Category: Uncategorized

  • POST FIXED PRECAST PANEL

    Every multi story buildings typically need the loading bay or hoist for each and every level during construction. A loading bay or loading dock is an area of a building where goods are loaded and unloaded to it from vehicle or site. On hoist or loading area of façade walls is being unbuilt up to end of construction. Final stage of construction only it needs to be built. Refer below picture for different types of loading bays are highlighted.

    If the rest of the building is constructed by the precast, the hoist area also needs to be covered or fixed by precast panel. This type of covering panels are named post fix panel. Which means the panel will fix on the existing structure after completion of required task.

    These post fix panels have different type of erection procedure, connection details compared to the all-other precast panels.

    Propping Method for Post Fix Precast:

                The temporary bracket connection between panel and to the slab need to be done at the top of the panel. The rest of the panel hanging below slab where braces are connected to plumb the panel as well as support. That the brace is anchored below level slab. The bottom of post fix panels is connected with dowel & grout tube arrangement to the below level precast panel. Refer the propping snap.

    Permanent Connection of post fix panel:

                The grout tube with dowel connection between the panels are only resist the horizontal movement, the additional permanent connection is made between panel and the slab through cast in plate and weld on site at both top and bottom the slab. The structural connections details are need structural engineer approvals. Refer below picture for typical connection details.

  • DEMOULDING SLOPE

    Demoulding of precast member without damage to either the components like lifter or mould is critical to successful replication process for the particular complicated design. During mould design, the designers concentrate to make minimum draft (nearly 10 ) on mould to wherever the possible  to minimize demoulding force and resultant stress on lifters and prevent on weaker part of the precast member.

    For Example,

    CONTRIBUTORS DURING DEMOULDING WITHOUT SLOPE

    The above picture shows influencing factors for demoulding force. In this case the resultant DEMOULDING forces like vacuum & friction (Area of contact, Coefficient of friction & Normal contact Pressure) along with self-weight of precast will increase demoulding force. If the demoulding force exceed the lifter capacity limit leads to fail the lifters. So, we can’t able to lift this precast member. To eliminate this type of failure. We need to provide slope where contact pressure or interface adhesion develop.

    CONTRIBUTORS DURING DEMOULDING WITH SLOPE

    The above picture shows the effect of demoulding slope. Where the 10 slope didn’t affect too much the original shape of precast, but considerably minimize the demoulding force. The slope reduces the frictional force & provide passage to air enter where vacuum force develops.

  • CONCRETE WITH SPECIFICATION DIFFERENCE (N & S)

    CONCRETE:

     (AS 1379 Specification and supply of concrete) A mixture of Cement, aggregates and water with or without the addition of chemical admixtures or other materials.      

    Cement: (AS 3972 Portland or blended cement) A hydraulic binder composed of Portland or blended cement used alone or in combination with one or more supplementary cementitious materials.

    Concrete is defined as follows,

    • Plastic concrete:

    Concrete in the state between completion of mixing and initial set as defined in AS 1012.18 Methods of determining setting time of fresh concrete, mortar and grout by penetration resistance.

    • Hardened concrete:

    Concrete after initial set, as represented by test specimens that have been subjected to a specified process and duration of curing.

    • Normal- Class Concrete:

    Concrete that is specified primarily by a standard compressive strength grade up to 50 MPa and otherwise in accordance with Clause 1.5.3.

    • Special- Class Concrete:

    Concrete that is specified to have certain properties or characteristics different from, or additional to, those of normal-class concrete and otherwise in accordance with Clause 1.5.4.

    SPECIFICATION OF CONCRETE:

    Concrete shall be specified,

    (a) as either

    (1) Normal-class(N), or

    (2) Special-class(S), or

    (b) By strength grade or other readily verifiable parameter by which compliance with the specification can be assessed.

    NOTE: Standard strength grades should be specified wherever possible.

