Dustyhohmann
Marine/Ocean
- Jun 13, 2020
- 2
thread256-110287
I was searching on google for some info and came across this thread, so I thought I would look for some help here. I am located in central Texas on lake LBJ, and work in boat dock construction. The normal around here is to drive 2 7/8” pipe using pneumatic hammers. We use a 110lb hammer. We drive through sand then into what everyone says is a granite gravel. Everyone try’s to drive the pipe to complete refusal. I have driven pipe from 5’ to 65’ deep using this method. But I was curious if there is away to figure out the blows per inch for refusal using these smaller hammers, and how much skin friction there might be. The reason I ask is because we build two story boat docks with concrete decks, so some of these piles hold about 3500lbs on them, which I don’t feel like is that much. There is no construction code here for thee boat docks, and I have never seen a engineered plan either.
Thank you for any help you can provide.
I was searching on google for some info and came across this thread, so I thought I would look for some help here. I am located in central Texas on lake LBJ, and work in boat dock construction. The normal around here is to drive 2 7/8” pipe using pneumatic hammers. We use a 110lb hammer. We drive through sand then into what everyone says is a granite gravel. Everyone try’s to drive the pipe to complete refusal. I have driven pipe from 5’ to 65’ deep using this method. But I was curious if there is away to figure out the blows per inch for refusal using these smaller hammers, and how much skin friction there might be. The reason I ask is because we build two story boat docks with concrete decks, so some of these piles hold about 3500lbs on them, which I don’t feel like is that much. There is no construction code here for thee boat docks, and I have never seen a engineered plan either.
Thank you for any help you can provide.