Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: minus twice the size of weld
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:Design strength of fillet welds uses the effective throat over the effective length. End portions of fillet welds do not develop full throat due to start/stop craters and stress distribution, so a length reduction is applied.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:Standard practice takes the effective length as the actual length minus two times the weld size to discount the under-strength at the two ends. This gives a conservative net length participating at full capacity.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Identify reduction: two ends × (one size each).Compute effective length: Leff = Lactual − 2a.Use Leff in strength = throat * Leff * allowable stress.Verification / Alternative check:Code commentaries and steel design handbooks present the same reduction for isolated fillet weld segments.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:Subtracting one size underestimates the end effects; adding sizes is unconservative; taking full actual length ignores known end weaknesses.
Common Pitfalls:For overlapping or returned welds, details may restore some end capacity; however, unless detailed otherwise, the standard 2a reduction applies.
Final Answer:minus twice the size of weld
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