Truss - significado y definición. Qué es Truss
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Qué (quién) es Truss - definición

RIGID STRUCTURE THAT CONSISTS OF TWO-FORCE MEMBERS ONLY
Trusses; Lenticular truss; Roof trusses; Continuous truss; Trussing; Lenticular pony truss; Bottom chord; Truss (civil engineering); Pin-jointed truss; Vierendeel truss; Indeterminate truss; Lower chord; Panel point; Top chord; Chord (truss construction); Draft:Structural truss; Structural truss; Truss girder; Trusswork; Triangular brace; Vierendeel trusses; Pin jointed truss
  • A type of truss used in roofing
  • A bowstring truss is used on the oldest metal bridge in Virginia
  • A [[Vierendeel bridge]], which lacks diagonal elements in the primary structure
  • A large timber [[Howe truss]] in a commercial building
  • Mir space station]], September 16, 1993
  • [[Truss bridge]] for a single-track railway, converted to pedestrian use and pipeline support. In this example the truss is a group of triangular units supporting the bridge.
  • The roof trusses of the [[Basilica di Santa Croce]] in Florence
  • Truss sections stabilize this building under construction in [[Shanghai]] and will house [[mechanical floor]]s
  • Typical detail of a steel truss, which is considered as a [[revolute joint]]
  • Historical detail of a steel truss with an actual revolute joint
  • Tempe Salt River Southern Pacific Railroad bridge
  • Planar roof trusses
  • The [[Waterville Bridge]] in [[Swatara State Park]] in Pennsylvania is a lenticular truss
  • An Egyptian ship with a rope truss, the oldest known use of trusses. Trusses did not come into common use until the Roman era.

truss         
¦ noun
1. a framework of rafters, posts, and struts which supports a roof, bridge, or other structure.
2. a surgical appliance worn to support a hernia, typically a padded belt.
3. a large projection of stone or timber, typically one supporting a cornice.
4. Brit., chiefly historical a bundle of old hay (56 lb), new hay (60 lb), or straw (36 lb).
5. a compact cluster of flowers or fruit growing on one stalk.
6. Sailing a heavy metal ring securing the lower yards to a mast.
¦ verb
1. tie up the wings and legs of (a chicken or other bird) before cooking.
bind or tie up tightly.
2. [usu. as adjective trussed] support with a truss or trusses.
Derivatives
trusser noun
Origin
ME: from OFr. trusse (n.), trusser 'pack up, bind in', based on late L. tors-, torquere 'twist'.
Truss         
·noun A bundle; a package; as, a truss of grass.
II. Truss ·noun To bind or pack close; to make into a truss.
III. Truss ·noun The rope or iron used to keep the center of a yard to the mast.
IV. Truss ·noun To take fast hold of; to seize and hold firmly; to pounce upon.
V. Truss ·noun To execute by hanging; to Hang;
- usually with up.
VI. Truss ·noun To strengthen or stiffen, as a beam or girder, by means of a brace or braces.
VII. Truss ·noun A tuft of flowers formed at the top of the main stalk, or stem, of certain plants.
VIII. Truss ·noun To Skewer; to make fast, as the wings of a fowl to the body in cooking it.
IX. Truss ·noun A bandage or apparatus used in cases of hernia, to keep up the reduced parts and hinder further protrusion, and for other purposes.
X. Truss ·noun A padded jacket or dress worn under armor, to protect the body from the effects of friction; also, a part of a woman's dress; a stomacher.
XI. Truss ·noun An assemblage of members of wood or metal, supported at two points, and arranged to transmit pressure vertically to those points, with the least possible strain across the length of any member. Architectural trusses when left visible, as in open timber roofs, often contain members not needed for construction, or are built with greater massiveness than is requisite, or are composed in unscientific ways in accordance with the exigencies of style.
truss         
(trusses, trussing, trussed)
1.
To truss someone means to tie them up very tightly so that they cannot move. (WRITTEN)
She trussed him quickly with stolen bandage, and gagged his mouth.
= bind
VERB: V n
Truss up means the same as truss
.
She was trussed up with yellow nylon rope.
PHRASAL VERB: usu passive, be V-ed P, also V n P
2.
A truss is a special belt with a pad that a man wears when he has a hernia in order to prevent it from getting worse.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Truss

A truss is an assembly of members such as beams, connected by nodes, that creates a rigid structure.

In engineering, a truss is a structure that "consists of two-force members only, where the members are organized so that the assemblage as a whole behaves as a single object". A "two-force member" is a structural component where force is applied to only two points. Although this rigorous definition allows the members to have any shape connected in any stable configuration, trusses typically comprise five or more triangular units constructed with straight members whose ends are connected at joints referred to as nodes.

In this typical context, external forces and reactions to those forces are considered to act only at the nodes and result in forces in the members that are either tensile or compressive. For straight members, moments (torques) are explicitly excluded because, and only because, all the joints in a truss are treated as revolutes, as is necessary for the links to be two-force members.

A planar truss is one where all members and nodes lie within a two-dimensional plane, while a space truss has members and nodes that extend into three dimensions. The top beams in a truss are called top chords and are typically in compression, the bottom beams are called bottom chords, and are typically in tension. The interior beams are called webs, and the areas inside the webs are called panels, or from graphic statics (see Cremona diagram) polygons.

Ejemplos de uso de Truss
1. In matters of grammar and vocabulary, there is little in Walters, Hislop, Hyde, Kostova that would risk putting Lynne Truss in a truss.
2. Inside Discovery‘s payload bay is the P5 integrated truss structure.
3. Abolhassan Astaneh–Asl, a professor of structural engineering at the University of California at Berkeley, said "there‘s no reason to believe" that a truss bridge with a deck on top of its steel supports –– a deck truss –– has more "critical gusset plates" than a truss bridge in which the deck is below the supports.
4. Bill Richardson ordered an inspection of several steel–truss bridges in the state.
5. The 103–foot–long steel truss bridge fell around ':20 p.m.