Abstract

Sixty-degree equal-leg steel angles find widespread application as leg members of triangular-base lattice towers. Compared to 90° angles of the same size, these angles are weaker in torsional-flexural buckling. The design of such angles is being explicitly covered for the first time in CSA Standard S37-94, "Antennas, towers and antenna-supporting structures." Recent experimental studies have shown that the design of 60° angles will be quite safe, if design is carried out using the expressions for factored axial compressive resistances given in CAN/CSA-S16.1-M89, taking into account only the effect of local buckling and flexural buckling about minor axis, and neglecting torsional-flexural buckling. The Canadian Standards Association Technical Committee on Antenna Towers also noted that the calculated resistances will still be less than the strengths according to the widely used Standard ANSI/ASCE 10-90, "Design of latticed steel transmission structures," which considers all the three modes of buckling. The present paper explains the rationale behind the design procedure adopted by the Technical Committee. Key words: angles, buckling, compression, design strength, schifflerized angles, specifications, steel towers, 60° angles.

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