Glenn,
I saw that you wrote this earlier. Yup, that's all you need to do.
Just as soon as the bolts are sheared, the column is unsupported. Now, in spite of what someone might think from looking at drawings, column 79 & column 44 have about 3 side loads, 3 vertical loads & 3 moments at every story. The chance of the resultant forces & moments being directly downwards and zero, respectively, are zero. There will be a resultant side load & moment on the now unsupported columns 79 & southward unsupported column 44.
If column 79 should buckle 6" eastward, then the girder will slide off. But the big danger is if it buckles about 1" southward OR if column 44 buckles about 1" northward. If either of these happens, then the massive girder will simply shear off the 1" thick, flimsy seat, and fall.
Similarly, if the girder (W33 x 130) thermally expands until it contacts the body of either or both of col 79 or 44, and then buckles under the axial load because it is constrained, it will fall off the support plate, shear the seat & fall.
Similarly, if the girder merely sags due to heat after shearing the bolts, it'll fall off the support plate, shear the seat & fall.
And if it buckles from thermal expansion, somehow does not fall off, but then cools off, then it will absolutely fall off the support plate, shear the seat & fall.
The 1" seat (without a gusset plate) is the incredibly weak link in this design. It ONLY manages to hold up that girder as long as the girder is over the support plate. If the central rib of the girder ever manages to come to the edge of the support plate, it's all over. The 1" seat will fold up like a cheap beach chair.
Anyone think that the support structure elements are moving around sizable distances in that building?
Anyone think that it's impossible for the combination of the expansion of the W24 beams AND the motion of their opposite ends AND any lateral movement of columns 79 and/or 44 could not possibly move the southern end of the W33 column 6" west and/or 1" north??
I fully expect that C7 or gerry will guarantee that this combined, relative motion is "impossible".
That's because they have no experience with large structures. Especially ones on fire.
Good work, Glenn.
tom