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I-35W Minnesota Bridge Inspection Report [opinion]
me | today | me

Posted on 08/09/2007 6:32:29 PM PDT by jim_trent

I just received a copy of the last bridge inspection report on the bridge that collapsed in Minnesota last week. While there is no smoking gun, it points to MANY possible failure points. Where I am coming from is this: I am a Certified FHWA bridge inspector and have additional training in fracture critical bridges (which this bridge was). I am mainly concentrating on the center section, since that is where the failure started.

The report was dated June 2006. It is 50 pages long. Interestingly, it was NOT done by a private engineering firm (like mine) while under contract to the MNDOT. MNDOT did their own inspection for their own people to review. The bridge had been inspected yearly back to 1996 and every two years before that to 1988. There was no Federal requirement for bridge inspections before that.

Although I have read elsewhere that the engineers supposedly had used “exclamation points” in their report to emphasize the importance of what they were saying, I found none in this report. It recommended yearly inspections, some small repairs, and nothing else. At most, there was a weak recommendation that “the eventual replacement of the entire structure would be preferable” (to the repairs listed). The word “eventual” does not denote any particular urgency to me.

It does list some things that should have alerted engineers to the problems, but nothing was evidently passed on higher (to the politicians that control the purse strings). For example, it says about the Main Truss Members, “The truss members have numerous poor weld details.” Then it lists numerous cracks at the ends of tack welds, at internal diaphragms that did not have outer stiffeners along the web, welding tabs left in place, plug welds, etc. These are all VERY bad when it comes to fatigue cracking.

But the worst problem was rust. There are about 20 pages of color photos, mostly of badly corroded details. There were some places that there were actually holes rusted through the metal. A combination of fatigue cracks and corrosion is death for any structure. Some of the statements are as follows: “Pack rust is forming between the connection plates.” “The floor beam trusses below stringer joints have section loss, severe flaking rust.” “Truss bottom chord gusset plate has section loss, flaking & pack rust.” “Sway bracing has severe pitting and a 3” x 8” hole due to rust.“ “Some areas (of the trusses) have section loss with holes due to rust.“ No use repeating any more. From the pictures, this is worse than any bridge I have personally inspected. The deicing system was installed in 1999, which could have only made the situation worse. Some of the floor drains dropped directly onto the truss and the corrosion is even worse there.

In addition, there was vertical and horizontal movement at several support locations. Some of the gusset plates were bent. Some had shed bolts (there were empty holes where bolts had been originally), probably from a combination of rust and force from shifting. Just a few inches shift, but that can induce large, unplanned forces into the bridge before a single vehicle drives over it. About half of the expansion joints were non-functional, too. This alone would not cause failure, but it cannot help.

They say that they remove the “plastic pigeon screens” every other year to check the inside of the trusses. They were put on because of the buildup of bird crap inside the box trusses several years ago. There was nothing said about cleaning it out so a thorough inspection could be made. A quick look-see into an uncleaned box could hide a lot. Also, this means that the yearly reports could not be as thorough as they should have been, considering the condition of the bridge.

In the back of the report are several drawings of the truss with the type of stress in each member. About 1/3 of the lower chords were always in compression. About 1/3 were in tension all the time. And about 1/3 reversed stress (went from compression to tension as a vehicle traveled over the bridge). At least that part of the bridge was well designed. The top chords were about 1/4 in compression. About 1/2 in tension. The remaining 1/4 reversed stress. The members between the top and bottom chords were alternately compression and tension.

My guess is that the failure was in probably in a member that reversed stress. That could be either top or bottom chord, but I am guessing bottom. It could have also been in a tension member. That does not narrow it down much. However, it looks like this bridge was an accident waiting to happen. If it did not fail in the spot that they finally decide it failed, it would have failed somewhere else -- and soon.

The fault was not totally with the inspectors. They accurately portrayed the bridge as a piece of crap (although I think they downplayed urgency more than they should have). I believe the fault is the people within MNDOT who got the report and sat on their hands.

