655321
Civil/Environmental
- Dec 21, 2006
- 66
We have a couple of 30-year transformers with pads that are 4.5' deep, 10'long and x 20' wide. We are replacing the transformers, but want to reuse the pads. The new transformers are about 20% heavier, and has its center or gravity shifted off the center-line in the short direction of the pad. We calculated the max pressure on one side of the foundation doubles from the increased load and eccentricity.
Back when the earthwork occurred, we know the soils were tested, and were a well controlled engineered fill. We have an old document that prescribed an allowable bearing of 8.5 KSF (for the whole site). The underlying soils are deep highly Compacted medium sand.
I'd appreciate any input on this you have to offer; do those numbers seem unreasonable for compacted sand, does getting a geotech in on this seem reasonable; drilling holes near these devices is terrifying for us, is there an other means to establish the grounds adequacy without drilling?
Thanks.
Back when the earthwork occurred, we know the soils were tested, and were a well controlled engineered fill. We have an old document that prescribed an allowable bearing of 8.5 KSF (for the whole site). The underlying soils are deep highly Compacted medium sand.
I'd appreciate any input on this you have to offer; do those numbers seem unreasonable for compacted sand, does getting a geotech in on this seem reasonable; drilling holes near these devices is terrifying for us, is there an other means to establish the grounds adequacy without drilling?
Thanks.