    • NORMAL-CLASS CONCRETE:

    Normal-class concrete shall be specified only by the parameters given in Clause 1.5.3.2(Basic parameter), and shall have the following attributes:

    • A mass per unit volume in the range 2100 kg/m3 to 2800 kg/m3 when determined in accordance with (AS 1012.12.1 Determination of mass per unit volume of hardened concrete) in the saturated, surface-dry condition.
    • Acid-soluble chloride and sulfate contents within the limits given in Clause 2.7, when determined in accordance with Clause 5.5.2.
    • A shrinkage strain not exceeding 1000 × 10−6, when determined in accordance with Clause 5.6 after 56 days drying.

    NOTE: This maximum value of 1000 × 10−6 is consistent with the use for design purposes of a median basic shrinkage strain value of 850 × 10−6.

    • A mean compressive strength at 7 days, assessed in accordance with Clause 5.7, of not less than the values of Grade designation for N20-9MPa, N25-12MPa, N32-16MPa, N40-20MPa & N50-25MPa.
    • A cement complying with (AS 3972 Portland or blended cement) alone or in combination with one or more supplementary cementitious materials.
    • No lightweight aggregate as defined in AS 2758.1 Aggregates and rock for engineering purposes Concrete aggregates.

    Basic parameters of normal-class concrete:

    The following basic parameters shall be specified by the customer:

    • A standard strength grade selected from 20MPa,25MPa,32MPa,40MPa, 50MPa,65MPa,80MPa or 100MPa and designated as one of N20, N25, N32, N40 or N50.
    • The slump at the point of acceptance, selected as one of 20 mm, 30 mm, 40 mm, 50 mm, 60 mm, 70 mm, 80 mm, 90 mm, 100 mm, 110 mm or 120 mm.

    NOTES:

    1. The customer should carefully consider that the specified slump of concrete suits the placement method.
    2. For residential slabs and footings, if the slump is not specified by the customer, the specified slump should be considered to be 100 mm.
    3. The maximum nominal size of aggregate, selected as one of 10 mm, 14 mm or 20 mm. Unless otherwise specified, the default value shall be taken as 20 mm.
    4. The intended method of placement, including relevant details of equipment.
    5. If project assessment is required to be carried out by the supplier (see Note).

    NOTE: If unspecified, it will be assumed that project assessment is not required.

    • If required, a level of air entrainment up to a maximum of 5.0%.

    (2) SPECIAL- CLASS CONCRETE:

    Concrete other than normal-class concrete shall be specified by the customer as specialclass and, if applicable, by strength-grade. The parameters and attributes that should be specified for special-class concrete should be as set out listed below with reference to Appendix B and Table B1 on AS1379.

    Special-class concrete commonly has the same basic parameters as normal-class concrete with some additions and(or) exceptions. Parameters or attributes that are different from, or additional to, those of normal-class concrete should be included in specification below. If the requirements of specification for any concrete are inconsistent with those for normal-class concrete then the requirements of specification take precedence for that concrete.

    Where any parameter other than strength grade requires the specification of a special-class concrete, or the proportions of the mix are specified, the concrete should be identified by an appropriate code agreed to between the supplier and customer that identifies that particular mix.

    Basic parameter for specification of special-class concrete:

    • It is recommended to select from standard strength grades of S20, S25, S32, S40, S50, S65, S80 and S100.
    • Where concrete is specified as special-class and a strength grade is applicable, the strength grade is designated by the prefix:

    S, for compressive strength grades;

    SF, for flexural strength grades; or

    ST, for indirect-tensile strength grades.

    Where concrete is special-class and any property other than strength grade is Specified as the principal criterion, or the proportions of the mix are specified, it is designated by an appropriate alphanumeric code, agreed between the supplier and the customer, to indicate the criterion.

    • Special-class concrete should be subject to project assessment.
    • Certain concrete exposure classifications may require special provisions for aggregate durability (AS 2758.1 Aggregate & Rock for engineering Purposes.)
    • Any departures from the parameters or composition, or both, of normal-class concrete and any other criteria or limitations shall be specified by the customer in consultation with the supplier.

