Warren truss

Warren truss illustrated – some of the diagonals are under compression and some under tension

A Warren truss or equilateral truss[1] is a type of engineering truss.

Wills Creek Bollman Bridge, a short Warren truss bridge of 1871

Origins

It was patented in 1848 by its designers James Warren and Willoughby Theobald Monzani.

Truss

The Warren truss consists of longitudinal members joined only by angled cross-members, forming alternately inverted equilateral triangle-shaped spaces along its length. This gives a pure truss: each individual strut, beam, or tie is only subject to tension or compression forces, there are no bending or torsional forces on them.

Loads on the diagonals alternate between compression and tension (approaching the centre), with no vertical elements, while elements near the centre must support both tension and compression in response to live loads. This configuration combines strength with economy of materials and can therefore be relatively light. The girders being of equal length, it is ideal for use in prefabricated modular bridges.

It is an improvement over the Neville truss which uses a spacing configuration of isosceles triangles.[2]

A variant of the Warren truss has additional vertical members within the triangles.[1] These are used when the lengths of the upper horizontal members would otherwise become so long at to present a risk of buckling[lower-roman 1] These verticals do not carry a large proportion of the truss loads, they act mostly to stabilise the horizontal members against buckling.

Bridges

Crumlin Viaduct,[3] 1857, an important early use of the Warren truss[4]

Architecture

The Warren truss is also a prominent structural feature in hundreds of hastily constructed aircraft hangars in WW2. In the early parts of the war, the British and Canadian government formed an agreement known as the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan which used newly constructed airbases in Canada to train aircrew needed to sustain emerging air forces. Dozens and hundreds of airfields, aprons, taxiways and ground installations were constructed all across Canada. Two characteristic features were, and indeed many still remain in service, are a triangle runway layout and hangars built from virgin British Columbia timbers with Warren truss configuration roofs.[5][6]

Aircraft

A preserved Ansaldo SVA, with Warren truss bracing between its wings
A Handley Page H.P.42 shows off its interplane trusses

Warren truss construction has also been used in aircraft.

An early use was for the interplane wing struts on some biplanes. The Italian World War I Ansaldo SVA series of fast reconnaissance biplanes were among the fastest aircraft of their era, while the Handley Page H.P.42 was a successful airliner of the late 1920s and the Fiat CR.42 Falco fighter remained in service until World War II.

The Warren truss is also sometimes used for fuselage frames, such as in the Piper J-3 Cub.

References

  1. Column theory shows that the risk of buckling increases with length, not merely compressive load.
  1. 1 2 Frank Griggs, Jr. (July 2015). "The Warren Truss". Structure.
  2. "Warren Truss". Garrett's Bridges.
  3. Jones, Stephen K. (2009). Brunel in South Wales. III: Links with Leviathans. Stroud: The History Press. pp. 20–21. ISBN 9780752449128.
  4. de Maré, Eric (1975) [1954]. Bridges of Britain. Batsford. pp. 86–87. ISBN 0-7134-2925-9.
  5. "HistoricPlaces.ca - HistoricPlaces.ca".
  6. Rkelland (10 February 2016). "Hangar 14 and the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan".
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