Revision History
This document is organized in such a way so that newer
revisions appear at the top.
Improvements and corrections
in STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005 since May 2001.
- Improvements : Changes in
the programs/calculation procedures.
- List of errors in analysis
which would cause results to be erroneous.
- List of defects which lead
to un-terminated operations (infinite loops) and unexpected
termination of analysis processes.
- List of defects and performance
issues in analysis engine due to errors in user input.
- List of defects in features
associated with steel tables and design codes.
- List of defects involving
the graphical user interface.
- Improvements : Changes in the programs/calculation
procedures
- The POST, SPRING, NUBOP, DYNRE5 and NODEXC modules
have been added to the STARDYNE engine, effective
the September 2001 Patch.
- For single angles subjected to axial force + bending,
the basis used for determining the critical fcy
and fcz (compressive stresses due to bending), and,
the critical fty and ftz (tensile stresses due to
bending) for design based on AISC ASD 89 has been
changed. Until now, those stresses were chosen as
the values at the point on the section where stress
due to MY and MZ both had the same sign. Henceforth,
the maximum values will be used. The old scheme
is available as an option. This is effective from
the September 2001 Patch.
B. List of errors in analysis
which would cause results to be erroneous.
- Response spectrum analysis using the STARDYNE
engine - Matrix element results only may be erroneous.
- If one of the component load cases of a REPEAT
LOAD case contains temperature loads, the analysis
results may be erroneous for that case.
- Member Loads - If tapered members and then non-tapered
members are both loaded in one command, then some
of the members received zero load.
- Multilinear Spring If rotational springs are
present at a multi-linear support, they were not
detected. The analysis results may be wrong.
- Select Optimize : If this command is entered
with a LOAD LIST of a subset of all the cases, then
only the subset of the cases is re-analyzed
- Tapered Beam Section Displacement : This was
incorrect.
- Cable Member - Member Tension : If a member is
declared to have the cable attribute as well as
the tension attribute,
a) The tension checking did not compute
tension in cables correctly. The sag effect was
omitted just in the checking phase. The stiffness
and member force results were OK.
b) The SAG effect was not properly computed if initial
tension was 0.0.
c)In PDELTA the SAG effect was not considered.
- PDELTA and Member Tension/Compression : File
error prevented these two features to work together
properly.
- PDELTA and Member Release : Additional Pdelta
loads were not computed for members with releases.
- Inclined supports : In rare cases, an obscure
memory error caused inclined supports to give strange
results.
- Loads Processing : If there are no beams in the
model, and two or more load cases are present, some
data may be reset to zero. Known to affect plate
temperature loads and may have other effects.
- Moving Load : The weights for wheels which are
off the bridge were clustered on the end of the
span.
- Load Combination and Re-Analysis : When multiple
cycles of analysis are required, and load combination
cases are present, in some cases, section calculations
may be incorrect.
- Temperature loading on plates : If 2 or more
entries are made for the same element for the same
load case, then the intila fixed end stresses were
not summed.
- Story Drift : An error was present in processing
the joints.
- A loophole in the checking process for determining
which mass is to be included in the mass matrix
caused some masses to be left out. As a result,
frequencies calculated using the August patch may
be higher than the true frequencies of the model.
- If multiple cycles of a P-Delta analysis is requested
using the command "PDELTA n ANALYSIS" where "n"
is the number of cycles, the program will perform
a Non-linear analysis instead. This too is present
from the August 2001 Patch onwards.
C. List of defects which
lead to un-terminated operations (infinite loops) and
unexpected termination of analysis processes.
- For members which have been assigned member offsets,
those offsets are not taken into account while determining
the position of individual wheel loads for moving
load generation cases.
- Frequency calculation using eigensolution method
: This process may be terminated with "J" and "E"
type error messages before modes and frequencies
can be successfully extracted.
- Elastic Mat Support generation : Program fails
to generate support springs if over 10000 joints
have been assigned this support type.
- Composite beam : The Ix torsional stiffness generation
results in a division by zero (NaN) if there is
no bottom plate for the member, and consequently,
the analysis process may be terminated.
- Matrix Bandwidth, Connectivity : If the structure
contains solids, plates & beams, the program may
terminate with a message indicating a SET CONN command
should be entered.
- American Timber Code : If the member list for
a GLULAM parameter input requires data to be continued
to multiple lines using a hyphen, the analysis &
design engine may fail to read the command.
- Long File Names : If the STD filename is longer
than about 44 characters, the program may terminate
at the very end of the analysis process.