BTW, the bridges built when this one was built had a combination of bad factors that made them “wear out” much sooner than planned. Three things came into being that all made fatigue a problem -- something that bridge designers never had to deal with before. One was the introduction of computers and hand calculators, which allowed more loads to be checked and the use of thinner material. Higher strength steel became widely available. A7 (30ksi) and A36 (36ksi) steel were used before that -- very ductile and low strength (thick), so that rust would not affect it as badly. 50ksi to 100ksi steel became readily available at about that time. That meant thinner material, again, more susceptible to rust. In addition, welding substantially replaced bolts and rivets. Along with bad welding details, fatigue cracks were inevitable. Although it came along a few years later, the adoption of deicing (either on trucks going over the bridge or mounted directly on the bridge) was also bad. “Stress-corrosion” cracking is what did this bridge in.


TOPICS: Extended News; US: Minnesota; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: 35w; bridgecollapse
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To: The Mayor
Well then, look at this one... This is the NY State Thruway Authority at work protecting our safety...
Do you see that blue collar near the top of the pier on the concrete pier/leg nearest to us - someone HAS been working to 'protect our safety'.

It does look like some work is going to be required near the base of that pier sometime in the future though ...

101 posted on 08/14/2007 7:04:30 PM PDT by _Jim (Highly recommended book on the Kennedy assassination - Posner: "Case Closed")
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To: _Jim

Sure do, have you seen the rest of the pictures?
I took more tonight and the more I see, the worse it gets.


102 posted on 08/14/2007 7:20:00 PM PDT by The Mayor ( A man's heart plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps.—Proverbs 16:9)
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To: jeffers

Well, here’s something I’d like to ask you. Where is the main truss that was sitting on the east side of pier 6 ? We can see a large section of intact truss that sat on the west side of pier 6 ( evidently ) but there is no sign of the corresponding east side. Where is it? I would have to guess it is under the roadway which is collapsed to the ground east of the eastern pier. I would love to be there when they raise the concrete roadway, just to see what’s under it.

BTW, isn’t it a little weird that they want to reassemble the bridge? All the parts are readily identifiable, I think, and the question is where did they end up, not where did they start out. I think you indicated the same thing when you talked about divers identifying structural members.


103 posted on 08/14/2007 7:31:12 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: jim_trent; sionnsar; theDentist; VRWCmember
Sobering.

But who (how many ?) at MINN DOT will actually face the consequences? Nameless bureaucrats remain in place all too often.

104 posted on 08/14/2007 7:35:50 PM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but Hillary's ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: dr_lew

In some of the imagery, that’s been posted in other threads, you can see what might be the kingpost from the pier 6 east truss, buckled and flattened against the SE side of the pier. Poor camera angles and grainy enlargements make it hard to tell for sure, that might be something else.

If that is the SE kingpost, there’s a shard of another box beam attached to it that may be the root of the east truss span 7 bottom chord.

You can also see a steel box beam, about where’d you expect to find the top chord of the span 7 east truss near pier 6, but it appears to be too small to me. In the pictures, the west truss top chord is visible, and shows the same width, flat side on to the camera, as this other one does, diagonal to the camera, such that you can see three of its corners. Since the unidentified beam is closer to the camera, is should look thicker than the known top chord box beam, but it doesn’t.

Five possibilities:

1. We see what we think we see. The bottom chord then, is probably folded up under the debris of the span 7 pier 6 west truss, or possibly in the river. If the east pier came apart at or just north of pier six, this is a logical arrangement for the debris.

2. The span 7 east truss panels that used to be at and just north of pier 6 are in the water, probably in pieces. If the east pier initially failed a panel or two north of pier six, this is a logical arrangement for the debris. If so, they can probably yield a lot of information about the collapse.

3. The span 7 east truss panels that used to be at and just north of pier 6 are now under the northbound deck pavement and floor truss assemblies. If this is the case, it’s logical to look hard at the sway bracing between the trusses at pier 6, because both trusses fell eastward, early in the collapse sequence. I’d also want to look back at the span 5 crossbeam/endbeam/rocker bearing assemblies. I think the span 8 trusses failed when relieved of the counterbalancing cantilever weight of span 7. While they rotated, shoreward, about pier 7, as a unit, an early failure in the southside approach span could have produced similar damage, or, induced similar damage with a rotational component which rocked the pier 6 truss panels back towards the shore, and also to the east.

