©
2004 Door & Access Systems
Publish Date: Winter 2004
Author: Gary Wedekind
Pages 40-44
EXTREME Field Test!
Editor’s Note: In this special series of eyewitness
reports of Florida’s recent bizarre hurricane-fest,
we present independent perspectives from three DASMA companies:
Clopay, Raynor, and Wayne-Dalton.
Part II
Chasing Charley
By Gary Wedekind, Sectional Door Engineer, Raynor
This year’s hurricane activity captured my undivided
attention.
As a sectional door engineer, my special focus for the past
11 years has been in wind loading garage doors. In addition
to my interest in strengthening garage doors, I have always
been interested in the weather.
The power of nature fascinates me. Lighting, thunderstorms,
snowstorms, tornadoes, and hurricanes all have tremendous
power. That power was unleashed on the southeastern United
States this year.
In a 46-day period from Aug. 12 to Sept. 26, Tropical Storm
Bonnie and Hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne hit
the southeastern United States, but Florida took the brunt
of these storms. After tearing through Florida, these powerful
storms spawned numerous tornadoes and dumped massive amounts
of rain.
A Gigantic Field Test
From my perspective, these storms represented a gigantic
field test for garage doors. This test was so important because,
after hurricane Andrew in 1992, garage doors were often blamed
for being a weak link in the building envelope. This ultimately
led to higher wind load ratings for garage doors by the South
Florida Building Code (SFBC), the Florida Building Code (FBC),
and the International Building Codes (IBC).
No manufacturer ever wants anyone to go through a hurricane
or disaster, but bad things do happen. When they do, we have
to learn from them. This is why Joe Hetzel, DASMA technical
director, myself, and many other garage door industry representatives
went to Florida to investigate garage door damage.
To sell garage doors in wind-prone areas, manufacturers must
provide proof that their product meets the wind requirements
for the area. To do this, we test garage doors with a standardized
test method such as ANSI/DASMA 108. It is a method of simulating
wind by creating uniform pressure on the garage door.
After personally testing hundreds of garage doors by this
standard, I have constantly wondered how these doors would
do in a real storm. The test standard is very good at simulating
wind pressure. However, test conditions and hurricane conditions
are not the same.
Nature’s Awesome Power
Ten days after Hurricane Charley made landfall, I went to
the Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte area with two other Raynor
representatives to see how garage doors performed. Inspecting
doors for three full days, we naturally focused on how Raynor
doors performed, but we also inspected many other doors.
We quickly witnessed what nature’s awesome power can
do to a landscape. The amount of debris was overwhelming.
Tree branches, power lines, and building materials were thrown
everywhere. Cleanup will likely take months, and rebuilding
damaged or destroyed structures may take years.
When we focused on the building envelope, it was very easy
to identify homes that had been built to the new requirements
of the building code. We saw newer homes with little or no
visible damage, while older homes next door or across the
street suffered major damage.
Good News for Garage Doors
This was also true with garage doors. We saw many doors that
were installed prior to the new requirements of the code.
These doors were heavily damaged, destroyed, or missing from
the opening. The good news is that doors built and installed
per the current building code performed much better.
Many newer doors withstood the 145 mph sustained winds and
higher gusts of Hurricane Charley. This is impressive because
the FBC basic wind speed map for this area is 120-130 mph.
I personally witnessed many success stories of how garage
doors stood up to these fierce winds. And I continue to hear
similar stories from distributors, installers, and other manufacturers.
Last Door Standing
In Punta Gorda, we inspected a devastated area about a half
mile from the coast. One new home was standing in the midst
of an area that looked like a war zone. Everything around
this home was destroyed.
The house was a modular home with a 2-car attached garage.
The neighborhood was full of the same kind of homes. Immediately
behind the home was a trailer park that was completely destroyed.
Nothing was standing.
The homeowner, an older lady, let us come in and inspect
the doors up close. She had just built the house and had started
moving in only four days before the storm. She had two 16x7
Raynor doors, one in the front and one in the back, both installed
with proper wind loading. Since she was still moving in when
the storm hit, her garage was packed full of all her belongings.
Part of her roof was missing, but the garage was perfectly
intact, and all the items in it were untouched. From the street,
we could detect no door damage at all. But upon closer inspection,
we noticed a slight crease on the exterior of one of the doors,
probably caused by flexing in the wind.
The stickers on the doors indicated that they were built
in July 2004. The storm hit on Aug. 13. These two doors were
a powerful example of the importance of installing doors that
meet the building code.
Insight from Inland
South of Orlando, well inland, we visited a Ford dealership
with 12 commercial sectional doors. Two of the doors were
ours, and each was installed with an 8" truss. Of the
12 doors, these two were the only ones that survived the storm.
The guys at the dealership welcomed us very kindly. After
inspecting the damage, we learned that the other doors were
not wind loaded.
In all our inspections, we also found some of our doors that
failed, but in nearly every case, they were older doors and
had not been properly wind loaded. This again reinforced the
lesson of installing doors according to the building code.
As an engineer who has spent the last decade designing doors
for strong winds, I was very pleased to see that all our work
is paying off. Many people have devoted much time and effort
to design, manufacture, sell, and install wind-loaded doors.
It’s very good to know that we are helping to protect
the property of thousands of people from damage that can run
into the thousands of dollars.
DASMA Leadership
The DASMA technical committees have led the way in monitoring
the building codes as they relate to the garage door industry.
Today, wind load requirements across the country are becoming
more and more recognized and enforced.
I’ve been involved with DASMA for many years now, and
DASMA’s work has helped all manufacturers stay on the
cutting edge of this important issue. DASMA has produced many
Technical Data Sheets about wind loading, and they are freely
available at www.dasma.com. Thanks to all of DASMA’s
work, our industry is prepared to meet the wind load demands
of building codes throughout the nation.
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