KootK said:
Consider it as presented, in isolation from the retaining wall business. Is it your opinion that, in that example, the bars would still develop to yield without initiating a concrete breakout failure?
If the breakout cones are inadequate to resist the tensile uplift then not I don't believe the bars would yield. However I suspect your case would actually yield bars, despite your loading it up with bars. You have 1000 times the area of concrete than you do steel - that equals bar snap not concrete snap. But for the sake of argument yes lets say it will fail in frustrum pullout.
KootK said:
1) As I understand it now, having bar splitting forces aligned with global tension forces, makes things worse, right?
That's my understanding of it. It will break even easier.
KootK said:
2) So if my example doesn't have those aligned tension forces, would that not make my example more optimistic with regard to capacity?
Yes yours is more optimistic than the bad cases and is still failing.
KootK said:
3) If my example is more optimistic with regard to capacity, and still indicates a serious lack of capacity, is there still not a problem?
Your example in plain unstressed concrete. In abominable retaining wall footing we have top steel. We also have the C force at the front face of the wall strutting against the hook, making it harder to pull out.
If you believe your example is a suitable analogy, do you think adding a little bit of extra hook length is going to improve capacity?
This is where I'm at (not arguing, just trying to clarify my own understanding):
-Your examples WON'T break the bars. Cone break-out will occur if going by the numbers (although in reality the bars probably yield).
-135 hook into the bottom of an unstressed reinforced beam WILL BREAK the bar. (Wheeler)
-A 90 degree hook into the opening side (detail (a), U74 )is really bad and WON'T BREAK the bar. This is the one I would call ABOMINABLE
-A 90 degree hook into the toe (your abominable detail) is much better and may break the bar.
-We haven't completely established the difference between a 90 degree standard hook going into the toe (abominable detail #1) vs a hook with full code development length into the toe (your detail #5),
That being said, Nilsson series U74, U75, U76, U70 show the range of toe lengths and hook length achieving 94%+ capacity, with marginal increase in capacity as the toe (and hook length) increases.
-Adding a diagonal bar is ideal, but a hassle for a small wall.