tower22 - to analyze each and every site - that is always the golden question. A lot depends on the geology of the area in which you are working. There are many places where the basic soil conditions, say 1.5m or 5 ft below surface are remarkably the same over very large areas - bad areas are usually known. Then there are sites where the conditions can change every hundred feet or less. I would do a desk search of the geology of your area of interest; check out ag maps or US conservation maps for details. Your geotechnical engineer should know if your alignment is "always good" - "often bad" or "this and that." He would be able to help you arrange for a realistic programme of investigation. In more uniform areas, you could space out the investigation, in poor areas, you may very well have to do an investigation at each site. But get the geotechnical guy on board as part of your planning and I would surmise the overall design experience will be greatly enhanced.