dirtsqueezer
Geotechnical
- Jan 29, 2002
- 269
I have a question about a project I never felt comfortable with.
A few years ago, I inspected pile driving for a building built entirely on timber piles, a number of which simply didn't meet the criteria upon initial driving. It was only after we ran into this shortcoming that the engineer agreed to re-driving the piles- it just seemed flimsy. If the engineer was competent enough to recommend pile criteria in the first place, why didn't he include re-drive criteria along with it? Not only that, but if competency depends 75% on skin friction, what happens when the case of an earthquake, when those particles are put in motion? I was in good-old-boy territory over there, so that may have had something to do with my questioning. Is this all due process for piles engineered mostly based on skin friction?
A few years ago, I inspected pile driving for a building built entirely on timber piles, a number of which simply didn't meet the criteria upon initial driving. It was only after we ran into this shortcoming that the engineer agreed to re-driving the piles- it just seemed flimsy. If the engineer was competent enough to recommend pile criteria in the first place, why didn't he include re-drive criteria along with it? Not only that, but if competency depends 75% on skin friction, what happens when the case of an earthquake, when those particles are put in motion? I was in good-old-boy territory over there, so that may have had something to do with my questioning. Is this all due process for piles engineered mostly based on skin friction?