First off - and I am sure Focht3 will cover my "misses" - you ain't gonna get no pipe pile through 30 ft of till to the bedrock closed end driving. Not an 8" one; not any one. I think that the designer may be a
bit off in his expectations. I can't imagine why the design would go for driving an 8" pile through 120 ft of clays/silts, 30ft of till just to reach shale - not the strongest rock either and one that is quite like fractured at the surface due to the ice forces. Also near surface shales might have clayey seams that would affect bearing. Queenston Shale in Ontario usually is fractured/weathered to 5 ft or so in the locations I've hit it - sometimes less. - And, to boot, 8" in pretty small for such a long pile (slenderness ratio will be exceedingly high).
What is the load to be carried by the pile? What "area" are you in - Ontario? Upper New England? You never said - I've done 10 and 12 inch closed ends for more than 100 tons in till. I like closed end tube piles; I've used them many times and they are wonderful (my opinion) driven to till. In groups, you may have to check uplift on driving adjacent piles and retap.
For consideration of other pile types - you could use "H" piles. Again, I wouldn't drive to bedrock - only into the till. With these "knife and butter" piles, you might have to worry about your driving in the till. Our company did a study years back; H piles were driven into till, then load tested. Then they were retapped and went another 10 to 15ft! - then load tested again. Another round too. In each case, after achieving the set, retapping was able to re-enable driving. In the load tests - the "near" failure loads were all relatively the same. H-piles are used extensively - or had been - in Ontario tills (highway bridges). Where the tills are thin, they did reach the underlying shale formations.
Did the designer ever consider friction piles in the "stiff" - N=12 clayey zone? Might need more piles, but they wouldn't have to be so long. Use of step-tapered piles might be advantageous.
One other aspect bothers me - the 120 ft of N=1 to 12 clays/silts. Are you going to place any fills? If so, you need to take into account the negative downdrag forces. If on the shale, this is relatively rigid and would be detrimental (see some of the 1970s papers on driving pipe piles to bedrock and then they failed as the tip wouldn't budge but fill settlements overloaded the piles). In the tills, this would be less of a problem but would seriously need to be taken into account. 120 ft of the clay and silt is pretty thick.
Anyway - the above gives some early thoughts on your problem. Keep us informed.
![[cheers] [cheers] [cheers]](/data/assets/smilies/cheers.gif)