oldestguy
Geotechnical
- Jun 6, 2006
- 5,183
Here is a question that may be a dumb one, but I have recently heard of a "contractor" installing soldier piles for retaining the sides of an excavation using this method. Comments??.
Before excavating for a basement, a soldier pile system with lagging was installed surrounding a proposed excavation site.
At each soldier pile location a casing is advanced into the ground with a continuous flight auger inside. Not sure if any force is applied downward, but unlikely. Also not sure if the auger was working ahead of casing.
After the casing and auger are at required depth, the auger comes out and an H pile is set inside. Then pea gravel is gradually dumped in the cavity, as the casing is withdrawn, leaving the H pile surrounded by gravel.
This site work is below the water table, in saturated fine sands with thin clay layers (lacustrine area).
Upon excavating inside this "wall" of soldier piles and lagging, the piles all have tilted inward and earth behind has settled.
Would not this procedure have been suspect from the start?? Has anyone heard of it before?
Subsequent nearby test borings show very loose soil near these soldier piles.
Before excavating for a basement, a soldier pile system with lagging was installed surrounding a proposed excavation site.
At each soldier pile location a casing is advanced into the ground with a continuous flight auger inside. Not sure if any force is applied downward, but unlikely. Also not sure if the auger was working ahead of casing.
After the casing and auger are at required depth, the auger comes out and an H pile is set inside. Then pea gravel is gradually dumped in the cavity, as the casing is withdrawn, leaving the H pile surrounded by gravel.
This site work is below the water table, in saturated fine sands with thin clay layers (lacustrine area).
Upon excavating inside this "wall" of soldier piles and lagging, the piles all have tilted inward and earth behind has settled.
Would not this procedure have been suspect from the start?? Has anyone heard of it before?
Subsequent nearby test borings show very loose soil near these soldier piles.