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Glulam Beam & Column Design Software

Design Glulam headers, girders, and columns to NDS 2018. Optimize 24F-V4, Southern Pine, and custom stress classes with automated Volume Factor ($C_V$) and Stability ($C_L$) checks.

The "Workhorse" of American Timber

Glue-Laminated Timber (Glulam) is the cornerstone of US mass timber, defined by the rigorous ANSI A190.1 manufacturing standard. From simple door headers to long-span roof trusses in Type IV construction, Glulam offers the strength of steel with the carbon benefits of wood.

The SPEC Toolbox Glulam Calculator is engineered for the American workflow. It automates the complex modification factors of the National Design Specification (NDS)—specifically the volume factor and beam stability—allowing you to specify standard layups (like 24F-1.8E) with complete confidence.

What This Calculator Does

This tool performs a complete Allowable Stress Design (ASD) analysis of Glulam members under gravity and wind loads. It verifies:

Bending Capacity (F’b): Checks positive and negative moment capacity, automatically applying the governing Volume Factor (CV) or Beam Stability Factor (CL).
Horizontal Shear (F’v): Verifies shear capacity at the critical section (distance “d” from support).
Bearing (F’c\perp): Checks compression perpendicular to grain at beam supports and concentrated load points.
Volume Factor (CV): The unique NDS check for Glulam. Unlike solid sawn lumber, Glulam strength is influenced by its total volume (Length\times × Width\times × Depth).
Deflection: Calculates immediate and long-term deflection using the NDS creep component (Kcr).

About : Glulam Design

Technical Guide: Navigating NDS 2018

1. Decoding the “Stress Classes”

US Glulam grades can be confusing “alphabet soup.” Our calculator simplifies the NDS Supplement Table 5A library:

  • 24F-1.8E / 24F-V4: The industry standard for Western Species (Douglas Fir-Larch). “24F” means 2400 psi bending stress; “1.8E” is 1.8 million psi stiffness.
  • 24F-V8 (Balanced): Specific layups for continuous span beams or cantilevers where negative bending strength must match positive bending.
  • Southern Pine (24F-V3): High-strength layups common in the Eastern US.
  • Custom Layups: Define your own specific combination to match a manufacturer’s submittal.

2. The Volume Factor ($C_V$)

In the NDS, Glulam behaves differently than Sawn Lumber. The “Size Factor” ($C_F$) is replaced by the Volume Factor ($C_V$).

$$C_V = \left(\frac{21}{L}\right)^{1/x} \cdot \left(\frac{12}{d}\right)^{1/x} \cdot \left(\frac{5.125}{b}\right)^{1/x}$$

This formula penalizes large-volume beams. Our tool calculates this dynamically based on your span and cross-section, ensuring you don’t overestimate the capacity of massive girders.

3. Beam Stability ($C_L$)

For deep, narrow beams, Lateral Torsional Buckling is a risk.

The calculator determines the Slenderness Ratio ($R_B$) based on your unbraced length ($l_u$) and computes the Beam Stability Factor ($C_L$).

  • Optimization Tip: Toggle “Continuous Decking Restraint” to set $C_L = 1.0$ and maximize your beam’s efficiency.

Key Formulas & Parameters

Adjusted Design Values ($F’$):

The calculator applies the full suite of NDS modification factors to the Reference Design Values:

$$F’_b = F_b \cdot C_D \cdot C_M \cdot C_t \cdot C_L \cdot C_V$$

(Note: $C_V$ and $C_L$ are not cumulative for bending; the NDS requires using the lesser of the two factors).

Load Duration ($C_D$):

Adjusts strength based on the shortest-duration load in the combination:

  • $C_D = 1.6$: Wind/Seismic (Short Term)
  • $C_D = 1.0$: Live Load (Ten Years)
  • $C_D = 0.9$: Dead Load (Permanent)

Deflection & Creep:

For Total Load deflection, the tool applies the creep factor ($K_{cr}$):

$$\Delta_{Total} = K_{cr} \cdot \Delta_{LongTerm} + \Delta_{ShortTerm}$$

  • $K_{cr} = 1.5$ for Glulam (Note: This is lower than the $2.0$ used for Sawn Lumber, reflecting Glulam’s seasoned stability).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between "Balanced" and "Unbalanced"?

“Unbalanced” layups (e.g., V4) have stronger laminations on the bottom only. They are cheaper but meant for simple spans. “Balanced” layups (e.g., V8) have strong laminations on top and bottom, required for cantilevers or continuous spans.

Does this check Camber?

The tool calculates the required Camber ($1.5 \times \text{Dead Load Deflection}$) to ensure the beam sits flat under load, a critical serviceability requirement for long-span

Can I design curved beams?

This module currently handles straight (prismatic) members. Curved beams require a specialized check for radial tension ($k_{radial}$), which is covered in our advanced geometry module.