- Time History loading - Time Load : Entering a
load in the MY or MZ direction would result in an
error message followed by a termination of the analysis
run.
- Fixed End Load : Program inadvertantly reported
this type of load input as an error even when there
wasn't any.
- Solid Incidences : There was an error in the
processing of the REPEAT ALL command. Instead of
repeating data which followed the prior repeat all,
data all the way back to the first solid element
were repeated. Also, REPEAT ALL 0 did not work as
a way of defining the start of the range of the
next REPEAT ALL. In most cases, this process would
lead to termination due to encountering of undefined
joint numbers.
- Triangular Factorization and Re-Analysis : Obscure
memory error caused the program to terminate.
- PDelta & Cables : Obscure memory error caused
a system termination.
- Moving load generation & YRANGE : In some cases,
load generation requiring the program to find members
within a specified YRANGE would lead to a crash.
- Composite Beam : The weight calculated could
be wrong if the concrete thickness became large
(as in a case where the thickness value is not defined
in the correct units).
- Multilinear Spring : The iteration procedure
can continue forever without convergence or error.
D. List of defects and
performance issues in analysis engine due to errors
in user input.
- Members with thermal bending load about the local
Y axis, when the width of the member is not specified
under properties. This may lead to a division by
zero.
- Member Thermal Bending about local Y - If this
temperature was omitted, a large value was inadvertently
used rather than zero.
- Member load : If start and end of load are both
off the same end of the beam, then both will be
reset to the same end of beam location and the load
application length is hence zero. This would lead
to a division by zero.
- Load List : If this command is entered before
any load data or between the beginning of load data
and the Analysis command, then, data may be overwritten,
cases not solved, or results may be erroneous.
- Solid element stresses : If solids have joints
entered with the back face first, then a negative
volume is detected. The program attempts to correct
this by swapping the faces internally. There was
an error in this procedure.
E. List of defects in
features associated with steel tables and design codes.
- Japanese Steel Table : Obscure error in reading
data from file has been corrected. May not affect
analysis results.
- Japanese Steel Code : Slenderness ratios (KL/r
checks) were not correctly checked for design per
this code.
- German Steel Code : Program crashes during design
of British angles per this code.
- AISC steel table : Error in wall thickness of
the D40 pipe has been corrected. The value was incorrectly
defined as 0.647 inches instead of 0.674. This can
have an effect on the Torsional Constant for members
that have been assigned this cross section, and
hence the analysis results.
- Steel Design per AISC : If the TRACK 1 parameter
is used, the number of lines printed per page for
the steel design output is evaluated erroneously,
leading to wasted space on those pages.
- American LRFD code : If design is done for member
ends only and not for intermediate section locations,
a warning message to that effect was not being printed.
- American AISC and LRFD codes : Default spacing
of shear stiffeners was not based on the most conservative
requirements of the respective codes. The spacing
of web stiffeners must be based on the criteria
which produces the least capacity according to Section
F4 of Pg 5-40 of AISC ASD 89. So, if the user fails
to assign stiffener spacing, shear capacity calculation
may be un-conservative if member is short but very
deep.
- American LRFD code : Design of T shapes may result
in a message 'ERROR IN CHH VALUE FOR MEMBER # '
- AISC code : For single angles subjected to axial
force + bending, the basis used for determining
the critical fcy and fcz (compressive stresses due
to bending), and, the critical fty and ftz (tensile
stresses due to bending) for design based on AISC
ASD 89 has been changed. Until now, those stresses
were chosen as the values at the point on the section
(among long toe, short toe and heel) where stress
due to MY and MZ both had the same sign. Henceforth,
the maximum values will be used. The old scheme
is available as an option.
- For concrete beams, during torsion design per
ACI 318, there was an error in the implementation
of the formula in Clause 11.6.3.6 of the code.
- For design of composite beams per the AISC ASD
code, if a SELECT MEMBER command is specified, the
program may issue a warning message that
*WARNING- FC VALUE OUTSIDE THE NORMAL RANGE. CHECK
UNITS.
- This error pertains to composite members designed
per the AISC ASD code. If a member is assigned the
parameter CMP=1, but is still designed as non-composite
due to the fact that there is a positive moment
somewhere along the span (moment which causes tension
on the concrete side), the properties of the non-composite
section used in the design calculations may be erroneous.
- In the Japanese steel table file JAPAN.TBL, the
channel section name C380X100X20 was named C380X100X13.
