tch549
Geotechnical
- Dec 4, 2009
- 4
Are the installation of power poles typically monitored by a geotech? If so, what are the concerns?
The reason I am asking is because I am currently working as a geotech in northern Canada on a drill monitoring job which requires me to classify the soil in the base of the drilled hole. This is supposed to determine whether or not the power pole needs a bearing plate installed (which I assume increases surface area = decreasing bearing pressure caused by the butt of the pole). I have past experience with soil identification and geotech monitoring in other settings, but this is new to me - and I think the contractors might be trying to give me the run-around!
They claim to be well experienced, and I have no reason to believe they are not. They say "the engineers tried to apply the process for a multi-storey bldg to a @&#*$% wooden pole!". This could be a valid point, but contractors have a reputation for trying to bamboozle testers/techs to bend the rules for them, so I wanted to get some other opinions on what level of monitoring - if any - should be done with installation of power poles.
Also on a side note, when I become the bearer of bad news for contractors, i've had people tell me "once your in this career for a bit longer you will lose those ethics!", and then have a hearty laugh at my apparent "naivety". Are some rules meant to be broken in engineering? Or have I just been lucky enough to work with jackasses so far? lol
Geology of the Area: at the pole foundation depths ive encountered silt and clay based glacial tills (hard to very hard) and fluvial sand (fine to very fine grained, clean, moist-saturated, loose to dense)
Thanks for reading my lengthy post, all!
The reason I am asking is because I am currently working as a geotech in northern Canada on a drill monitoring job which requires me to classify the soil in the base of the drilled hole. This is supposed to determine whether or not the power pole needs a bearing plate installed (which I assume increases surface area = decreasing bearing pressure caused by the butt of the pole). I have past experience with soil identification and geotech monitoring in other settings, but this is new to me - and I think the contractors might be trying to give me the run-around!
They claim to be well experienced, and I have no reason to believe they are not. They say "the engineers tried to apply the process for a multi-storey bldg to a @&#*$% wooden pole!". This could be a valid point, but contractors have a reputation for trying to bamboozle testers/techs to bend the rules for them, so I wanted to get some other opinions on what level of monitoring - if any - should be done with installation of power poles.
Also on a side note, when I become the bearer of bad news for contractors, i've had people tell me "once your in this career for a bit longer you will lose those ethics!", and then have a hearty laugh at my apparent "naivety". Are some rules meant to be broken in engineering? Or have I just been lucky enough to work with jackasses so far? lol
Geology of the Area: at the pole foundation depths ive encountered silt and clay based glacial tills (hard to very hard) and fluvial sand (fine to very fine grained, clean, moist-saturated, loose to dense)
Thanks for reading my lengthy post, all!