4.The span 7 east truss panels that used to be at and just north of pier 6 are now under the southbound deck pavement. This would be more likely if the SE kingpost buckled and rotated shoreward. Instead of leaning to the east, it would have dropped more nearly vertical. Both road decks could be carried east since the floor trusses were single transverse units that carried both northbound and southbound lanes.

5. None of the above.

Like you, I’d really like to know for sure where the east pier 6 truss panels came to rest. If not critically involved in the failure sequence, maybe even the trigger for the collapse, knowing where they ended up could permit analysis of the stresses that failed them, which in turn could point towards the first member that failed.


105 posted on 08/15/2007 5:10:57 AM PDT by jeffers
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To: jeffers

Thanks for the comments, Jeffers.

Here’s more food for thought. I haven’t seen these issues discussed.
Look at the big photo at http://fullyarticulated.typepad.com/sprawledout/2007/08/article-are-the.html (Sorry about the political content, but it’s a great photo) and I notice 3 things.

1. South landside span (the one that twisted), the 2 southbound lanes are folded in so as to be almost vertical. A tighter fold than anywhere else in the main bridge system. Why did they fold so vigorously, especially when the main truss that they were on top of seems to have become completely separated? If it had folded down on both sides of the main truss, it would have pinched it, and the main truss wouldn’t be lying down on the riverbank all casual-like.

2. No cars on the SB lanes or on the ground on the twisted south landside span. You’d think if there were cars on that span when it collapsed that you’d see them on the ground. And there was the schoolbus and semi truck just ahead of them, which you’d normally get cars queing behind. If the main span fell first, thes cars would have gotten off without any additional cars coming on. No cars visible in http://www.flickr.com/photos/thecurseofbrian/981931600/in/set-72157601159020144/ either. Maybe there just weren’t any cars, the traffic cam video should show this.

3. The west truss is lying horizontally on the pier, and it’s in pretty good shape. It’s still pretty much all in plane, it has a couple web members all intact, in fact, it’s the only non-mangled piece of the whole supertructure.

Another shot of the relative good condition of the west truss over the south pier http://www.flickr.com/photos/s4xton/980394803/in/set-72157601157770382/

and 2 other things:
* South approach girder spans failed due to compression—they got shoved back away from the river. South side http://www.flickr.com/photos/s4xton/980437381/in/set-72157601157770382/ and north side was plainly tugged, as one span even got tugged off its foundations a couple spans back from the RR tracks. (Though it looks like the south spans slid backwards after it kinked on the pier, so it could be a post-collapse feature (slipped on the way down). In any case, the south side girder span that fell on the Tastee truck cab seems to have fallen in a different sort of way than the north side approach girder span that fell on the train cars.

* High survivorship is really remarkable. Lots of folks dropped 105’ into the river and walked away from it. 3 of the folks that died did so after they fell—one drowned rescuing people, one had a lampost hit them, one had a sign land on their car. And the truck driver had the fire to contend with.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/s4xton/980407219/in/set-72157601157770382/ this pic shows the plastic pylons still rightside up...

*************

So, seems to me the south approach cantilever arm (from pier 5 to 6, I think) with the twisted roadway almost has to be where it started. Everything else failed symetrically across a cross-section of the deck. The cars are all where they were on the road, so the main span didn’t twist on its way down to the river.

And it was just good luck that there weren’t cars going south at that instant in time, or they’re hidden under the bridge in the one photo. But with a sideways fall seems like you’d have lots of fatalities.

The intact west-side truss suggests that it simply fell down, didn’t fail at all, wasn’t crushed.

So somehow the main deck over the river didnt get twisted, even though the underlying truss did...

Anyhow, more stuff for everyone to think about, piece together.

