Steel Member (Design Only - ASD, AISC 360-16)
Member reactions link to connected column or footing calculations automatically - change a load and everything downstream updates. Built for structural engineers using Allowable Stress Design who already have analysis results and need fast capacity checks to AISC 360-16. For projects on the 2016 code cycle - use the AISC 360-22 ASD version for new work.
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What it calculates
Member reactions link to connected column or footing calculations automatically - change a load and everything downstream updates. Design steel members to AISC 360-16 ASD with combined axial and bending interaction, lateral-torsional buckling, and flexural buckling checks. For projects on the 2016 specification using allowable strength design.
Code standards
- AISC 360-16
How it calculates
The Steel Member (Design Only - ASD, AISC 360-16) calculator takes ASD (service-level) design forces from analysis and evaluates all member capacity limit states using allowable strength design safety factors per AISC 360-16.
ASD safety factors
In ASD, available strengths are divided by a safety factor Omega (typically 1.67 for tension yielding, 1.67 for flexure, 1.67 for compression). The demand-to-capacity ratio is expressed as Pa/Pc (axial), Ma/Mc (flexure), or Va/Vc (shear), where each allowable value equals the nominal strength divided by the appropriate Omega factor. All interaction equations use these ASD available strengths.
Section classification
Plate element slenderness ratios are compared to the limiting values from AISC 360-16 Table B4.1. Compact, non-compact, and slender classifications are applied automatically. Slender elements trigger effective area reductions for compression and modified flexural equations for bending.
Flexural capacity and lateral-torsional buckling
Chapter F provisions determine the nominal flexural strength Mn. For doubly-symmetric I-shapes, the plastic moment Mp is the upper limit. Lateral-torsional buckling reduces Mn when Lb exceeds Lp. The calculator computes:
- Lb ≤ Lp: no LTB reduction, Mn = Mp
- Lp < Lb ≤ Lr: linear LTB interpolation
- Lb > Lr: elastic LTB governs
The Cb factor for non-uniform moment is calculated from the moment diagram along the unbraced length, increasing allowable moment where demand is lower. HSS, pipe, channel, and angle sections use the applicable sub-sections of Chapter F.
Compression and column buckling
Chapter E compression checks cover flexural buckling about both axes and torsional or flexural-torsional buckling as required by section type. The slenderness ratio KL/r is evaluated for each axis and the critical stress Fcr is used to compute the nominal compression strength Pn. The ASD allowable compression is:
Pc = Pn / Omega_c (where Omega_c = 1.67)
For slender sections, an effective area Aeff accounts for local buckling.
Combined actions interaction
Chapter H ASD interaction equations form the core output. For high axial ratio (Pa/Pc ≥ 0.2):
interaction ratio = Pa/Pc + (8/9)(Max/Mcx + May/Mcy) ≤ 1.0
For low axial ratio (Pa/Pc < 0.2):
interaction ratio = Pa/(2Pc) + (Max/Mcx + May/Mcy) ≤ 1.0
Each term breaks down the axial and bending contributions, making it easy to see which drives the design. The governing equation is identified and all required and available strengths are shown alongside the code clause.
P-delta and stability
A first-order moment amplification factor is applied within the member for P-delta effects, consistent with the assumption of a braced frame. Frame-level second-order effects should be verified separately before using this calculator for sway-sensitive structures.
Shear
Chapter G shear provisions determine the allowable shear force. The web shear coefficient Cv is used to compute Vn, and the ASD allowable shear is Vc = Vn / Omega_v (Omega_v = 1.67). For compact webs Cv = 1.0.
What engineers say
The reason why I use Calcs.com more often now is load linking.
Richard Faulkner
Senior Structural Engineer, Kusch Consulting Engineers

The load linking feature is huge for us. Before, we had to use separate calculators and manually input everything.
Noah Diaz
Engineering Design Coordinator, PWI
Frequently asked questions
What design method and code does this calculator use?
What are the key inputs?
What limit states does it check?
Can it handle combined axial load and biaxial bending?
How do I set effective length factors and unbraced lengths?
Can this member calculation link to beam and footing calculations?
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