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AISC Steel Construction Manual, 15th editionUnited States

Steel Bolt Group Analysis

US structural engineers running basic bolt group analysis for bolted connection design. Determines the peak bolt demand for a single load case using the elastic method - available on the free plan.

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What it calculates

Find the maximum shear demand on the critical bolt in any bolt group under in-plane shear and moment. Uses the elastic method per AISC to resolve direct and torsional shear components - available on the free plan.

Code standards

  • AISC Steel Construction Manual, 15th edition

Who uses this calculator

US structural engineers running basic bolt group analysis for bolted connection design. Determines the peak bolt demand for a single load case using the elastic method - available on the free plan.

Find maximum shear on bolts in a group to size bolted connections.

How it calculates

The Steel Bolt Group Analysis (Free) calculator applies the elastic method from the AISC Steel Construction Manual to find the maximum shear demand on any bolt in an arbitrarily arranged bolt group under a single in-plane load case.

Bolt group centroid

Bolt positions are defined by their X and Y coordinates. The centroid of the group is computed assuming equal bolt areas:

  • x_c = (sum of x_i) / n
  • y_c = (sum of y_i) / n

All subsequent calculations use bolt coordinates measured from this centroid.

Polar moment of inertia

The polar moment of inertia I_z treats each bolt as a unit area:

I_z = I_x + I_y = sum(y_i^2) + sum(x_i^2)

I_z governs how the applied moment is distributed to individual bolts - the farther a bolt is from the centroid, the larger its torsional shear component.

Direct shear

The applied vertical shear V is shared equally among all n bolts:

V_p = V / n

Torsional shear from eccentricity

When the applied load acts at a horizontal distance e from the centroid, the resulting in-plane moment M = V × e is distributed to each bolt in proportion to its distance from the centroid:

  • Vertical torsional component: V_e = M × x_i / I_z
  • Horizontal torsional component: H_e = M × y_i / I_z

Resultant bolt force

The total vertical and horizontal forces on each bolt are summed and the resultant is found:

  • V_t = V_p + V_e
  • H_t = H_e
  • R = sqrt(V_t^2 + H_t^2)

Utilization = R_max / R_allowable ≤ 1.0

The maximum R across all bolts in the group is the governing demand for connection sizing.

Using the output

The reported R_max is the raw elastic demand on the critical bolt. To complete the connection check, compare R_max against the allowable shear capacity for the chosen bolt diameter and grade from AISC Table 7-1 or Table J3-2. The elastic method is conservative relative to the instantaneous centre of rotation (IC) method for many common bolt configurations.

Frequently asked questions

What design method and code does this calculator use?
The calculator uses the elastic method per the AISC Steel Construction Manual (15th edition). Bolt positions are entered at arbitrary X and Y coordinates, and the elastic method distributes the applied shear and moment load across the group using the polar moment of inertia to find the critical bolt demand.
What are the key inputs?
Inputs include the X and Y coordinates of each bolt in the group, the applied in-plane shear force, and the eccentricity of the load relative to the bolt group centroid. The moment on the bolt group is derived from the product of the applied force and the eccentricity.
What does the calculator output?
The primary output is the maximum resultant shear force R (in kips) on the bolt farthest from the centroid of the bolt group. Supporting outputs include the direct shear component V_p, the torsional shear components V_e and H_e, total bolt forces V_t and H_t, and the polar moment of inertia I_z.
Can it handle bolt groups under combined shear and moment?
Yes. When a load is applied eccentrically, the calculator resolves the resulting moment into torsional shear components at each bolt location. The critical bolt receives the vector sum of its direct shear and torsional shear contributions, and the highest resultant R across all bolts is reported.
What bolt grades and types are supported?
This calculator determines the force demand on the critical bolt only - it does not check bolt capacity. The output R can be compared against the allowable shear for any AISC bolt grade (A325, A490, etc.) based on the engineer's connection specification. For multi-load-case analysis with capacity checks, the ASD version is available on paid plans.

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