MattMontgomery
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 12, 2015
- 2
Hello,
Quick question, I was having a bit of a discussion with my director, whether or not you get full pressure on a retaining wall if you do not have continuous conditions.
The problem is, we have 2 retaining walls of approximately 800mm high, at 400mm from eachother, with ballast (40mm granular fill, ungraded) filling up the void between. I was arguing that ballast does not work like water, and we do not take the full height of ballast as the effective "head" because the pressures are distributed differently and there is rigidity that comes into play, as it is not a liquid. Surely if the wall pressures actually begin to move the wall, there is much less ballast within the wedge to push the wall outwards?
Please could someone confirm to me the system in which this works? Should it be full height of ballast pressures, or does it reach an equilibrium?
Quick question, I was having a bit of a discussion with my director, whether or not you get full pressure on a retaining wall if you do not have continuous conditions.
The problem is, we have 2 retaining walls of approximately 800mm high, at 400mm from eachother, with ballast (40mm granular fill, ungraded) filling up the void between. I was arguing that ballast does not work like water, and we do not take the full height of ballast as the effective "head" because the pressures are distributed differently and there is rigidity that comes into play, as it is not a liquid. Surely if the wall pressures actually begin to move the wall, there is much less ballast within the wedge to push the wall outwards?
Please could someone confirm to me the system in which this works? Should it be full height of ballast pressures, or does it reach an equilibrium?