So, if the section name C380X100X20 is referred
to, program will report that the section does not
exist.
F. List of defects involving
the graphical user interface.
- When non-American steel section properties are
defined, the stress values shown in the Beam - Stresses
table in the post-processing mode may be 0.0 even
when the members are subjected to axial forces and
bending moments.
- For Tee sections, property name icon displays
a garbled string.
- Member orientation of single angles displayed
incorrectly.
- Break All command fails to split intersecting
beams in some cases.
- Spring Tension / Spring Compression cannot be
assigned correctly graphically.
- Saving a file : When some of the member properties
are not assigned, but other attributes like CONSTANTS
are assigned, the save operation may lead to a crash.
- The menu item Help - STAAD.Pro info on the web
was not working.
- Bending moment and shear force diagrams in Member
- Query were displayed incorrectly for some load
cases such as those involving area loads or concentrated
member loads along member local axes.
- Some of the American Timber parameters were erroneously
reported as being wrong while the file is being
read in.
- PERFORM ROTATION command for Z axis rotation
was not processed correctly.
- IX and IY section properties of pipes were displayed
incorrectly in Member - Query.
- Miscellaneous errors were present in model generation
from Structure Wizard.
- Some unit values in the View - Options - Force
units were incorrect.
- If the renumber operation for joints or members
is carried out after the creation of groups, the
original contents of the group did not get renumbered
simultaneously.
- Floor load generation : Loads are displayed along
local Y axes instead of global Y axis. This error
shows up when some of the members on those panels
have been assigned a beta angle. This is an error
in the graphical display only. The analysis is done
based on the global direction of loading.
- For members for which material constants have
been assigned using an explicit MATERIAL definition,
the bending moment and shear force diagrams shown
in the Member-Query window for load cases containing
the selfweight command will be arroneous. This is
only a display error. The diagram shown in the Beam-Forces
page of the post-processing mode is correct.
- If an input file containing the command SUBSTITUTE
joints is opened, the node number of the last joint
on the list will not be correctly renumbered.
What's New in STAAD.Pro 2001,
Build 1005?
- List of new features/improvements
in GUI for STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005
- List of errors rectified in
GUI for STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005
- List of known errors in GUI
for STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005
- List of errors rectified in
Analysis & Design engine for STAAD.Pro 2001 Build
1005
- Warning List for the Analysis
Engine for STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005
- List of improvements for the
Analysis & Design engines since STAAD.Pro 2001
Build 1003
- Changes made in the Analysis
and Design engine which can cause results to differ
from previous versions of STAAD/Pro, STAAD.Pro 2001
Builds 1003-1004, and STAAD-III
- The following new features/improvements have
been made to the Graphical User Interface in STAAD.Pro
2001 Build 1005
- New AVI exporting capability by which a dynamic
result, such as, a deflection diagram in animation,
may be captured and recorded for playing outside
of STAAD.Pro.
- Assigning beam, node, plate and solid labels selectively
making it possible to display labels for just a
few selected components of the view.
- New rendering capability to view sections in a
full 3D color.
- Graphically color code different groups of members
using the GROUP command.
B. The following errors
have been rectified in the Graphical User Interface
since STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1003
- In certain situations, design parameters do not
get assigned as intended from the Design pages of
the Modelling mode.
- Open an existing input file. Go to the editor.
Make a modification to the data from the editor,
save the file. Return to the GUI. A crash may occur.
- If data errors are present in an existing input
file, the program can crash under certain circumstances
if the file is opened.
- If the length unit is changed after joint coordinate
specification, and one enters the loading page while
certain node(s) are highlighted, the coordinate
value of that(those) node(s) will get altered.
- If a file containing commands such as AIJ, UBC,
Colombian, IS1893 loads etc. is saved from the GUI,
some of that data may get corrupted.
- If the number of generations of a moving load
are altered within the editor, the program may hang
when one returns from the editor to the GUI.
- When transferring a finite element model from
"Structure Wizard" to the STAAD.Pro GUI, in the
mini-window where the finite element model is displayed
for Reference Point purposes, the model appears
scrambled.
- In the modelling mode - Design page - Design
Parameters tab - the values and unit displayed as
default for items such as FYLD, FU, LY, etc. are
not consistent in terms of units with the current
active units. As a result, when these parameters
are assigned to members, an incorrect value will
be assigned.
- If members on which temperature loads have been
assigned are deleted, the loading data on those
members is not deleted.
