Well, of course you use multiple columns.Relax wrote:Oh yea, and if you do a deflection calc on a tower 60,000ft high with a diameter of only 500ft and a wind velocity of 60mph, lets just say, it blew over. Don't know about you, but the wind blows a hell of a lot stronger than 60mph.
The tensile problem only becomes MASSIVELY more pronounced the larger diameter you go. Now if you wish to propose multiple columns of pressurized air 60,000ft high, go for it. Its base is going to be around a mile wide...
From the page I quoted before:
Dani Eder wrote: ...
You would build the compressive tower the same way that TV transmission towers are built - as a truss of smaller elements. A reasonable height-to-base ratio is 20:1. So a 100 km tower would have 3 base points 5 km apart, assuming you have a triangular cross section for the tower as a whole. Each principal column would in turn be a truss with 3 sub-columns spaced 250 meters apart, which in turn are made of tertiary columns 12 meters apart and 0.6 meters in diameter each. The tertiary columns have a wall thickness of 0.03 meters.
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Wind loading is indeed the driving force on the tower in the first 20 km of height. Up to 10 km, higher wind speeds dominate over pressure drops. Above that height, wind speeds no longer increase, and reduced atmospheric pressure dominates. When I did the studies of this type of structure, I used pivoting airfoils around the truss elements to minimize drag. They can lower it quite a bit below that of a circular tube.