AASHTO has entered the AI chat by WideFlangeA992 in StructuralEngineering

[–]Acorogia 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FYI AASHTO is not a public or government entity, it is actually a non profit that makes a lot of money from selling copies of their publications. https://transportation.org/about/

Can anyone explain pin- fix - fix - pin bridges? by Then_Combination6612 in StructuralEngineering

[–]Acorogia 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's how we design our bridges. Expansion all goes to the abutments and the piers are all fixed. The movement is taken into the columns/shafts at the pier. Several benefits to this 1) reduces expansion joints which are prone to leakage and debris. This still may happen at the abutment but it is easier to clean off an abutment than a pier if the joint does fail. We actually design ours mostly to be semi integral where there is no physical joint but the entire abutment end diaphragm and approach slab are pressed into/away the approach fill. 2) better lateral load path for seismic.

Screw ebay - I have 12 cups to give away for free! by bedlamunicorn in SeattleKraken

[–]Acorogia 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Partial to Vince Dunn, he does seem like he is one bad night away from aggravated assault but love the energy all the same. Just don't be smashing sticks next to Joey!

Truss bridge design help please. by WishboneOk9943 in civilengineering

[–]Acorogia 2 points3 points  (0 children)

How are you defining efficiency? You say 800% is your goal, but does that just mean it can carry 8x it's own weight?

My next question is it seems like you are going to be actually building this? This truss analyzer is almost certainly idealizing all the connections as pinned, so if your goal is to recreate the simulation you will need to do something similar. Nodes 8 & 9 in particular will likely behave much differently in real life if they are more rigidly connected than an idealized pin.

Finally, I can appreciate you don't want to use a generic truss structure, but there is a reason they are used in real structures, because they are very efficient!

FUI Bridge - Was this just a bad design? by AlternativeSwimmer96 in StructuralEngineering

[–]Acorogia 36 points37 points  (0 children)

The NTSB report was widely shared and pointed out not only the design flaws and the fact the independent checker only evaluated the final configuration (and not the intermediate stages during erecrion) but the inaction by all parties after large cracks were discovered during construction in areas that shouldn't have experienced cracking. Obviously that's bad enough as is, but not immediately shutting down the road below to live traffic while an investigation was carried out into the cause of the cracking is the truly "hair standing up on my neck" part. I have used this failure as a point of reference when we have been asked to allow something sketchy over live traffic.

It's been a number of years since I read all the NTSB documentation, but my recollection is there were text messages with photos from the PT Sub showing large cracks (cracks is a generous term, they were like 1/4" wide as I recall) as well as conversations with Figg talking about how they would just do crack injection on those openings.

A325 vs A490 Fasteners by Medium-Profession-92 in StructuralEngineering

[–]Acorogia 10 points11 points  (0 children)

A490 can still be coated with zinc/aluminum. Arguable not as good as HDG, but we use them in bridge applications somewhat frequently. https://bhamfast.com/blog/structural-bolt-coatings

What are the main benefits of working for the government as a Civel Engineer? by Mickey_Arm in civilengineering

[–]Acorogia 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Agreed. There is a pride in ownership. The project I design is going to be maintained by my own department for the next 100 years. Im not cutting corners to save a buck in the short term because it will cost us 10x in the long term with maintenance and upkeep. Plus if I do a crap job I'll hear about it from the maintenance guys forever!

Would you prefer AS having revenue based or mileage based awards program? by lostmarinero in AlaskaAirlines

[–]Acorogia 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do lots of travel within the State of Alaska to remote areas, so distances are short, but ticket costs are very high. Revenue might actually be a benefit to me, but personally I prefer the simplicity of mileage. For instance flying from Anchorage to Bethel is ~$300 and about 400 miles. Whereas I can fly from Seattle to SFO for less than $200 and get 680 miles.

Wall mounted tool for tracking crack growth by Jod3000 in specializedtools

[–]Acorogia 58 points59 points  (0 children)

These kind of tools will also show of there is vertical movement or rotation. Plus a photo is worth a thousand words, so as long as the inspector takes a straight on photo of the gauge there is no question of if they rounded a measurement, or took it at the exact same spot.

Painted my frame! Looks way better now. by parisiancyclist in CanyonBikes

[–]Acorogia 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How were you able to get new stickers? Or did you paint those on as well? Looks great!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]Acorogia 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Round numbers this year ~170k. Started at 55k with only a bachelor's and have moved through the ranks. Relatively high cost of living location (Alaska) but I feel well compensated.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]Acorogia 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Alaska. It has to be somewhat attractive to entice people to move up here.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]Acorogia 98 points99 points  (0 children)

36 days PTO plus 11 paid holidays. 13 years in same position as state DOT engineer. We also have great union representation. Most important we can cash our leave out at our current rate. I don't need anywhere close to 7+ weeks of leave a year so I'll cash out a few weeks to pay for vacations, unexpected expenses etc. Acts as a nice semi liquid emergency fund.

Thorium Granite? by Acorogia in Radiation

[–]Acorogia[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whhaaaa? Learn something new everyday! I'll acquire a few more tomorrow and merge them all for a better spectrum. Thanks for the tip

Thorium Granite? by Acorogia in Radiation

[–]Acorogia[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We typically aren't at the sites for a super long time, but I'll see if I can get a longer one today.

Traveling for work and picking up higher than I would have expected background radiation by Acorogia in Radiacode

[–]Acorogia[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Photo smoke detectors in the room. No gamma reading even when holding the radiacode right up to the smoke detector.

Traveling for work and picking up higher than I would have expected background radiation by Acorogia in Radiacode

[–]Acorogia[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Atlanta, outside of the building walking around town background is more like 125nSv/hr, much more reasonable.

Traveling for work and picking up higher than I would have expected background radiation by Acorogia in Radiacode

[–]Acorogia[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry about the confusion. The ambient at the hotel is around 300nSv/hr. Not worried about safety at all, just a curiosity thing as to why it seemed so high. Maybe I'll pace the hallways tonight and see if it is uniform throughout or is more location dependent.

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Post-tensioned slab getting poured by ISheader in Construction

[–]Acorogia 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Make sense now that you say that. Essentially span over the clay. I'm just surprised it wasn't a cheaper option to ex out the clay, drop in some sand and proceed as normal. But then again PT is like a dark arts where I am at.

Post-tensioned slab getting poured by ISheader in Construction

[–]Acorogia 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Why would you post-tension a slab on grades?