Kwuntongchai


106 posted on 08/15/2007 5:55:16 AM PDT by kwuntongchai
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To: jeffers

http://www.flickr.com/photos/s4xton/sets/72157601157770382/

If you haven’t seen this set, you might be able to recognize some bits, especially the close up of that east pier.


107 posted on 08/15/2007 6:06:42 AM PDT by kwuntongchai
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To: jeffers; jim_trent
It is important to draw a distinction between problems that need attention, and problems that may indicate imminent structural failure.

Another engineer brought my attention to this. I thought it was unusual but he said.

Your picture South Bridge16 is very concerning to me. Where did you take that picture. It appears as thought the bearing that allows the bridge to thermally expand/contract has been replaced by a few boards? These bearings allow the steel to expand and contract and reduce stress in the bridge. If they are locked solid or do not function, you could see some very high local stresses in the bridge that were not designed for. That scares me a lot more than the number of vehicles that cross the bridge every day.

So last night I went down to the base of the bridge and took more pictures and found Eight (8) places where the bearing has been removed and steel plates put in their place. Can I bother you two to give me a quick opinion on this. All of a sudden the thruway authority is all over these bridges inspecting them. I will be curious as to their findings.



More pics here.

108 posted on 08/15/2007 6:14:06 AM PDT by The Mayor ( A man's heart plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps.—Proverbs 16:9)
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Bump!


109 posted on 08/15/2007 6:18:35 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: Robert A. Cook, PE

Thank you for the ping!


110 posted on 08/15/2007 8:00:43 AM PDT by sionnsar (trad-anglican.faithweb.com |Iran Azadi| 5yst3m 0wn3d - it's N0t Y0ur5 (SONY) | UN: Useless Nations)
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To: The Mayor

Pile it higher, wedge it deeper.


111 posted on 08/15/2007 8:03:27 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but Hillary's ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: The Mayor

Actually, that is not at all unusual. As I have mentioned several times, EVERY bridge I have ever inspected (or supervised the inspection of) has expansion joints that don’t work or don’t work well. That alone is not the reason for the failure. It may have contributed to the failure (the straw that broke the bridges back), but it did not do it alone.

There have been many attempts to design expansion joints that work, but to my knowledge, none have succeeded. What he sees there is not “boards”. They would crush in an instant. It looks from the photos that they are stainless-steel sliding plates (they don’t rust very fast and allow movement longer).

The oldest expansion joints I have seen are rockers on really OLD bridges. They were heavy, expensive, cast steel sections of a wheel. Later, they cut down the rockers to just a small part of a very large circle. The problems with both of these is that they concentrate the load in a VERY small area. This area deforms plastically and doesn’t move after that.

Then they went to steel on steel flat-plates. They spread the load out further so the load per square inch was less. However, it rusted, even those that were galvanized. Next came the same thing in stainless steel. These last longer without rusting. There have been several attempts to use Teflon or other plastics, but the loads are too high — they extrude out too quickly.

The latest I have seen is a wideflange beam in the weak direction inside a corrugated metal tube to allow flex. I don’t know how they will do in the future, but nothing has worked very well so far.


112 posted on 08/15/2007 10:34:24 AM PDT by jim_trent
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To: jim_trent

Movie footage of the bridge under construction. Land-side cantilever arms were constructed first, it looks like they had temporary supports, suggesting that they aren’t designed to stand as a pier-to-pier truss. (and indeed the north main span demonstrated that pretty well)

http://www.mnhs.org/library/bridge/


113 posted on 08/16/2007 1:08:41 AM PDT by kwuntongchai
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To: kwuntongchai

Those are some good pictures. Thanks for posting the link. More on that later.

In answer to your questions:

1. The cantilever arms of the floor trusses (supporting the outer edges of the road deck) seem to have failed near universally across the length of the trussed spans.

This suggests to me that there was either less margin of safety in the design there, or else the bridge was subject to a powerful jerk in the vertical plane at some point in the failure process.

We can account for such a jerk when the main trusses, largely intact, hit the ground falling straight down. The cantilevered outer deck lanes just kept falling even after the fall of the main trusses was arrested by impact with the terrain underneath.

