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coring through masonry lintel beam
hi guys,
i have not been exposed to much masonry design in the past and have had this situation on-site where services need to pass through a non-loadbearing masonry wall. the cores need to be 2 x 100 dia (4") and 3 x 50 dia (2") and pass through the lintel beam that spans the doorway.
has anyone been exposed to coring through lintel/bond beams and is it acceptable or should i be looking at moving the locations of the cores or possible installing a steel channel to help strengthen the doorway lintel.
any help will be appreciated. attached is a sketch.
move the cores over about 8" and you'll be fine.
the sketch has the cores messing with the end bearing of the lintel. if it is not load bearing, it might work as drawn but i'd prefer the 8" shuffle to the right.
glad you eventually clarified 8" to the right jae .
mike mccann
mmc engineering
jae/mike
thanks, like i said i haven't dealt too much with masonry design or spent much time on-site understanding construction practices. i assumed that the cores that run vertical adjacent to the doorway would be core-filled so i will get the guys to move all the coreholes to the right of this.
i thought you guys where in the us. it must be getting late over there.
not quite 8 pm here.
mike mccann
mmc engineering
the grout and reinforcement for a smaller opening is usually used for continuity (not structural) and as a standard detail if the drawing is to scale since there is no real load carried by the lintel. it could possible be a bond beam (not a lintel) and the steel would be in the bottom of the cores.
moving to the right would be good because common construction practice is to frame an opening with one core of grouted masonry that is usually reinforced with minimal steel. that is normal around the world.
the wall may have been built around the door frame (if there is one) depending on the type of door and location.
dick
concretemasonry,
pardon my ignorance on the topic, but i have been using the terms "bond beam" and "lintel" interchangeably. what is the difference between the two?
asixth,
i know your australian so time for a bit more reading:
cheers mate |
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