nseguin
Geotechnical
- Aug 10, 2009
- 1
thread507-321109
Hello,
Are any of you aware of any existing requirements for pile load testing with regards to what the applied load should be? For instance, with an LRFD design, a structural resistance factor of 0.5 is applied to the ultimate load for the nominal structural compressive resistance for H-piles in severe driving conditions (AASHTO LRFD Bridge Design Spec.'s - 5th ed., 2010). This may or may not govern the pile's actual resistance, depending on the geotechnical resistance achieved through side/skin friction and end bearing (to which a resistance factor of 0.45 may be applied for a static analysis method, such as the Nordlund method).
If a static load test is to be performed, is the pile to be loaded to the magnitude of its nominal resistance, its factored resistance, or some other multiple thereof? Is this up to the designer? It would seem as though you would want to avoid loading a pile to its nominal (or loosely put, its "ultimate") resistance.
Any feedback would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks in advance,
Nate
Hello,
Are any of you aware of any existing requirements for pile load testing with regards to what the applied load should be? For instance, with an LRFD design, a structural resistance factor of 0.5 is applied to the ultimate load for the nominal structural compressive resistance for H-piles in severe driving conditions (AASHTO LRFD Bridge Design Spec.'s - 5th ed., 2010). This may or may not govern the pile's actual resistance, depending on the geotechnical resistance achieved through side/skin friction and end bearing (to which a resistance factor of 0.45 may be applied for a static analysis method, such as the Nordlund method).
If a static load test is to be performed, is the pile to be loaded to the magnitude of its nominal resistance, its factored resistance, or some other multiple thereof? Is this up to the designer? It would seem as though you would want to avoid loading a pile to its nominal (or loosely put, its "ultimate") resistance.
Any feedback would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks in advance,
Nate