CAP4000 - I appreciate the assumption, and the wishful thinking. Actually, the foundation was designed in accordance with the builder's best opinion and experience. Hmmm. The makeshift pilasters on the 9' wall with 8' of backfill might have stopped the wall from moving, had the cores been grouted. Yup, nice shiny rebar exposed through the 1/4" horizontal crack.
Focht3 - I have no idea if frost is really to blame, but the builder seemed to be sure of it and sometimes it helps to give the builder something beyond his own inabilities to blame. And since I had never thought about frost loading, it seemed worth asking the question.
PEinc - this house is in the woods at the south edge of the Poconos, and it is shaded from most winter light by a mountain ridge directly to the south, so all sides are similar, except where the garage is attached.
The house is on a slope and the sump pit is bone dry, even after all of the rains we've had in northeast PA this winter. But when I look at my backyard and see puddles on top of ground that is so solidly packed from one freezing event after another, it makes me wonder if all of those rains aren't locked in ice near the ground surface.
Regarding the cracks, the big problem wall has 1/4" horizontal cracks down 3' from the top. Two other walls have one or two 1/16" horizontal cracks running the length of the wall.
I am considering fixing the walls with the 1/16" cracks thus:
- Locate the rebar somehow (by luck, intuition, drilling, etc.)
- Grout the cores with rebar in them by knocking holes in say the bottom, middle and top of the wall.
- Grind out and repoint the cracked joints.
- Verify design capacity once we determine what rebar is in the wall.
There is no discernible bulge to these walls, and I am working under the premise that they are otherwise in good enough condition to stay.
The wall with a 1/4" crack is bulged somewhere around 3/4". The owner does not care if the bulge remains, as long as the strength is restored. Also, the (ineffective)pilasters are about 11 feet apart, 9 feet tall. I am considering repairing this wall as follows:
- Remove the top 3-4 courses of the pilaster down to the crack level
- Grouth these cores completely solid with existing rebar
- Cast the remainder of the pilaster to full height, anchoring into the adjacent wall as necessary.
- Repair all horizontal cracks the same as the other walls.
I am figuring on waiting until everything thaws before any work should be done. If it is frost heave, perhaps the wall might move back enough to close the cracks a bit. Would that possibly prove the frost theory if the cracks actually closed?
TIA,
Jim