I don’t thing that applies to the area you describe, since the west truss fell over sideways, nearly intact. The folded roadway edges there suggests a powerful shock in the vertical plane, nefore the lean became pronounced, but accounting for this heads quickly into gray territory.

As always, “gray territory” in this bridge failure, for me, anyway, always comes down to a single question: “Initial main truss failure at the south end of span 7, or at the north end of what we’ll call, for lack of a better term, span 5.”

More on this later too.

2. Implied question, where are the cars? Answer, in the woods west of the bridge, between the northbound and southbound lanes, on the northbound lanes heading south, under the northbound lanes, or there weren’t any.

Or...

...hmmm, did you just imply a 64 dollar question?

If the center span, span 7 over the river, severed from span 6 very early in the failure, and span 6 survived for a few more seconds, the truck and bus may have been the last southbound cars that made it onto span 6 before span 7 went in the drink.

Interesting.

3. The pier 6 panel of the west truss is in pretty good shape. Members still attached in the panels immediately north and south suggest one of two things:

A. The pier 6 west king post rotated clockwise, as seen looking east from west of pier 6, prior to collapse to the east. Both the top chord and bottom chord of the panel just south of the pier 6 panel, of the west truss are bent “up” in relation to the trusses design oriantation. Both the top chord and bottom chord of the first panel north of the west trusses pier 6 panel are bent “down” in relation to the truss’s design orientation. The bottom chord is ripped half out of the connection gusset, which itself is mangled. When I say “ripped”, I mean the four sides of the box beam are no longer joined at the corners of the original box. Powerful stresses were imposed there.

The pier 6 west truss panel’s post collapse orientation also supports early rotation in the plane of the standing truss. The base of the kingpost now sits riverward of pier 6, at least one rocker plate from pier six now sits riverward of pier six, and the top of the SW kingpost sits shoreward of the bottom of the SW kingpost.

Such rotation implies a failure sequence similar to that seen on the north end of the bridge, at span 8. In fact, there are very many similarities between the post collapse visual appearance of the east truss at pier 7, and the west truss at pier 6, even though both trusses at pier 8 are still vertical. The pier 8 east truss has both top and bottom chord bent “up” at the next shoreward panel, and both remnants of the top and bottom chords bent “down” at the next riverward panel, just like the west truss at pier six, except now that truss is lying on it’s side.

This suggests the possibility that span 6 failed in a manner similar to span 8. We are reasonably confident in understanding the mechanics of the span 8 failure. From the video we see span 7 drop close to the camera, sever at the far end of span sevem, and see span 8 remain standing for several seconds before collapsing.

With the counterweight represented by span 7 missing from the cantilever calculation at pier 7, the center of span 8 sagged, drawing the kingpost tops at pier 7 and 8 together. Eventually, the midspan sag of span 8 was so great that both ends were dragged off their piers.

Did this happen on the south side too?

We see similar rotation at pier 6, but we also see that the centroid of mass and structure of the pier 6 west truss seems to have come to rest riverward of pier 6, while the span 8 mass ended up shoreward of pier 8.

Let’s hold there for a minute and look at the other possible reasons why the top and bottom chords adjacent to the pier 6 west truss panel might be bent the way they are.

B. If span 7 ripped apart just north of pier 6, it would begin falling immediately thereafter. Nothing left to support it and the pier 8 cantilever could never reach that far south. Members still partially attached at the sever point would be pulled downward by the falling portion of span 7.

That can account for the bending we see in the west truss, one panel north of pier 6.

Again, with the span 7 counterweight removed, the shoreward cantilever is disturbed, this time at pier 6, and affecting span 5. Span 5 sags in the middle similar to span 8, but in this case, the riverward ends of the trusses also fall over to the side. Why?

Clearly, because their transverse integrity, their ability to resist lateral forces, was compromised. The sway bracing between kingposts, and between vertical struts at every panel connection HAD TO fail before the trusses could fall over sideways.

How does this happen?

Two ways.

The SW kingpost buckles and rips loose from the sway bracing.

The SW kingpost topples, still straight along its length, ripping loose the sway bracing.

