fattdad wrote "If I have an N-value of 25 for a safety hammer you would re-equate that to an N60 value of 40 (i.e., 95/60). If I have an N-value of 25 for a doughnut hammer you'd re-equate that to an N60 value of 19 (i.e., 45/60)."
Should that say "If I have an N-value of 25 for AN AUTOMATIC hammer you would re-equate that to an N60 value of 40 (i.e., 95/60)." ?
msucog: For any analysis other than liquefaction, I would probably not bother trying to adjust it for energy UNLESS I'm using the CME auto hammer or something of the sort, or a hammer I know to perform very badly. The correlations are mostly based on unadjusted N with unknown hammer and operator characteristics, so leave them alone ordinarily - it would just be trying to sharpen the pencil too much. (Remember, it's just pounding a piece of pipe into the dirt - not exactly a precision instrument.) It could be important with the CME hammer, however, because the difference is so large; you might see a problem where there isn't one.
BTW, Cn is approximately (1/sigma'v)^1/2 for sigma' in tsf, atm, kg/cm^2, or bars. (Those units are all within a few percent of each other, close enough for dirt.)
Regards,
DRG