Methinks you need a better epoxy for them anchors..
Or just use 8,000 PSI anchoring cement, bonds wickedly to existing concrete, even without expensive undercutting tools. Cures underwater too. Impervious to any temps below the kiln it was made in, lol.
Here in Austin we use epoxy to anchor all our concrete stuff..
BRAND name? Because the stuff I've looked at warns RIGHT ON ITS OWN LABEL about the 105F. Then there's SHRINKAGE and coefficient of THERMAL EXPANSION issues too... quite a different material from the surrounding Portland cement mixture.
On our lakes we drill into the rock and anchor our boatdocks with epoxy..
Immersed, or coffer-dammed? It's a lot of labor to make a "dry spot" in a body of water, lol.
AND you say epoxy won't do for a hurricane? That's what lawyers and engineers in a court room will getcha ain't it? The 105*F is a joke.. The stuff we use clings to the rock and the metal anchor even here in the desert.
Again, it's the folks who MAKE IT saying this, so it'd be kinda hard to defend in court... or explain to your (surviving) family members, eh...? =:O Have you read up on Boston's Big Dig debacle? Believe it was an epoxy (workmanship?) failure which killed some innocent civilians driving through in their vehicle. Apparently proper resin:hardener ratios and mixing techniques are a bit too exacting for the average illegal immigrant non-union laborers...??
Personally I think a hurricane will bring down anything that one can AFFORD to build so I ask "why bother"?
Uh, perhaps you're confusing hurricane with TORNADO, or hurricane winds with hurricane STORM SURGE? All of coastal Fla. (incl. my house) is built to withstand hurricane WINDS, and HAS, many times, e.g. 2004-2005.
You may have to clear some trees off the bridges, but you can drive right over them after the wind abates, not a creak from their beefy concrete piers. ;') The concrete power poles stand, the wooden ones over 12 years old snap... oh well... kinda like when peeps put a wood-frame addition on a sturdy CBS house--looks like a cleaver removed the addition, LOL.
And is was all AFFORDABLE (the local sand, gravel & limestone is PRIMO for making high PSI concrete--we export trainloads of it everyday)... until Greenspan did his Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac BUBBLE thing 2001-2005... as that unwinds, in a bad way, it's again becoming affordable... via foreclosure auctions.