as erection bolts. The welds are made subsequently and allowed to shrink. Finally, the bolts are tightened as required. If the bolts were tightened first and the welds made subsequently, the weld shrinkage would cause an indeterminate but significant amount of pre-load in both the bolts and welds. I'm not an engineer by any stretch of the imagination. This is just how I've understood it to work.