Is anyone out there with extensive experience in evaluating the condition of unbonded post-tensioning strand in the old "push-through" (not extruded) type sheath with annular space between the steel strand and the sheath where water can collect and corrode and fail the strand?
After much investigation of a 40 year old garage we find a few totally broken tendons, some with one or more wires broken in a 7-wire strand, etc. Investigation over several years included chipping into the low point of tendons in about 150 spans, and tightness testing of the strand by crowbar prying, and screwdriver penetration test (screwdriver penetration test is not that good a test).
The whole structure is currently outfitted with an acoustic monitoring system and it reports about one "possible wire break" every 6 weeks. There have been only about 5 "definite" wire breaks reported by the acoustic system over its 3 years of operation.
The crowbar tightness testing has identified about 300 broken wires.
I have concluded that there is no way to reliably determine the number of broken wires in a strand (except for the case where the strand is totally limp, in which case we can conclude it is broken).
Based on the crowbar tightness testing, some spans have 22% loss of wires, but no midspan soffit cracking, but cracking is not a good guide to percent loss of wires, since you can have a large loss of wires without resulting cracking. However, if there is significant cracking, there is most probably also significant loss of prestress due to wire breakage.
Running ADAPT indicates that the loss of strength is close to the percent loss of strand wires. So 22% seems a lot, and I am having trouble justifying not doing anything to add support, but that would be very expensive.
Given the subjective nature of the crowbar tightness test, am I justified in recommending strengthening, or should I recommend another few years of the acoustic monitoring before making a decision to strengthen? Is there anything else that can be done to evaluate the loss of strength?