Back...
What I was getting at essentially was that are we to "blanket" all singly reinforced walls with theta=0.65, or only when the bending, shear and axial forces are considered as "in-plane" actions.
Back to tilt up buildings - it would seem unreasonable for a wall subject to out-of-plane bending, with N-class reinforcement that meets the minimum ratios and demands to be assigned theta =0.65. Essentially a wall designed utilizing the findings of the slender wall task committee and SEAOC bluebook recommendations should be sufficiently reliable with theta =0.8-0.9.
Maybe too many tilt panels have been designed ignoring minimum steel quantities, with L class reinforcement and neglect of P-Delta effects, that theta=0.65 is warranted. In my opinion such poorly designed walls would need more than theta=0.65 to make them sufficiently reliable.
Toby