- Under certain circumstances, if a file containing
GROUP commands (START GROUP DEFINITION .. END GROUP
DEFINITION) is opened, the program may report those
data as erroneous.
- For Aluminum sections, the section properties
displayed in the View - Tables - Section Properties
facility are not adjusted correctly for the units
shown. However, this error does not have any effect
on the analysis. It is merely a reporting error.
- If copies of a member are created using the Translational
Repeat feature, the Truss attribute if present on
the parent member is not assigned to the newly created
members.
- In the View Options dialog box, the ANGLE text
option for Beam labels, Plate labels and Solid labels
is not being saved.
- When a member is split using the Geometry - Split
Beam facility, member offsets of the original beam
are not correctly assigned to the constituent beams.
- The orientation of single angles is presently
not drawn correctly. (This feature is accessed from
View - Structure Diagrams - Labels - Beam Orientation).
C. The following is a
list of known errors in the Graphical Interface, at
the time of release of STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005
- If steel design is performed per the American
LRFD code, the values reported in
Query - Steel Design
are wrong.
- MATERIAL tags may fail to get assigned to some
members in this scenario.
Create and assign material tags to some
members.
Enter the editor.
Return to the GUI and assign material tags to some
more members.
- When a portion of the structure if magnified using
the Zoom Window facility, the entities in that view
may be plotted beyond the margins if they are plotted
using the Print Current View facility.
- The Shear-Bending diagram in the Query option
isn't drawn correctly when the following 2 conditions
are prevalent in a file.
a) INACTIVE MEMBER command is used.
b) Member loads or the SELFWEIGHT loads are applied
on the inactive member(s).
- It is presently not possible to print the results
displayed in the tables of the Envelope tab of the
Beam-Forces page in the Post-processing mode.
- On some systems running Windows 98, the print
facility does not work for any of the tabs except
the one called "Shear Bending".
- The Translational Repeat feature of the Geometry
menu can take a significant amount of time to complete
execution for large structures.
- REPEAT commands for generation of joint coordinates
and member incidences may not be processed correctly
by the STAAD.Pro GUI. If an input file containing
such commands is opened, the program may report
that several joints or members do not exist.
- For PRINT commands without an accompanying list
(such as as PRINT MEMBER FORCES or PRINT SUPPORT
REACTIONS), the Highlight Assigned Geometry feature
of the Tree Control View fails to highlight the
associated components on the drawing.
- If a member has properties which are defined through
a user table GENERAL section, the stress values
reported in the Post-processing mode in the Beam-Stress
table for that member may not be correct.
- If the item "Beam Max Forces by Property" is included
in the report, that quantity cannot be printed.
A message "There is no data of this type- Analysis
results are not available" will appear instead.
- In plotting the plate stress contour, the units
for QX and QY in the plate stress index are displayed
incorrectly.
- If multiple units are used within an existing
input file, the load values displayed in the data
area on the right hand side of the screen may be
erroneous. This is only a reporting error. It does
not affect the results of the analysis.
- If the "SET Z UP" command is specified, the member
property values displayed in the Properties window
of member query are incorrect.
D. The following errors
have been rectified in the analysis and design engine
since STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1003
- Master/Slave. The master may not have any pinned
or fixed directions, however springs are OK. Slave
joints may not be connected to support joints that
have any pinned or fixed directions, however springs
are OK. Non-slave directions at slave joints may not
have any pinned or fixed directions, however springs
are OK.
Workaround: Use stiff spring supports
rather than pinned/fixed support directions; and/or
split members between supports and master/slave joints.
- Member Loads - Linear. If the linear load changes
sign from one end to the other, the load distribution
used is incorrect.
Workaround: Use Trapezoidal load.
Or, user must obtain STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Tapered Members. Section displacements are incorrect.
May be very large.
Workaround: Only view joint displacements
in GUI.
- Memory Block Overflow. This message occurs when
the disk space available on C: is low at the beginning
of an analysis. STAAD reduces the internal memory
that it will use. Sometimes that memory is not enough
to complete the analysis. However there may actually
be plenty of memory on other drives that STAAD has
failed to consider in this message. This is especially
true when virtual memory is configured to span drives
and TEMP memory is directed to other drives and the
STAAD input is on another drive. This problem is more
likely to occur on NT4 systems.
Workaround: Try to have at least
200+ MB available on C: even if the input data is
on another drive. Updated version has a warning note
only without reducing the memory used.
