As far as AWWA M11 is concerned, use the latest edition. The previous edition was suspect in some areas. In the latest edition, the saddle tip stresses are now reduced based on the work of Stokes (1965) from South Australia.
You can also refer to 'Steel Penstocks' an ASCE manual 79. Remember that power penstocks are used for power generation & hence they usually do not consider temperature stresses. These stresses are too large for both the design of the pipe shell & anchorages. The temperature loads are removed with the use of flexible joints. For most water utilities, temperature stresses have to be included in the analysis because the pipes are usually fully restrained.
If you want to consider temperature stresses, read Bednar 'Pressure Vessels' (I think that is the title). In Bednar, there is info on 'self limiting' stresses from temperature, that is based on ASME info & also included in the commentary of the Australian Standard for Pressure Vessels. These references include higher allowable stresses (up to 2Fy) based on combinations of stress. The design is 'strain based' - see Bednar for details.
For most above ground pipelines, the maximum design stress is usually the sum of the uniaxial stresses, in the circumferential direction (NOT longitudinal), at the saddle tip.
Longitudinal stresses (in a continuous & restrained pipeline) are the sum of bending stresses (wl^2/12 at the support), long. stress due to pressure (PD/4t), temperature stresses & poisson stresses (vPD/2t).
Circumferential stresses are the sum of hoop stress (PD/2t) & the saddle tip stresses (see Stokes or AWWA M11 above for the reduction factor). I usually use Fy as a MIN stress for this combination (see Bednar or ACSE 79).
Combined stresses are (Huber, Henky, von Mises): -
reference stress = sqrt(f1^2 + f2^2 - f1.f2)
See AWWA M11 for details.
If you want to increase the span (or reduce stresses) try using a ring girder as in AWWA M11 or ASCE 79. For a pipe of 900 mm dia, a ring girder could be used because a 'one off' cost would not be prohibitive in a pipeline. Remember that 'normal' beam formula are used for the analysis based on the pipe being kept circular with either a saddle or ring girder. I usually use a 150 angle saddle. Even though the formula for saddle tip stresses indicates a lower stress from a 180 angle saddle, this is impossible to achieve because the stiffening effect of a pressurised pipeline, will lift a pipe off the top edge of a 180 angle saddle & the effective angle will be about 150.
Deflections are not usually a problem for a span of 20 m & a 750 mm pipe with an 8 mm wall thickness (I am assuming a D/t ratio of about 100). Just remember that most utilities do not take the stiffening effect of the cement mortar lining into account when checking the deflection. I have test results that indicate for a reasonable cement mortar lining, the combined EI value can be as high as double the EI value for the steel shell only.
BarryEng