So....we have two mechanisms to account for what we see, both near equally plausible.

One, span 7 severs near pier 6, one truss, east or west, before the other, which follows quickly, but not instantaneausly. The removal of the span 7 counterweight causes span 6 to sag and then collapse.

Two, span 6 sags and collapses, removing the counterweight for span 7, which sags, severs, and as the pier 6 truss assemblied fail assymetrically, they lean east.

Wait a minute, who’s talking about a span 6 trigger?

Well, MnDOT, for one, indirectly anyway. The worst problem the bridge ever had was when the SE rocker bearing at the endbeam/croissbeam assembly froze, necessitating closure of the whole bridge, and jacking it up to repair it, back in 1986.

What is a crossbeam/endbeam/rocker bearing, anyway?

It’s another cantilever.

At the south end of span 6. (and the north end of span 8, but that’s not important now).

At the south end of span 6, the big steel trusses end, and the road deck is supported very differently. Instead of two large steel trusses spanning pier to pier, supporting crosswise (transverse) floor trusses, which in turn support longways (axial) steel beams which in turn support the road deck, we change over to concrete piers each supporting a wide array of axial steel beams and then the road deck, just like 95% of all the highway overpasses most drivers are very familiar with.

But the span5/span6 junction is special. There is a cantilever in play there. I’m going to simplify this a little bit to get the point across without drawings and three D models.

Assume span 6, the southernmost trussed span, extends well past its southern piers. It’s hanging out into space, south of the piers. Assume the weight of the south end of both trusses rest of a massive steel beam made up of cold rolled (not welded) pieces all bolted together, and that this beam rests on the span 6 piers, pier 5. Concrete piers holding up a huge beam, which hold up the trusses which then reach further south, just hanging in space.

With me so far?

Good, that massive steel beam is called the crossbeam.

Now, attach another massive steel beam to the ends of those trusses hanging out in space. This is called the endbeam. Now attach the north end of a normal highway overpass to the endbeam.

That’s the idea. If the span 6 trusses fail, so does the north end of span 5.

But it’s more complicated than that. You have the concept, but in reality, the crossbeam directly supports the main trusses, AND it directly supports the endbeam. There are axial beams running THROUGH there, and there are rocker bearings mounted on the crossbeam which actually support the endbeam.

Not necessary to understand exactly how, just the concept. Even I don’t know exactly how this all fits together, I haven’t pored over the engineering drawings. But the concept is easy, there is a cantilever over pier 5.

The north end of span 5 helps support the south end of span six, the first big truss span as you move north. The south end of sopan 6 helps support the north end of span 5.

They are co-dependant.

Fail one, the other soon follows.

Just like we saw onb the north end of the river. the main span failed, then span 8 failed, north of the river, a few seconds later.

Why is all this possibly critical?

Look at the pictures.

You WILL NOT SEE SPAN 5.

The southbound semi crashed into it, head on.

Span five came to rest near vertical, north end down, and the semi ran off the south end of span six, ran into the vertical concrete wall that was then span 5, and burst into flame.

More important yet, the north end of span 5 is UNDERNEATH the south end of span 6.

There is one photo I know of, showing two northbound SUVs resting on span 5, with their hoods crushed under span 6 and on fire. In the distant background, you can see the light from the fire caused by the southbound semi.

If the bridge failed at the south crossbeam/endbeam, dropping the north end of span 5, span 6 would have lost it’s cantilever. Span 6 would then sag in the middle, just like span 8 did. The north end of span 6 would rotate, top towards the shore, just like span 8 did.

If only one side of the crossbeam/endbeam failed early on, then only one of the span 6 main trusses would have lost it’s counterweight. If the east end of the crossbeam/endbeam failed first then the east truss of span 6 would sag earlier than the west truss of span six.

Both would sag quickly, because one truss was nowhere near strong enough to carry the whole bridge by itself, but when one sags even a little quicker than the other, now you have a transverse moment.

Now you have “lean”.

The lean we see in all the photos.

So, the trigger point of failure could have been...well...probability suggests one of three main places.