    NOTE: A summary list of several such parameters, some or all of which may be specified for the production of special-class concrete for a project, is given in Appendix B on AS 1379.

    • Other requirements additional to these parameters may be specified.

  • Quiz on getting Approvals

    Here is a quiz that Bharath has written. Very relevant.

    Engineers Architects are trying to wriggle out of their responsibilities by stamping “VIEWED” or “No COMMENT”. They do not want to stamp approved for fear of any error in the document could come back and bite.

    Insurance companies on the other hand are trying to minimize their risk when they provide insurance to detailers by explicitly stating, they will not cover the detailer unless the drawings are stamped for approval by the engineer and architect, and anyone else.

    To cut the discussion short, if the detailer issues without approval then the detailer will put everyone at risk because there will be no insurance cover. Detailers are the smallest in the chain. Try to litigate against the detailer is unlikely to get any good result. They could simply windup.

    Now here is the quiz

    https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScspZzCdNBlwVb4FJcB3rUebNuaZHBk28goPcUBHGFXz-aQiA/viewform

  • Our Privacy Policy

    We comply to Australian Governments privacy policy as in the URL given below

    https://www.oaic.gov.au/about-us/our-corporate-information/key-documents/privacy-policy/

  • Steel Detailer Jobs

    12 Positions available for Trainees / Experienced

    Tekla Trainees to work from our new Trichy Office

    Send applications to hr@tek1.com.au


    Take on line Test if you are fresh or less than 2 years experience as steel detailer

    After the quiz is completed we will contact you if you have cleared the test and eligibility criteria we will contact you.

    Go to our Testing URL: https://training.tek1.com.au/login/index.php (Copy paste link to a new tab)

    Click the button: ‘Create New Account’

    Enter a user name & password of your choice. If the username already exists, please try another.

    Enter your valid email address & your official First Name & Surname.

    Create your account. In your inbox, open the email from the System Administrator at Tek1, open the web address link in the email. This will confirm your account & login. If you haven’t received it immediately, check your junk mail box or let us know.

    Now go to the URL: https://training.tek1.com.au/mod/quiz/view.php?id=115 (Copy paste link to a new tab)

    Under ‘ Interview Test from home‘ at bottom of page, enter Enrolment key: Hometest@2025

    Enroll. You will see a page subtitled ‘ Interview Test from home’. Important: Read the instructions.

    When ready, take the quiz by clicking the button: ‘Attempt quiz now’.

    Complete the quiz & submit.

  • Basic Autocad Tutorial

    Here is you tube series which could help in getting started with Autocad

  • Rhino Tekla Interop

    Here is a demo on how a Rhino model can be brought into Tekla

  • Data Enriched COBie

    Data Enriched COBie

    COBie: Construction Operation Building Information Exchange

    COBie is a standard for the exchange of Building Information during the life of a building project. Information containing specific project details helpful for understanding, operating and maintaining a facility properly. One of the items is the inventory of spaces and their functional requirements.

    To facilitate requirements the designer must provide a spatial layout for building, facility, floor & room number which forms the basis of assigning equipment and products to specific space. Strictly, there is no information on interior components such as furniture nor on structural members.

    In order to obtain information at right time throughout the life cycle of a facility in BUILDING DELIVERY PROCESS, a mechanism is needed. Such a mechanism should filter out unnecessary information, reorganise for owner’s convenience.

    Spreadsheets can be a good tool to manage information in small amounts and simple relationships. The COBie project bridges the gap in interpretation by identifying the similarities in the process that contractors, operators, maintainers & asset managers use to accomplish daily activities.

    What COBie does: As an information exchange standard, it has capabilities of everything from planning, vdesign, construction, commissioning all the way to operations, maintenance & management of spaces. It simply changes the required deliverable from paper documents to electronic formats, facilitating building information interchange.

    “If you use COBie in a way which violates the COBie specification you are no longer meeting it’s requirement. You are doing something else that is not COBie”  Bill East, Inventor of COBie

    Here is the data flow in COBie:

    Compiled and edited by Shantha Priya S.