- Plate Stresses in Response Spectrum. The modal
stresses are factored by erroneous numbers.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- __MASS.TXT file. The Joint number and/or data is
incorrect and sometimes results in a memory reference
abort.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Natural Frequencies. For some models with some
values of CUT OFF MODES, the sub-space iteration will
stop with a "J3" message from the Jacobi iteration
routine.
Workaround: Add/subtract 2 to 5
to/from the CUT OFF MODES value. Next version will
alter the first iteration logic.
- Missing Mass procedure There is an abort due to
record length overflow. Also there should have been
a divide of the participation factor by the Generalized
Modal Weight.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Six digit Joint and Member/element number In some
cases the number is truncated to 5 digits and would
change the joint loaded. In other instances asterisks
are printed instead of the number.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Composite I-Beams and I Beams with Cover Plates.
The Izz and Ixx values corrected to properly account
for the concrete and cover plates..
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Composite and Tube Sections. In some areas of STAAD,
the Tube section logic was entered when the section
was a Composite.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Logarithmic Interpolation. In some cases, zero
was assumed as spectrum acceleration.
Workaround: None or use Linear.
User must obtain STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005 to use
LOG.
- SOLID Elements. Solid Elements do not have results
calculated for Time History or Spectrum cases. However
the modal stresses for the highest frequency mode
was inadvertently output instead of all zeroes.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Repeat Load. Member thermal with second axis bending
was formatted incorrectly.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Displacements. For a model containing solid elements
and response spectrum load cases, displacements of
the Spectrum load cases are overwritten.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Member Tension. During the iterative analysis phase,
the tension in members is calculated from end joint
displacements and applied Thermal or Strain loads.
The effect on tension in the member due to selfweight
or pre or post tension or member loads is ignored.
The selfweight occurs frequently and in some cases
is enough to put a tension only member into compression
at one end when member forces are printed and for
code checking where L/R exceeded can occur. Build
1005 will evaluate L/R exceeded at mid-span where
selfweight effects are zero.
Workaround: Set density to zero
on members that are printed as compressive even though
member tension iterations have converged or set "MAIN"
parameter to ignore the KL/r check. Otherwise, user
must obtain STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Spring Tension/Compression. Program is using an
equation list that was not updated to reflect the
joint reordering for minimum bandwidth. So except
for models that were not renumbered, the results will
be erroneous.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Spring Tension/Compression. After a CHANGE command,
if more than one command of this type is entered,
then only the last was being used in the subsequent
PERFORM ANALYSIS.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- Member Tension/Compression. After a CHANGE command,
if more than one command of this type is entered,
then only the last was being used in the subsequent
PERFORM ANALYSIS.
Workaround: None. User must obtain
STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- User Table Units. If a User table was in the input
stream and a UNITS command was within it, the UNITS
command would apply only to that table. The next User
table would revert back to the units in effect at
the START USER TABLE command. The next build will
make a UNITS command in the input file the Units for
all remaining input until next UNITS command in the
input file. Note that UNITS commands in auxiliary
files will not affect the units in effect in the input
file commands.
Workaround: Enter a UNITS in every table.
E. Warning List for the
Analysis Engine for STAAD.Pro 2001 Build 1005.
- In-Plane (membrane) Plate Instability. This is
not an error but is in the nature of the formulation
of the in-plane (FX, FZ, MY) portion of the plate
stiffness matrix. A regular, flat assemblage of plates
that has limited support (say pinned at corners),
has some free edges without members, and no members/elements
normal to the plane; may have one instability warning
printed (usually in the element's local MY direction).
The instability is a deformation pattern where all
local MY deformations are equal. STAAD will automatically
suppress this deformation (a.k.a. Spurious mode) by
applying a very weak rotational spring in the appropriate
direction. If no unusual displacements, reactions,
or stresses and the static check is in balance, then
you can safely ignore the instability and its correction.
F. List of improvements
for the Analysis & Design engines since STAAD.Pro
2001 Build 1003.
- Load Case Limit. Limit increased from 500 to
1000.
- Multi-linear Spring. More than 1 load case permitted
if each has CHANGE command and a PERFORM ANALYSIS
command. SET NL command required as well.
- Elastic Mat command. PRINT specifier added to
select printing of the influence area of the support
joints created.
- ADLPIPE command. This command has been added
for testing, but not for release. With this command
and 6 unit load cases at a single joint, Staad
computes a 6x6 stiffness matrix relating the joint
to the supports. This matrix will be imported
to ADLPIPE as a 6x6 matrix support spring. This
will more accurately reflect the 3D stiffness
of the support structure.
