Euler,
Startup will not be a problem, as the screen passes through the natural frequency very quickly. What will be a prolem is shut down. The screen will shut down slowly over a period of time. I design screen towers every day. Most of the towers have 2 to 4 screens in them. The company that I work for has about 30 years experience in the industry also, so we have a lot of standard type bracing arrangements that we use. You are right in that it is not economical to force the natural frequency of your structure to be greater than the screen. What we do is force the manufacturer to give us the resonant loadings of the screen and their frequency. The loads that the screen gives off at this point will be 5 times higher or so, maybe more, than any live loading that they give you. Make sure that the natural frequency of your structure and the resonant frequency of the screen are not the same. For the most part I design for these values. Experience shows that as the screen slows, it will pass the natural frequency of the structure, which wil cause a moment of slight shaking, and then settle out. As the screen reaches the resonant frequency, again the structure will have two or three cycles of shaking and then will settle out. The mangitude of the shaking will depend on the closeness of the screen and structure natural frequencies. It is company policy to be conservative to the tune of unity numbers in the 60%-70% ranges, and to allow a 1.5 multiplier on all loads supplied by the screen manufacturer, per AISC. You can do a more involved analysis, but it probably is not worth it, and you will get a satisfactory structure. Also, you will have better results if you can support the screen with columns directly under the spring pads, or at least close to it. If you can't, and have to put the screen on a beam, spanning out to columns, then I highly recommend placing in plane bracing for the screen base to transfer lateral loads to the column line. This will help reduce vibration in handrails, etc. Also, one of the most important things to remember is that a screen is constantly changing in mass and rigidity. All manufactures put a nice disclamer that all their loadings do not take into account rock, etc. The screen media decks will change on a daily basis, and their will be wet aggregate and dry aggregate, some of which will stick to the screen and some will not. What I am getting at is that we can all do as much dynamic analyis as we want, but in this industry their will be things that change all the time and you can't control it. The method of design that we use now reflects a lot of experience designing these structures, some good and some bad. We have just proven to ourselves over time that designing these types of structures has just as much to do with your gut, as with the theory behind it. Hope my long winded response has helped.
aggman