JStructsteel
Structural
- Aug 22, 2002
- 1,449
Can someone help me explain how a battered pile gets it capacity. I understand it as a function of the batter....i.e. the component of the vertical load. So a 100K axial load with 4:1 batter would give you 25K lateral resistance.
The engineer I am discussing this with is saying the pile axial capacity is 200K, and thus at 4:1 it would be 50K lateral. I agree, if I had 200K vertical load on top.
The best analogy I can come up with is that if you dont have the vertical load, and you put the 50K lateral load, then what is stopping the pile from just being pushed over back to vertical any beyond.
The piles are end bearing, geotech says soil offers no lateral resistance.
Whats my best argument to convince the engineer that lateral load in a battered pile is the function of the vertical load?
The engineer I am discussing this with is saying the pile axial capacity is 200K, and thus at 4:1 it would be 50K lateral. I agree, if I had 200K vertical load on top.
The best analogy I can come up with is that if you dont have the vertical load, and you put the 50K lateral load, then what is stopping the pile from just being pushed over back to vertical any beyond.
The piles are end bearing, geotech says soil offers no lateral resistance.
Whats my best argument to convince the engineer that lateral load in a battered pile is the function of the vertical load?