For a single span short bridge, normally built by an ordinary bridge contractor, with simple pile driving capability, I have a question about what it practical. Site is in glacial country of Wisconsin.
The site has loose sand and silt to 60 feet and then a dense deposit of sity sand and occasional cobbles. However, in that zone and for considerable depth below there is artesian pressure of considerable magnitude. The fear is that piling founded in the dense zone will lose side friction and end bearing and settlement will occur. This has been known to happen at other sites in the state
We would like to get pling down to rock, which is at 100 feet. The usual loadings have been 40 to 60 tons per pile.
The usual contractors have pile driving equipment for say 50 ton H piles of 10 and 12 inch size, with welding capability, due to crane boom limits, etc. However, specifying piles have to go to rock, say by driving, may not be feasible.
Can jetting be done by some means that does not require a much taller crane boom?
On one job I know of a test boring was left with casing and a T fitting with horizontal discharge section, that apparently relieved the pressure. Maybe this is the answer, but local water regs dept may not permit it.
Would vibration methods do the job?
A heavier pile section driven to 100 tons? Any ideas?
The site has loose sand and silt to 60 feet and then a dense deposit of sity sand and occasional cobbles. However, in that zone and for considerable depth below there is artesian pressure of considerable magnitude. The fear is that piling founded in the dense zone will lose side friction and end bearing and settlement will occur. This has been known to happen at other sites in the state
We would like to get pling down to rock, which is at 100 feet. The usual loadings have been 40 to 60 tons per pile.
The usual contractors have pile driving equipment for say 50 ton H piles of 10 and 12 inch size, with welding capability, due to crane boom limits, etc. However, specifying piles have to go to rock, say by driving, may not be feasible.
Can jetting be done by some means that does not require a much taller crane boom?
On one job I know of a test boring was left with casing and a T fitting with horizontal discharge section, that apparently relieved the pressure. Maybe this is the answer, but local water regs dept may not permit it.
Would vibration methods do the job?
A heavier pile section driven to 100 tons? Any ideas?