1. The SE kingpost crumples, either ripping out the swaybraces attaching it to the SW king, or because the sway braces failed first.

Mental exercise: stand two wooden children’s toy blocks, oh, a foot long, on end, six inches apart. Place two smaller blocks between the two horizontally, one midway up the tall blocks, the other between the tops of the two standing blocks. Wrap six feet of duct tape, horizontally around the horizontals and verticals, tying them to the uprights.

Now stand on it. Try to either crush one of the uprights, or make one of the uprights rip the duct tape and fall over sideways.

Hold that thought.

2. One side or the other of the south crossbeam/endbeam fails, dropping first the north end of span 5. Span 6, relieved of its cantilever counterbalance, sags midspan, rotating the pier 6 kingposts towards the shore at their tops. Span 7 severs just north of pier 6. Span 8, relieved of its counterweight, sags and fails as described earlier.

Mental exercise: stand four children’s blocks on end. Lay three blocks on top of these four “piers” to create three “spans” of bridge. Run one strip of duct tape end to end atop the spans.

Now, jump on the middle of one of the end spans, breaking it between piers.

The goal is to end up with the broken span underneath the middle span, and the far end span underneath the middle span. The middle connecting span has to fall LAST.

Hold that thought.

3. Span 7 fails just north of pier 6, one truss, east or west slightly before the other truss. Span 7 severs completely, both trusses, just north of pier 6. Both trusses at pier 6 are yanked northward, and span 6 loses its counterweight as soon as span seven breaks free. Span 6 sags, disturbing the crossbeam/endbeam assembly, actually pulling it apart, remember there’s only rocker bearings connecting the two, span five’s north end just rests atop span 6’s south end. The north end of span 5, along with the endbeam, drops, and span 6, still sagging, eventually fails like span 8 later did, as described earlier.

Mental exercise: create the same structure as in exercise 2, four piers, three spans, but this time, only duct tape two of the spans on top. Jump on the middle of the end span which IS connected to the middle span with duct tape, breaking it.

The objective is to break the end span and pull the middle span sideways towards the break, jerking the far middle span pier out from under the farthest endspan.

That’s easy to do.

The earlier two are harder to accomplish. The first one is near impossible. Crushing the kingpost, failing it in compression, is VERY hard to do. Your own intuition supports this, and engineering experience suggests very very few members fail in compression.

That’s why I favor initial failure in span 7, just north of pier 6. One truss or the other first, not simultaneausly.

That’s where I’ve been since 24 to 48 hours after the collapse, what, two weeks ago?

But it’s not conclusive.

Because option two, failure at the crossbeam/endbeam, slightly more difficult than option three, severing span 7 just north of pier 6, while less likely, is still plausible and because the north end of span 5 is UNDER the south end of span 6, at “the bottom of the pile”, meaning it failed early on.

For two weeks, I’ve been trying to decide, span 5 falling first, or span 7 falling first? A week ago, I decided there wasn’t enough visible in photos to be sure, but that span 7 severing was more likely than span 5. Span 5 falling first would be the tail wagging the dog.

It happens, but it’s usually the other way around.

Now, to wrap up, back to your new pictures.

I found a new member.

It’s a very large piece of steel.

Very large.

It could be the SE kingpost.

It’s big enough.

It’s in a strange place, and bad, bad things happened to it.

It could also be a top or bottom chord.

I’ve torn the images apart, downloaded tens of them at full res and those are SLOW on dialup.

I can’t tell.

It might be the SE kingpost.

It’s draped on the concrete wall at the river’s edge.

It’s a very large cross section box beam, more rectangular in cross section (like the SW kingpost), less square in cross section (like the top and bottom chords).

The key is the holes. Big ovals mean chords. Two slits mean kingposts or struts. Diagonal’s have two slits, but they are much smaller in cross section.

I can’t see the holes well enough to tell.

If it’s the SE kingpost, it’s a loooooong way from where it was before the bridge fell.

No matter what it is, it took a beating. One end of it is wrapped in a corkscrew spiral. The other end used to be in a gusset connection, you can see where it didn’t get painted last time around. The gusset was forcibly ripped off and is not visible.

