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Timber Piles

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connect2

Structural
Dec 24, 2003
306
Early days.
What would be a general sort of rule of thumb for the allowable load for a timber pile? 20 tons?
Just ballparking some stuff. Yes there's lots more info needed.
Thanks
 
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should add, endbearing through dredged mixed fill, then clay to refusal in glacial till, length about 50 feet, there's about 4,800 of them carrying a structure built in the early 30's, not much known about them except they were locally provided, minimum dia 12" on drawings, likely red pine, likely treated.
 
Hi,
thanks for the replies.
SlideRuleEraa; Yes that's my starting ball park number as well.
JedClampett; Load Testing is for sure where we need/will end up. Access for testing and condition assessment though is very difficult and complicated.

It is a waterfront structure, a port, an elevator with a capacity of 155,000 tons of product alone.
so at 20 tons per pile, never mind condition, down drag, etc., etc., the drawings indicate 4,800 piles, 155,000/4,800 = 32 tons per pile product only and that doesn't include the weight structure or any other loads such as berthing.
 
Look at the serviceability of the whole system. What happens if you have a shut-down of this elevator? While wood piles have an excellent service record, I'm not so sure I would want to place such a critical structure on such a large number of wood piles.

I'm sure you've probably considered other foundation systems and I'm sure the owner wants to save money wherever possible, but the initial cost of a more robust deep foundation system would pale in comparison to a failure.
 
There is a Timber Foundation Series of articles that you can find on the internet - I have the original book back in storage - a lot of the articles are for Louisiana . . . I've used more than 20 ton (at 2000#/ton) on timber piles - mainly into compact sand. Can look at Nordland's equation for tapered piles; also, in driving, check with the modifications for Gates Formula (yeah, I know that many don't like driving formulas . . . but . . .)
 
Sure are SRE . . . I do remember, now, that you had these . . . I had the book (but in deep storage in Canada).
 
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