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msquared48
Structural
Just analyzed another tower, 245 foot lattice on the top of an 1800 foot high ridge where, in 2011, an out of state engineer had apparently not done his topographical homework, and misapplied the definition of the Crest Height as well as the Topographic Category, if even he looked at Google Maps. He was not even aware of the local northeasters that can come down from the Frasier Valley, the critical direction for the tower.
He used a crest height of 0 and a Topo Cat of 1 where it should have been a Topo Cat 3 for a ridge, and a crest height of at least 1500 feet according to the ASCE 7-10 definition per section 26.8.1. His analysis was originally marginal at 102%, but mine with the new equipment and correct topo fails at 246%, way more than just the additional equipment (+20% to his original analysis).
Now I have to explain this to the telecom client. Man I live this job!
This is not the first time I have seen this. We really need to be careful with these wind factors, particularly with critical communication equipment, and such terms as "crest Height" needs to better defined in ASCE7 with examples, specific, real world examples, not just textbook where it is all left to interpretation and chance.
I'll step down now.
Mike McCann, PE, SE (WA)
He used a crest height of 0 and a Topo Cat of 1 where it should have been a Topo Cat 3 for a ridge, and a crest height of at least 1500 feet according to the ASCE 7-10 definition per section 26.8.1. His analysis was originally marginal at 102%, but mine with the new equipment and correct topo fails at 246%, way more than just the additional equipment (+20% to his original analysis).
Now I have to explain this to the telecom client. Man I live this job!
This is not the first time I have seen this. We really need to be careful with these wind factors, particularly with critical communication equipment, and such terms as "crest Height" needs to better defined in ASCE7 with examples, specific, real world examples, not just textbook where it is all left to interpretation and chance.
I'll step down now.
Mike McCann, PE, SE (WA)