DaveVikingPE
Structural
- Aug 9, 2001
- 1,008
Any assistance/thoughts/etc. appreciated, re:
Boring logs indicate silty sand and sand from the surface to about 15 ft, thence a very soft, fat clay all the way down to the bottom of the bore hole, +50 ft.
Triaxial tests of sample taken from, according to test report, 25+/- ft, sure do look like a clayey sand. Two of the Mohr's circles look like a sandy clay, but the third skews everything, giving a high phi (I expected phi = 0 or less than 10 degrees at most) and higher cohesion values (expected c to top out in the 500 psf, results are above 1000 psf).
Unconfined compression for another sample, from 40+/- ft down the hole behaves like a soft clay.
My gut instinct is to toss out the triaxial test results, look to the unconfined compression test and rely on conservative book values based on what the boring logs tell me is actually in the ground. This is for a timber pile foundation.
Thanks in advance for any responses!
Boring logs indicate silty sand and sand from the surface to about 15 ft, thence a very soft, fat clay all the way down to the bottom of the bore hole, +50 ft.
Triaxial tests of sample taken from, according to test report, 25+/- ft, sure do look like a clayey sand. Two of the Mohr's circles look like a sandy clay, but the third skews everything, giving a high phi (I expected phi = 0 or less than 10 degrees at most) and higher cohesion values (expected c to top out in the 500 psf, results are above 1000 psf).
Unconfined compression for another sample, from 40+/- ft down the hole behaves like a soft clay.
My gut instinct is to toss out the triaxial test results, look to the unconfined compression test and rely on conservative book values based on what the boring logs tell me is actually in the ground. This is for a timber pile foundation.
Thanks in advance for any responses!