MTNClimber and
Abruzzese, The Pittsburgh area (mostly Busway projects) has built heavy duty, tiedback, soldier beam walls with very thick precast lagging for landslide areas since the early 1980's. I bid several of them and, despite being told my prices were good, I was an outsider and was never successful. The construction of these walls usually involved making steeply sloped, open cuts as deep as possible to install soldier beams and stack the precast lagging. They would backfill to the tieback level, install lots of cribbing above the backfill level, install and stress the tiebacks, and then continue backfilling. Then to finish the rest of the lower portion of the wall, they would excavate and pour cast-in-place concrete lagging because they could not install precast. Result: ugly walls, cracked lagging near the tiebacks, unsafe excavation in landslide areas, very expensive. Thankfully times have changed, but apparently not enough.
EDIT: Abruzzese, I looked at your details and they confirm my suspicions about loading the tiebacks without needing lots of cribbing and cracking the lagging. I am also surprised to see tieback anchors called for so close to the bottom of the wall. Your wall needs to be built from the bottom up.
If the casing pipe is supposed to prevent the soldier beam from pushing back under the tieback test and lock-off loads, what keeps the casing from plunging downward and crushing the top perimeter of the bonded length's grout? If the outside of the casing pipe is not grouted for frictional capacity, the tieback load would need to be resisted by bearing on top of the bond length grout. A factored(?) 172 kip test load on the bottom area of a 6.625" x 1.0" casing pipe = 9,738 psi = 172,000#/(5.625" x 3.14 x 1.0"). Seems like a pretty high stress on the grout.