Hi Tom,
I looked at your towers in your gallery; thanks for putting them up. I'm quite jealous! I'd really like to go with a four-sided wide-base tower. I understand their structural advantages but for now I have to go with what I have.
You wrote:
> I am no good at math [...] The shearing forces on
> the bolts must be a couple tons in my set up.
I'm pretty good at math if I do say so myself. My problem (not being a mechanical or civil engineer) is that I don't know what formulas to use, what the numbers would mean if I got an answer, or what's "standard" or "code" even if I knew what I was doing...
So, I've done some math but whether or not it means anything or not I'm unsure:
My math says (conservatively) that the 5/8" rod has a shear strength of about 8000 pounds. Lifting the tower up can't generate that kind of force but a 250 pound sideways force at the top of the tower while it's being lifted could. But the weight of the tower and mill could only generate half that force. That 2x safety factor combined with the conservative rating of the rod gives a safety factor of about 4x. I might want a higher factor in a public setting but I think (guess) that that's enough for my backyard. Well, that's if my engineering is worth the pixel dust you're reading...
> You can see the flex in the 3 inch angle iron legs [...]
It's possible that my tower is stiffer. I haven't seen any tendency for it to flex yet.
Also, I don't think that the weight of the tower and mill (also a 10 footer) will flex the rod because the rod is supported along it's entire length and range of motion directly on the concrete.
If you can imagine that the following drawing is an end-on view of the bracket, then it shows the tower and bracket at 0, 30, 60 and 90 degrees.

This is the main reason that I didn't put the rod into a hole drilled into a stationary piece of metal, then I'd have to wonder about the strength of that piece as well. But since it's not there, it can't fail!
Well, that's my thinking-slash-design-strategy. I'm not saying that stronger isn't stronger but that would still leave me with the question of what's good enough.
Thanks again,
- Ed.