I'm not real familiar with the Canadian Codes, but you should get ASCE 10 and a copy of the PLS-CADD software TOWER which has all the design codes built in, AFAIK. As a minimum, get PLS-CADD Lite and TOWER. You use PLS-CADD-Lite to develop the load cases because it includes Sag and Tension software. If you have several towers to do with multiple leg and body extensions, the TOWER software now has a Family Manager where you can analyze many versions of the tower family. This is their web page:
If you've never done T-Line tower design, there is a learning curve and our industry is unlike most others. You might try to locate the proceedings of the last few SEI conferences
that had several papers about towers.
How much time can you devote to learning the process? Most of the methods are based on testing results from full scale tower tests and lots of empirical data. For many years, the towers were designed by hand as 2D trusses with many assumptions so the method of joints would work. I started out designing towers with the graphical method in 1973 and have been amazed at the advances in software since then.
After the towers are designed, the fun is just beginning. Are you also tasked with detailing the tower so it can be fabricated? There are a few places in India that have software that does the tower details. There is one guy I know in Pittsburg that does tower details in AutoCAD that does very good work. His web site is here:
If all this seems like a daunting task, you might consider farming it out to some of the big T-Line fabricators that also design towers.
is one outfit but they only use equal leg angles in their design.
is another fabricator.
is a fabricator that I think still does towers.
does tower design.
Post back here and let me know how it goes.
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I have been called "A storehouse of worthless information" many times.