- Data Checking- Data order. Check if coordinates,
mesh, and incidence data are in proper order.
- Data Checking- Moving Load. Check if moving
load component is in the X-Z span of the structure.
Program cannot detect if load is on or between
members as is required. If not, the applied loading
will not have the correct center of force.
- Member Cable command. Command changed to allow
the TENSION specifier to be omitted if zero tension
is desired.
- LRFD. Shear Capacity error message changed to
print member number and to indicate whether the
error is really that the program does not compute
the shear capacity for that member section type.
- PLOT and DRAW Commands have been restored for
users wishing to run files created from older
versions of STAAD. However, support and maintenance
of these features will be minimal.
- Integrity Check. Select this option if inactivating
joints and members will result in 2 or more disconnected
structures.
- Matrix Assembly. Error message added if master/slave
joints being connected by members/elements to
a support has caused an assembly error.
- PDELTA Anaysis. Changed to double precision
for improved accuracy.
- Disk Space. Low initial Disk Space condition
changed from error to a warning. The message could
be irrelevant depending on the number of drives
and where virtual memory and scratch files are
allocated.
- Data Checking- Mesh Command. Check for N1 or
N2 greater than 20 has been added.
- Repeat Load. Plate Trapezoidal pressure loads
can now be factored.
- Moving Load. Allow hyphen continuation at the
end of Loads input lines and at the end of Distance
input lines to allow a means to enter up to 50
axles.
- Spectrum Spectra Periods Allow spectra input
to be in descending period order. Also added a
check to ensure data is in ascending or descending
order.
- Spectrum Load Case Combination. Make the factoring
of member end joint loads either by +1.0 or -1.0
a user option (before combining spectrum member
loads with static member loads). Default will
be +1.0 (same as 1998 versions and earlier). Spro2000
and Spro2001 Build 1003/1004 used -1.0.
- Z-up Shear Area Allow Z-up option to apply to
the calculation of shear area.
G. Changes made in
the Analysis and Design engine which can cause results
to differ from previous versions of STAAD/Pro, STAAD.Pro
2001 Builds 1003-1004, and STAAD-III
- For the AISC ASD code, default value of Fu (Ultimate
tensile strength of steel) is changed to 58 ksi
from the previous default of 60 ksi for steel
which has an yield strength less than 40 ksi.
- For load combinations involving response spectrum,
the sign of the forces at the end of the member
for the spectrum load component will no longer
be treated as negative. Please refer to Item 18
above in the list of impreovements to the engine.
- For the AISC ASD code, slenderness check for
truss members and tension-only/compression only
members will be performed based on the state of
the stress (compressive/tensile) at the mid-point
of the members and not at the start node.
- Starting with Build 1005, regardless of what
the values of MX and MY on an concrete element
are, the reinforcement provided will always be
checked against minimum reinforcement condition
(temperature and shrinkage). In older builds,
if the absolute value of moment was below 0.005
kip-in/in, minimum reinforcement was not provided.
What's New in STAAD.Pro
2001, Build 1004?
A. General
B. STAAD Analysis and Design
A. General
Network and corporate license versions of STAAD.Pro
2001 have been released through this build.
B. STAAD Analysis and Design
The following errors have been rectified in the
analysis and design engine.
- For composite sections (I shaped beams with
a concrete slab on top), selweight is not calculated
correctly in response to the command "SELFWEIGHT
n -1" where "n" specified X, Y and Z directions.
- For concrete design, if clear cover specification
using the parameter CLEAR runs into multiple lines
of data, the value may not be taken into consideration
during concrete column design. The default value
may be used instead.
