Showing posts with label steel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steel. Show all posts

AISC - Steel Construction Manual - 13th Edition

This Manual is the thirteenth major update of the AISC Steel Construction Manual, which was first published in 1927. With this revision, the previously separate Allowable Stress Design and Load and Resistance Factor Design methods have been combined. Thus, this Manual replaces both the 9th Edition ASD Manual and the 3rd Edition LRFD Manual. Much of the HSS Connections Manual has also been incorporated and updated in this Manual. The following specifications, codes, and standards are printed in Part 16 of this Manual: 2005 AISC Specification for Structural Steel Buildings 2004 RCSC Specification for Structural Joints Using ASTM A325 or A490 Bolts 2005 AISC Code of Standard Practice for Steel Buildings and Bridges The following resources are also included on the CD included with this Manual AISC Design Examples, which illustrates the application of tables and specification provisions that are included in this Manual. AISC Shapes Database V13.0 and V13.0H Background and supporting literature for the AISC Steel Construction Manual

Structural Steel Design 5Ed by McCormac

Structural Steel Design, 5e, is ideal for undergraduate courses in Steel Design. It is also useful as a reference for civil and environmental engineering professionals.
This best selling text has been fully updated to conform to the latest American Manual of Steel Construction. The material is presented in an easy-to-read reader-friendly style.

Steel Design 4th Edition by William T. Segui

STEEL DESIGN covers the fundamentals of structural steel design with an emphasis on the design of members and their connections, rather than the integrated design of buildings. The book is designed so that instructors can easily teach LRFD, ASD, or both, time-permitting. The application of fundamental principles is encouraged for design procedures as well as for practical design, but a theoretical approach is also provided to enhance student development. While the book is intended for junior-and senior-level engineering students, some of the later chapters can be used in graduate courses and practicing engineers will find this text to be an essential reference tool for reviewing current practices.

Steel Structures: Design and Behavior, Charles G. Salmon 5Ed

Strives to present in a logical manner the theoretical background needed for developing and explaining design requirements. Beginning with coverage of background material, including references to pertinent research, the development of specific formulas used in the AISC Specifications is followed by a generous number of design examples explaining in detail the process of selecting minimum weight members to satisfy given conditions.