Jayrod12 said:
My whole point is that an additional 15 or more minutes between different trucks coming to site (which is well within the allowable time since batching requirements) will cause different slump test results even for the exact same concrete mix.
Your comment illustrates my point. If there is a significant variation in slump test results, there is a reason. Time to look at the batch plant and see if their procedures are proper or if their materials are consistent.
I came up in very professional firm that was a Geotechnical and Materials ENGINEERING firm, first and foremost. Our technicians were pretty well trained, not only in the testing methods, but the background of the tests and their significance. They were taught to spot things like you noted and to report them. I can't tell you how many times I was called by contractors complaining and saying that our technicians were going to be kicked off the job because they reported everything.
I agree that the professionalism of "testing labs" has declined over the years. I see technicians who are not well trained and engineers who review their work that are often not well versed in the subjects. In my opinion, a testing lab should be an engineering entity that provides testing, not a testing lab that has an engineer on staff for looks and credibility.
For the past 30+ years, the construction industry has been pushing for and receiving performance based specifications. The liability to produce a performance spec is lower for the design professional and less troublesome for the contractor....it only has to be a sales job on the front end. Good deal for all around? Not for the end user. Assessing construction based on performance alone is akin to closing the barn door after the animals have escaped. It's too late to correct problems when performance doesn't meet expectations and the cost to repair is often multiples of the original cost to have done it correctly.
There's nothing wrong with telling a contractor what you want and how you want it done. Yes, it increases our liability, but if we know what we're doing, we only have determine if the contractor performs, not wait 5 years to see if the construction performs and then try to figure out why it failed. I realize I'm also cutting my own throat here if construction gets better....after all, I deal with construction defects and failures in my forensic practice on a daily basis. Unfortunately, I don't think I have to worry.