STAAD.Pro 2001 Software
Release Report - Build 1003
The following features have been added/improved
to the analysis and design facilities:
| Release Item |
Description |
Analysis and Design Engine
|
| Spring Tension/Spring Compression |
Define supports as unidirectional
- tension-only/compression only |
| Member Offsets |
Define member offsets in local
axis system |
| Material Damping |
Add damping ratio along with
other material properties like E, Density,
etc. |
| Member Reference Joint |
Define member orientation using
coordinates of existing joints |
| Modal Damping |
|
| Enforced Displacements |
Support displacement loading
now available with plates and solids |
| Master-Slave |
Enhanced facility for modeling
specialized linkages |
| Response Spectrum |
Enhancements, such as Missing
Mass, ASCE and TEN percent combinations, and
other improvements. |
| Miscellaneous Enhancements to
Analysis Engine |
Improvements and enhancements
to group definition, new cross section types
for member properties, I-beam warping end
restraint, member tension and member compression,
inclined supports, and several more. |
Graphical User Interface
|
| Background color setting |
Option to set background color |
| Adding Text to Graphical Windows |
Add comments and titles to plots |
| Display of moving loads |
Display loads generated using
the Moving Load generation facility |
| Miscellaneous enhancements to
GUI |
Plotting and annotating axial
force diagrams, nodal displacements, plots
of velocity and acceleration vs. time, automatic
copy of member attributes, and more |
Interface with STAAD.etc
|
| More components linked with
STAAD.etc |
Interface added to access 3
modules. Design rectangular footings, base
plates and connections using the link between
STAAD.Pro and STAAD.etc |
What's New in STAAD.Pro
2001, Build 1003?
A. Graphical Interface
B. STAAD Analysis and Design
A. Graphical Interface
The following features have been added/improved
to the analysis and design facilities.
Please refer to the
STAAD.Pro 2001 software release report for
a detailed list of these features.
The following errors have been rectified in the
Graphical Interface.
- When a STAAD file, containing several comment
statements at the beginning of the file before
the
STAAD ...
command is specified, is opened, the program may
crash.
- When a member is split using the Geometry -
Split Beam facility in the GUI, loads on the original
beam do not get automatically assigned to the
component beams.
- The bending moment diagram plotted in the Query
facility may be erroneous if a) there is a distributed
or concentrated loading on the member b) the Base
Unit system is Metric (File menu - Configure -
Base Unit - Metric)
- Error in the input for steel design parameters
when Group names are used can
lead to a crash. For example,
Erroneous input - KY 0.5 MEMB_RT1
Correct input should have had a blank space between
MEMB and _RT1
- If an input file contains ELEMENT INCIDENCES
commands in addition to element
mesh generation commands (DEFINE MESH + GENERATE
ELEMENT), is opened in STAADPRO,
and the file is then saved from the GUI, element
incidences are written twice into the saved input
file.
- If an input file containing multiple instances
of commands such as JOINT COORDINATES,
MEMBER INCIDENCES, ELEMENT INCIDENCES, etc. is
opened in STAADPRO, and the file is then saved
from the GUI, the associated data may be written
twice into the
saved input file.
- If data is provided in the following sequence,
the values written into the input file for the
plate for the material constants Poisson, Density
and Alpha will be the same as that for the beam
members.
Description of the sequence :
- Create a structure whose geometry consists
of beams and plates.
- Select the beams.
- Assign them cross sections from the built-in
steel tables. Make sure that the
Material field is checked and set to the default,
which is Steel.
Select the Plates. Assign a thickness for
the plates. While doing so, make sure
that the Material field is checked and set
to the default, which is Concrete.
- While assigning beta angles to members using
the Beta Angle button in the
General-Property page, the option "Assign to Selected
Beams" may not become active
even though members have been selected before
initiation of this process.
- An input file contains the command "CHECK CODE
MEMBER", but no member list has
been provided with this command. If this file
is opened in the GUI, it can lead
to a crash.
- LOAD cases with comment lines containing non-alphabetic
characters as in
LOAD COMB 28 DL+LIVE LO+LOC LO -X DIR+FGP +
or
LOAD 4 WIND LOAD -
may be flagged as errors when the file is opened.
- If an input file containing commands for TIME
ISTORY analysis is opened, the
program may hang.
- If an input file containing an error in element
load specification, as in,
4 TO 64 BY 4
(the load value has been omitted above, and the
command should have been similar to
4 TO 64 BY 4 PR -1.0)
is opened, the program may crash.
- In a structure containing several members, with
those members being classified
in various GROUPs, when properties are assigned
for these groups in succession,
some members may not be assigned any property
value. This situation appears to
exist only when the Base units are English. The
analysis engine will detect this and
terminate.
- If an input file is opened by double clicking
on that file from Windows Explorer, some of the
icons such as the load display icon may fail to
activate (stay muted).
- When a material is created using the General-Material-Create
option, the values for the
default materials (Steel, Concrete and Aluminum)
are not adjusted for the current unit
settings.
- Enter the Post-processing mode after a successful
analysis, but do not select any
load cases. Selecting some of the tabs in the
results grid such as the Envelope Tab
in the Node - Reactions page may lead to a crash.
