DarthSoilsGuy
Geotechnical
- Oct 31, 2006
- 237
I've been reading posts lately and i feel like i'm seeing a reoccurring theme. i think back to my old Geot/CMT company.
When i would work on CMT work where either we or other companies did the Geotech report, i would hardly ever see any lab testing besides natural moisture, Proctor, maybe a wash #200 sieve, maybe Atterberg limits, and very rarely a hydrometer to supplement boring logs for the geotech report.
On DOT work we would take undistrubed samples for the state to run tests on. I'm assuming the state performed triaxial or unconfined testing on the samples.
My question is: Did there use to be more lab testing, specifically triaxial, consolidation, or __________ testing, performed by Geotech companies for commerical and industrial construction?
In my head, i imagine that:
There use to be and as the old Geotech Egrs picked ran the tests over and over again, they got a good feel for the expected info to come out of the tests. Once this happened, less tests were run and info was based on experience for commercial efficiency (less expensive lab costs). Then the oldies retired and now you have an industry guessing about soil properties without having good experience to back it up.
Am i way off base here?
-DSG
When i would work on CMT work where either we or other companies did the Geotech report, i would hardly ever see any lab testing besides natural moisture, Proctor, maybe a wash #200 sieve, maybe Atterberg limits, and very rarely a hydrometer to supplement boring logs for the geotech report.
On DOT work we would take undistrubed samples for the state to run tests on. I'm assuming the state performed triaxial or unconfined testing on the samples.
My question is: Did there use to be more lab testing, specifically triaxial, consolidation, or __________ testing, performed by Geotech companies for commerical and industrial construction?
In my head, i imagine that:
There use to be and as the old Geotech Egrs picked ran the tests over and over again, they got a good feel for the expected info to come out of the tests. Once this happened, less tests were run and info was based on experience for commercial efficiency (less expensive lab costs). Then the oldies retired and now you have an industry guessing about soil properties without having good experience to back it up.
Am i way off base here?
-DSG