It would take enormous force to twist a piece of steel that big like that. Twisting force. Rotational force. A moment. The only way I can think of to do that would be to fix one end, attach the other end to a huge bridge, and push the huge bridge over sideways.

Hmmmm....

That’s where I’m at right now.


114 posted on 08/16/2007 5:56:19 AM PDT by jeffers
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To: The Mayor

The bearing plates aren’t that scary. Like Jim says, where can they go?

That concrete scares me.

The only thing holding that pier together is the rebar inside. Or the steel beam inside.

The concrete is effectively shattered.

The steel is inside where we can’t see it.

But we know what’s happening to it.

It’s rusting and the rust is running out the cracks and down the outside of the pier.

How much steel is left?

That pier is supporting two spans of bridge.

The shattered concrete atop that pier is holding nothing.

The steel inside is all that’s holding up those spans.

How much steel is left?


115 posted on 08/16/2007 6:02:18 AM PDT by jeffers
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To: jeffers; jim_trent
Thank you, I am relieved a little. But that is because of your explanation of the steel plates. I was under the impression they were not allowing the bridge to give a little as designed, thus causing more stress to the bridge.

Almost all the columns look just like this and some worse. These have been a concern of mine for years and they have simply gotten worse as the thruway authority in NY is supposed to maintain these bridges using our toll money.

An over pass just up the thruway almost collapsed 2 years ago and they were ignoring ou until an investigative reporter finally blew them out by doing news reports and posting pictures of the corroded columns. This is what we finally got for a repair after the bridge fell 4 inches.

290 overpass


116 posted on 08/16/2007 6:55:05 AM PDT by The Mayor ( A man's heart plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps.—Proverbs 16:9)
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To: The Mayor

The spalling of concrete on the outside surface of columns and beams is not, in itself, a problem. It is a very strong warning, however. That means that major work will be needed in the near future and the local authority must add it into the repair schedule. If that is not done, it will get worse until it drops 4” (or a lot worse).

The outboard concrete is basically there to keep salt away from the rebar. It does not do a very good job. The salt works its way in, starts corroding the rebar, which expands the rebar (rust takes up a lot more room than unrusted steel) and forces off the outer surface of concrete (in other words, the concrete fails in tension and falls off). This is another result of the use of salt for anti-icing in the winter. The newer, coated rebar has other kinds of problems, but nevertheless, problems.

As long as the concrete inside the outer rebar cage is sound, that is not an immediate problem. However, ignoring it (like I am afraid is done more often than not) means that complete structural failure is coming — and probably faster than the local authority thinks.

We had an elevated portion of the interstate system that had spalling like this on most of the columns and a few beams. For repair, they blew off the rest of the outer concrete, then hooked up the rebar to some kind of electrical gizmo for a month. That was supposed to “passivate” the steel so that it would stop rusting. Then they sandblasted it, painted it, and slopped some extra concrete over the top of it to get it back to the origianl dimensions. It will be interesting to see if this fix lasts.

BTW, I have seen newspaper reports that the Minneapolis City Council is holding up selection of a bridge designer for the replacement bridge. They want a LOT of expensive doo-dads added to it and expect the Feds to pay. They will probably get it. It was a tragedy, you know. That seems to be more and more the tactic of the left.


117 posted on 08/16/2007 7:30:13 AM PDT by jim_trent
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To: The Mayor

I think the fix looks great.

If you’re on top of the bridge anyway.

The steel ought to hold it up, regardless of what the concrete does.

Wouldn’t want to be underneath next time that concrete gets lazy.

Even with a hard hat.


118 posted on 08/16/2007 7:39:59 AM PDT by jeffers
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To: jim_trent

After all the analysis has been done, I predict gravity will have played a crucial role in the collapse


119 posted on 08/16/2007 7:45:30 AM PDT by fso301
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To: jim_trent

You are an example of what make this the best site on the internet, even with politics laid aside.


120 posted on 08/16/2007 7:50:45 AM PDT by KC Burke (Men of intemperate minds can never be free...their passions forge their fetters.)
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