Detail B below shows the girder displacement as calculated by TS without the column 76 girder push. The girder load is at the tip of the cantilevered seat.
Detail B1 below shows the girder displacement with the 1” column 76 girder push. The girder load is at the tip of the 4 7/16” cantilevered seat.
“The temperature of the girder between Columns 76 and 79 on Floor 13 was sufficient to displace Column 76 to the west and Column 79 to the east.” (NCSTAR 1-9 p527).
Detail C shows the sagging girder with a 20” deflection, similar to the beams deflection modeled by NIST. Any girder deflection would place the girder load at the tip of the cantilevered seat.
Detail D shows the condition at 13th floor Column 79 seat. The 83.7k load was calculated at 100 psf for 837 sf of area at the tip of the 4 7/16” cantilevered seat. It looks like torque would fail the seat in bending or shear and the girder would slide off, but I can’t do the math.
NIST didn’t consider the vertical failure of the seat and its model included a seat stiffener at Col 79 not shown in the plans.
“Since vertical failure of the seat was not considered (Section 11.2.5), the connections at Columns 79 and 81 were both modeled as stiffened seats.” (NCSTAR 1-9 p.558) See
“Figure 12-25 Seat connection in global model Column 79. (p. 559)