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Owen Duffy wrote:
Jim Lux wrote in : ... that would be what's known as a "pier pin" base, and, as noted, it greatly reduces the torsional load on the tower. Whether the force causing the tower to fail is torsional, I'm not sure. Guyed towers fail by buckling from the compressional force exerted by the guys. The vertical elements of a tower framework should take their load in line with the element. They are slender elements which are tied in by bracing to prevent buckling. It seems to me that in a typical construction where the end of that vertical element in each section is not free to hinge, that twisting of the section deforms the vertical element and would assist buckling if the downwards force in the element is very large... as it is on very large structures. Actually, you'd look at the diagonal braces, too. On several theatrical truss designs, the bending load limit is set by the compression buckling of the diagonal braces, not the tension or compression of the main tubes. A torsional load will put a bending load on the vertical main tubes, but a longitudinal load on the diagonal braces (compression or tension depending on which direction they go). probably also a bending moment on the diagonal struts because they're welded joints. |
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