A couple of stories, but short on pictures.
First off, I was out riding my bicycle a while back and went past this silo in the attached picture. That ridge about halfway up is an elephant's foot buckle, typically due to compressive loading. Either the silo was underdesigned, or not designed, or service was changed, who knows. Still in operation as far as I know.
Secondly, a story with no pictures. Quite a few years ago, a customer contacted us. They had two old molasses tanks that had been cut down, roughly 60' diameter x 40' shell height, and they wanted to rebuild those into one big flat-bottom silo roughly 60' diameter x 80' high. In theory, that part was simple enough. But, they also wanted to do all the withdrawal through a garage-door type opening at the bottom, using a front-end loader or equivalent. So I dutifully cranked out a design as best I could in the limited time available, which required a number of large stiffeners due to the eccentric loading, which also added a lot of cost to the project. To no one's surprise, we were high bidder on the job and the economy contractor down the road got the job. So several months went by and I happened to be driving down that way, and there was the silo, erected and in operation. And, up there at the top was a big ol' buckle in the shell plate. I guess as long as it didn't split down the side, they didn't care.