hollowstemhead
Geotechnical
- Feb 26, 2009
- 14
I recently monitored pile driving for two small bridge abutments. The piles were end bearing, relatively small (steel HP 10x42) and lightly loaded (to be dynamically tested to 100 kips). Our test borings identified 10 feet of fill/organic silt over 10 feet of stiff clay over 20 feet of very dense glacial till with frequent boulders over bedrock. The structural engineering, without consulting us, identified approximate pile tip at the top of bedrock and the contractor based his pile length purchase on this. Upon dynamic testing, it became apparent capacity was easily being achieved in the glacial till layer. The remainder of the piles were driven using the set criteria established but the depths were quite variable, up to 10 feet different from one side of an abutment to the other. I believe some of the shallower piles were catching up on boulders but were still achieving final set blow counts. Of course the contractor felt burned on the actual driven depths compared to the purchased lengths. Anyone have any experience in a case like this? Should I be worried about the piles sitting on boulders even though final set was achieved? Just looking for some general comments on a situation like this.