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Holes and Slots, Standard SizesFrom Draftsperson.netThis information applies to the American Steel Industry
Holes and SlotsStandard HolesStandard hole sizes for bolts are made 1/16-in. larger in diameter than the nominal size of the fastener body. This provides a certain amount of play in the holes, which compensates for small misalignments in hole location or assembly, and aids in the shop and field entry of fasteners. In the absence of approval by the engineer for use of other hole types, standard holes shall be used in high strength bolted connections. Oversize and Slotted HolesWhen approved by the engineer, oversize, short slotted holes or long slotted holes may be used subject to the following joint detail requirements:
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| Bolt Diameter |
Hole Dimensions | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Diameter |
Oversize Diameter |
Short Slot (Width x Length) |
Long Slot (Width x Length) |
|
| 1/2 | 9/16 | 5/8 | 9/16 x 11/16 | 9/16 x 1 1/16 |
| 5/8 | 11/16 | 13/16 | 11/16 x 7/8 | 11/16 x 1 9/16 |
| 3/4 | 13/16 | 15/16 | 13/16 x 1 | 13/16 x 1 7/8 |
| 7/8 | 15/16 | 1 1/16 | 15/16 x 1 1/8 | 15/16 x 2 3/16 |
| 1 | 1 1/16 | 1 1/4 | 1 1/16 x 1 5/16 | 1 1/16 x 2 1/2 |
| >= 1 1/8 | d + 1/16 | d + 5/16 | (d + 1/16) x (d + 3/8) | (d + 1/16) x (2.5 x d) |
Hole sizes for steel-to-steel structural connections are not the same as hole sizes for steel-to-concrete anchorage applications. In the case of steel-to-steel connections, the parts are made in a shop under good quality control, so standard holes (bolt diameter plus 1/16"), oversized holes (bolt diameter plus 3/16"), and short and long-slotted holes can be used quite successfully. However, the field placement of anchorage devices has long been subject to more permissive tolerances (and often, inaccuracies that exceed those tolerances anyway and may require consideration by the structural Engineer of Record).
AISC published Steel Design Guide Series 1, Column Base
Plates back in the early 1990s. At that time, it was recognized that the quality of foundation work was getting worse and worse. To allow the erector (and designer) greater latitude when possible, the permissible hole sizes in base plates were increased. These same larger hole sizes were included in the 2nd ed. LRFD Manual. The values there are maximums, not a required size. Smaller holes can be used if desired. Plate washers are generally required with these holes because ASTM F436 washers can collapse into the larger-sized holes, even under erection loads.
The larger hole sizes are primarily intended for the majority of base plates that transfer only axial compression from the column into the foundation. The anchor rods don't usually do much after erection in that case.
To allow for misplaced bolts, holes in base plates are oversized. The AISC Manual of Steel Construction recommends the following oversized hole diameters for each bolt diameter:
| Bolt Diameter | Hole Size |
|---|---|
| 3/4 | 1 5/16 |
| 7/8 | 1 9/16 |
| 1 | 1 13/16 |
| 1 1/4 | 2 1/16 |
| 1 1/2 | 2 5/16 |
| 1 3/4 | 2 3/4 |
| 2 | 3 1/4 |
| 2 1/2 | 3 3/4 |
AISC, Steel Design Guide Series 1, Column Base
Plates, suggests that using oversize holes meeting
these criteria may still not accommodate field variations
in anchor bolt placement and suggests adding
1/4 in. to the hole diameter listed. The guide recommends
using a heavy plate washer over the holes.
The AISC Structural Steel Educational Council cites
the following example: "If bolts are misplaced up to
1/2 inch, the oversized base plate holes normally
allow the base plate and column to be placed near or
on the column line. If the bolts are misplaced by
more than 1/2 inch, then corrective work is
required."
Based on AISC oversize holes, the AISC Structural Steel
Educational Council recommendations, and concrete
contractor anchor-bolt placement techniques, ASCC (American Society of Concrete Contractors)
concrete contractors recommend the following tolerance
for each bolt location:
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