born2drill,
I am interested in the reason of allowing some movement. I understand that some reserve is needed etc always for safety factor, avoiding zip failures, etc.
On the other hand, imagine for a moment a long stick of the kind of those used in fireworks, compressed from both ends, and then braced with two fingers at midheight. The *** small*** bracing force exerted by the two central fingers allows for a bigger buckling load. Now, temporary vertical cuts in the ground may eventually move upon meteorization, settlement or just movements readapting to a new state of equilibrium.
My interest centers on why it has evolved the case where allowing for some movement, i.e., more or less allowing for the formation of active wedges and pressures took precedence on the fact of not allowing any movement at all (no movement on a standing not failing vertical cut, pressure = 0). To prevent initial movement the force is small; to stand active wedge, the active pressures are to be met; for the assumption of not movement ... was it thought that at rest pressures then would have eventually to be met and then the anchors and wall systems woul need be stornger?
I am interested, even knowing of the difficulty in ensuring reliable behaviour (other than by slope stability analysis) in the precise situation at wich what one is more wishing and wanting is precisely that prevention of initial disruption. Any comments?