28 Tex. Admin. Code § 5.4038 - Use of Damage Estimation Module
(a) The
association must use the damage estimation module to estimate damage to
components of a structure that is the subject of a residential slab claim. The
association must use the following inputs:
(1) outputs from the wind field and surge and
wave models described in §5.4035 and §5.4037, respectively, of this title;
and
(2) property database
information.
(b) The
association must determine the total damage to a structure attributable to wind
by:
(1) estimating the time history of wind
damage to components and systems according to the damage estimation module,
without considering the effects of storm surge and waves;
(2) estimating the probability of collapse
due to surge and waves (Psurge) using Variant 5 of the
methodology in Tomiczek, T., Kennedy, A., and Rogers, S., Collapse Limit State
Fragilities of Wood-Framed Residences From Storm Surge and Waves During
Hurricane Ike, Journal of Waterway, Port, Coastal, and Ocean Engineering
(ASCE), (2014) 140(1), 43-55, dx.doi: 10.1061/(ASCE)WW.1943-5460.1463212;
(3) estimating the probability
that wind caused the collapse of the structure (Pwind)
by determining the maximum of the probabilities of failure for wall studs in
bending, the connections of the wall studs to the wall plates, and the shear
walls using the damage estimation module;
(4) calculating the time of surge slabbing
(tsurge), which is the earlier of the time at which:
(A) the probability of surge and wave
collapse (Psurge) reaches its maximum; or
(B) the probability of surge and wave
collapse first reaches 50 percent;
(5) calculating the wind damage to each
building component at the time of surge slabbing
(Dt_surge) using the damage estimation module; and
(6) calculating wind damage each
building component sustained during the applicable storm
(Dtotal_component ) using the formula:
(c) The association must
also use an observational approach, as described in Section 6 of the expert
panel's report, along with the probabilistic approach described in §§5.4032 -
5.4040. In using an observational approach, the association must consider the
following:
(1) modeled or observed surge and
wave heights;
(2) peak wind
speed;
(3) post-event photographs
referenced in §
5.4036(b) of
this title; and
(4) observed damage
to surviving structures.
(d) The association may input representations
of the wind exposure category for eight direction sectors.
(e) The association may also incorporate
other methods for computing probabilities of component and system failure due
to wind such as the Monte Carlo simulation or the Rackwitz-Fiessler
method.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.