fattdad
Geotechnical
- Sep 7, 2006
- 2,790
Here's the nature of the cunundrum: If you have a site where the natural soils are firm to compact clayey sand (i.e., N=10 to 30) and very favorable for reuse in earthwork (i.e., correct moisture content, etc.) how many cubic yards of excavation would it take to yield the equivalent amount of fill (based on 95 percent Standard Proctor)? I would think that the in-situ soils (seemingly stable for cut slopes, foundation bearing, etc.) would be at a favorable level of compaction. I would also think that one cubic yard of soil in-situ would provide more than one cubic yard in the back of the dump truck. I would also think that the yardage in the dump truck would be more than the yardage in the newly-placed fill. My question is just what is the relationship between the excavation volume and the fill volume?
I just had an earthwork contractor tell me that he uses 12 percent, which would make some sense in going from the dump truck to the newly-placed fill. But is this even close to the "shrinkage" factor in going from the in-situ volume to the compacted volume?
I considered an ideal soil: gammaDmax@117, gammaD95@111.15 and gammaD85@99.45 pcf. Solving the weight-volume relationship, going from 85 percent compaction to 95 percent compaction is a factor of about 12 percent. Does anybody out here really believe that compact in-situ soils are sitting at 85 percent relative compaction? I don't. . . .
Comments?
f-d
¡papá gordo ain’t no madre flaca!
I just had an earthwork contractor tell me that he uses 12 percent, which would make some sense in going from the dump truck to the newly-placed fill. But is this even close to the "shrinkage" factor in going from the in-situ volume to the compacted volume?
I considered an ideal soil: gammaDmax@117, gammaD95@111.15 and gammaD85@99.45 pcf. Solving the weight-volume relationship, going from 85 percent compaction to 95 percent compaction is a factor of about 12 percent. Does anybody out here really believe that compact in-situ soils are sitting at 85 percent relative compaction? I don't. . . .
Comments?
f-d
¡papá gordo ain’t no madre flaca!