The tower supports a catwalk that holds a conveyor used to transport material. No people involved unless someone is up working on the conveyor and then no one is going to be up there when the wind is blowing 90+ mph. Everyone will be in the basement because the only time the wind blows like that around here is during a tornado. I am analyzing the tower as a cantilevered truss with pin connected bracing. I am using wind load from ASCE7-05. Towards the top of the tower I have single angle bracing members. I have been using a modified slenderness ratio for the single angles per AISC Section E5 and plugging it into the equation for critical buckling stress from Section E3 of AISC. The equation for the critical buckling stress in AISC is the euler buckling formula and is identical to Eqn. 3.6-2 in ASCE10 with the exception of a 0.877 factor which accounts for the effect of member out-of-straightness. The modified slenderness equation given in AISC for single angles looks a little different than that given in ASCE10 but I get nearly the same slenderness ratio (KL/r) from both equations. In fact, the commentary to AISC Section E5 states that the modified slenderness equation is "essentially equivalent to those employed for equal-leg angles as web members in latticed transmission towers in ASCE10-97". The commentary also goes on to state that the equation accounts for a decrease in effective length and a reduction in end eccentricity due to end restraint from the connection. I should mention that I am using at least two bolts in my connections.
Towards the bottom of the tower my forces get larger and I have to use double angles. I would assume you get the same reduction in effective length and reduction in end eccentricity due to end restraint as you do for a single angle, however, AISC doesn't say anything on double angles used in truss members. I could use K=1 and evaluate the interaction equation for axial load and bending with M=Pe but I think this would be way too conservative. So the question is what value of K do I use and how much does the end restraint reduce the moment due to connection eccentricity? I would be alot more comfortable using a slenderness ratio (KL/r) based on years of testing than one based on an educated guess. I am just not 100% sure that the equations in ASCE10 Section 3.7.4.2 apply to double angles connected back to back. The only thing ASCE10 Section 3.7 says is "the provisions of this section are applicable only for 90deg angles". Is this to mean single and double angles?
All this has led to another question or maybe a clarification. It appears that the tower industry models towers as 3D trusses with pin connected joints. However, if the member connection is made with welds or at least two bolts, the industry considers some end restraint in determining effective member lengths used in design. On the other hand, any forces resulting from this assumed end restraint are ignored in the design of the connection. The connection is designed simply for the compression or tension in the member. Is this correct?