Title: Steel Utility Poles
1American Iron and Steel Institutes Technical
Session
Steel Distribution Poles - The Material of the
Future
Design Testing of Steel Poles
- presented by - Richard F. Aichinger,
PE Manager of Engineering, Utility
Products Valmont Industries, Inc.
2Designing For Equivalency
- Equivalency to what?
- Expected Strength
- Expected Life
- Expected Performance
- Deflection
- Handling
- Field Use
3Designing For Equivalency
- Most pole used to date have been wood
- How do you design a Steel wood pole?
- You cant but you dont want to
- Instead you design a pole that meets minimum
strength and performance requirements every time
4Designing For Equivalency
- How do you design a Steel Distribution Pole?
- ANSI Standards
- ANSI 05.1
- National Electric Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- ASCE Manual 72
- Material Manufacturing Proven Reliability
- Testing and Proven Product Experience
5ANSI 05.1
- Provides performance and quality criteria for
wood poles of various species - Provides strength requirements which define the
various pole Class definition (Class 6 to H-6) - Defined by a Capacity Loading to be applied 2
feet from the pole top - Provides direct embedment depth
6National Electrical Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- A Safety Code
- By default, also a Design Code
- Provides for Design considerations for various
line conditions (ice, wind ice, wind) - Provides for Construction Grades to differentiate
the allowable risk accepted in the design
7National Electrical Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- A Little History
- Provided for loading and strength since the early
1900s to present - Early editions were based on ultimate strength of
materials - Steel was first to be changed to Load Factor in
1941
8National Electrical Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- 1941 Summary
- Material Grade B Grade C
- Steel 2.54 2.2
- wood 25 37.5
- (equiv. OLF) (4.0) (2.67)
9National Electrical Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- 1973 Wood was modified
- Material Grade B Grade C
- Steel 2.54 2.2
- wood 25 50
- (equiv. OLF) (4.0) (2.0)
- Familiar?
- wood is now lower than steel in Grade C.
- 1997 Edition introduced Strength Factors
10National Electrical Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- 1997 Edition Grade B
- Strength Factor Equiv.
O.L.F. - Load Type Overload Steel Wood
Steel Wood Ratio - Vertical 1.5 1.0 0.65
1.5 2.31 0.65 - Transverse
- Wind 2.5 1.0
0.65 2.5 3.85 0.65 -
- Tension 1.65 1.0
0.65 1.65 2.54 0.65
11National Electrical Safety Code (ANSI C-2)
- 1997 Edition Grade C
- Strength Factor Equiv.
O.L.F. Ratio - Load Type Overload Steel Wood
Steel Wood - Vertical 1.5 1.0
0.85 1.5 1.76 0.85 - Transverse
- Wind 2.2 (steel) 1.0
0.85 2.2 2.06 1.07 - 1.75(wood)
- Tension 1.1 (steel) 1.0
0.85 1.1 1.53 0.72 - 1.3 (wood)
12ASCE Manual 72
- The Steel Pole Design Guide
- Provides for the best practices of the industry
- Provides for the Design Requirements equated to
- AISC
- ACI
- AWS
13Designing For Equivalency
- Equivalent Wood Pole Loading (B)
- ANSI Load x 2.5/4.0
- ANSI 05.1 Working Equivalent
- Pole Class Loading Load Steel Load
- 2 3700 925 2313
- 3 3000 750 1875
- 4 2400 600 1500
- 5 1900 475 1188
14Designing For Equivalency
- CLASS 4 Pole has ANSI rated capacity of 2400.
- GRADE B CONSTRUCTION
- WOOD O.L.F. 4.0
- STEEL O.L.F. 2.5
- STEEL RATED LOAD BECOMES 2400 x 2.5/4.0
1500 - GRADE C CONSTRUCTION
- WOOD O.L.F. 2.0
- STEEL O.L.F. 2.2
- STEEL RATED LOAD BECOMES 2400 x 2.2/2.0
2640
15Designing For Equivalency
- CLASS 4 Pole has ANSI rated capacity of 2400.
- GRADE B CONSTRUCTION
- WOOD O.L.F. 4.0
- STEEL O.L.F. 2.5
- STEEL RATED LOAD BECOMES 2400 x 2.5/4.0
1500 - GRADE C (Expected NESC Change for 2002)
- WOOD O.L.F. 2.06
- STEEL O.L.F. 1.75
- STEEL RATED LOAD BECOMES 2400 x
1.75/2.06 2039 (vs. 2640)
16Designing For Equivalency
- Steel Allows for Designs that Consistently meet
strength requirements by varying diameter and
thickness - ASCE Manual 72 provides criteria for Local
Buckling of Tubular Steel - Proven through years of use in other products
- Verified by EPRI and manufacturer testing
- Provides a pole that is consistent by design
17Designing For Life
- Steel Allows for the Design of a Product that can
be protected against deterioration - Galvanizing provides a proven inside/out
protection for most environments - An additional groundline barrier coating provides
extra protection at the most corrosive location - When damaged by overload conditions, Steel will
tend to locally yield rather than break or
collapse, often times allowing the line to
remain in service
18Designing For Performance
- Deflection of steel poles are normally less than
the equivalent wood pole based on the pole size
defined by ANSI 05.1 - The following graph shows a representative
comparison indicating the deflection of a Steel
versus wood poles
19Load Deflection of Steel vs. Wood Poles (40
Class 4, NESC Grade B)
20Designing For Performance
- Weight of steel poles are normally much less than
the equivalent wood pole providing added
savings for field handling and maneuvering - The following chart is a representative
comparison of the weight of wood poles versus
Steel Poles
21Weight Comparison of Wood to Steel
22Designing For Performance
- Additionally, Steel can be Designed for true
design applications wood is seldom correctly
considered for - Guyed angles and corners
- NESC requirements
- Unguyed angles and corners
- Steel provides the necessary strength and
flexibility of size and application
23Designing For Reliability
- Steel Poles have been successfully used
- for over 30 years for the Electric Utility
industry - for over 40 years with the same product in other
industries (lighting and traffic) - Fabrication and Quality systems have evolved to
keep up with customer demand, technology, and
increasing Design sophistication
24Designing Proven by Testing
- Steel Poles have been tested for as long as Steel
Poles have been fabricated. But there is a
difference - Steel Poles are tested to Verify Design strength
is attained as a Minimum - wood poles are tested to determine the mean
rupture strength
25Designing Proven by Testing
- Steel Distribution Poles have been tested by
independent firms (EDM in Fort Collins) and by
the manufacturers using controlled conditions and
sophisticated systems. - Strength / Buckling tests to verify design
acceptance for conditions including - full tube sections
- tube sections with many cut holes to verify that
condition - attachment and guy hardware loading
- All showing the Strength and Reliability of Steel
26Post Insulator Test On Steel Pole
27Guy Attachment Test On Steel Pole
28EPRI Test On 70 Class 2 Steel Pole
29Testing at EPRI (Class 2) and EDM (Class 3 5)
30Steel Distribution Poles - The Material of the
Future
31Steel Distribution Poles - The Material of the
Future
- In Conclusion
- Steel Distribution Poles Provide
- Expected Strength
- Expected Life
- Expected Performance in
- Deflection
- Handling
- Field Use