- Open a file containing multiple steel section
profiles in a single PROFILE statement
as in
PROFILE W12 W14 W18 ALL
Save the file from the GUI. The multiple profiles
will be replaced by a single profile
as in
PROFILE W12 W12 W12 ALL
- Open any example file. Run the analysis. Go
to Mode-Post-processing. Select the Beam
page from left. Double on any member of the structure.
On the Query window, select
Shear-Bending. Close. Click on the editor.
A prompt to Save the file appears even though
no change has been made to any input data.
- Open any example file. From the left side of
the screen, click on the Analysis/Print page.
Then click on the editor button.
A prompt to Save the file appears even though
no change has been made to any input data.
- Open any example file. From the left side of
the screen, click on the Design page.
From the File menu, select Close.
A prompt to Save the file appears even though
no change has been made to any input data.
- In the Commands - Support Specifications menu,
for the option "Inclined",
the focus in the corresponding dialog box is on
the "Foundation" page instead
of the "Inclined" page.
- In the Commands - Support Specifications menu,
for the option "Foundation",
the focus in the corresponding dialog box is on
the "Multilinear Spring" page instead
of the "Foundation" page.
- In the Commands - Support Specifications menu,
there is no option for "Multilinear Spring".
- The Apply button does not work for File - Configure
- Error File Format.
- When a member is split using the Geometry -
Split Beam facility, the material constants
of the original member are not assigned to all
of the constituent members.
- When member properties are specified using the
PRISMATIC attribute, and some but not all required
properties are specified, as in,
1 PRI AX 40448. AY 19448. AZ 21000. YD 600. ZD
750. ZB 750.
(notice that moment of inertia values are not
provided)
the stress values reported in the Beam - Stresses
page in the Post-processing mode will
not include any bending stresses.
- For I shaped members which are very nearly vertical,
(the tilt with respect to the
vertical axis is extremely small), the beam orientation
is not drawn correctly. (This
feature is accessed from View - Structure Diagrams
- Labels - Beam Orientation).
The following is a list of known errors in the
Graphical Interface, at the time of release of STAAD.Pro
2001 Build 1003
- If steel design is performed per the American
LRFD code, the values reported in
Query - Steel Design
are wrong.
- MATERIAL tags may fail to get assigned to some
members in this scenario.
Create and assign material tags to some members.
Enter the editor.
Return to the GUI and assign material tags to
some more members.
- When a portion of the structure if magnified
using the Zoom Window facility, the
entities in that view may be plotted beyond the
margins if they are plotted using the
Print Current View facility.
- The Shear-Bending diagram in the Query option
isn't drawn correctly when the following
2 conditions are prevalent in a file.
a) INACTIVE MEMBER command is used.
b) Member loads or the SELFWEIGHT loads are applied
on the inactive member(s).
- When a member is split using the Geometry -
Split Beam facility, member offsets of the
original beam are not correctly assigned to the
constituent beams.
- It is presently not possible to print the results
displayed in the tables of the Envelope tab of
the Beam-Forces page in the Post-processing mode.
- For Aluminum sections, the section properties
displayed in the View - Tables - Section
Properties facility are not adjusted correctly
for the units shown. However, this error
does not have any effect on the analysis. It is
merely a reporting error.
- On some systems running Windows 98, the print
facility does not work for any of the tabs
except the one called "Shear Bending".
- The orientation of single angles is presently
not drawn correctly. (This feature is
accessed from View - Structure Diagrams - Labels
- Beam Orientation).
- The Translational Repeat feature of the Geometry
menu can take a significant amount of
time to complete execution for large structures.
- REPEAT commands for generation of joint coordinates
and member incidences may not be
processed correctly by the STAAD.Pro GUI. If an
input file containing such commands is
opened, the program may report that several joints
or members do not exist.
- For PRINT commands without an accompanying list
(such as as PRINT MEMBER FORCES or PRINT
SUPPORT REACTIONS), the Highlight Assigned Geometry
feature of the Tree Control View
fails to highlight the associated components on
the drawing.
- If a member has properties which are defined
through a user table GENERAL section, the
stress values reported in the Post-processing
mode in the Beam-Stress table for that
member are not correct.
B. STAAD Analysis and Design
The following features have been added/improved
to the analysis and design facilities.
Please refer to the
STAAD.Pro 2001 software release report for
a detailed list of these features.
The following errors have been rectified in the
analysis and design facilities.
Please refer to the STAAD.Pro 2001 software
release report for a detailed list of these corrections.
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