Because the anchor's wedge plate is relatively thick and stiff, the anchor's load to a simply-supported bearing plate is not really a distributed load. The stiffness of the wedge plate causes the anchor load to be applied to the bearing plate closer to the ends of the plate's span. This reduces the plate bending. I would expect a bearing plate for a 5-strand tieback anchor, spanning 250mm to be about 60 - 75 mm thick with Fy = 36 to 50 ksi. The larger the diameter of the wedge plate, the less load is applied to the middle of the bearing plate. The attached picture is from a recent tieback anchor project. The bearing plates spanned approximately 1'-5". The tieback design loads were generally in the 200 to 400 kip range. The steel for the bearing plates had Fy = 50 ksi. The plate thickness for a 5-strand, 176 kip DL anchor was 2.75 inches. If you ask the tendon supplier, they will often give you the plate design for the particular anchor design load and span.
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