ONENGINEER
Geotechnical
- Oct 13, 2011
- 284
I am employing the beta method to calculate the ultimate load capacity of relatively long piles (35-40m). The soils encountered are predominantly clayey sandy silts, as well as sand. The Standard Penetration Tests (SPTs) conducted in the field often exceed 30 or are reported as refusal before reaching 24 inches of penetration. I would appreciate expert insights on the following points:
1. I am utilizing the Canadian Foundation Engineering Manual (CFEM), which provides the following beta values for cast-in-place piles:
- Clay: 0.25-0.32 (uncertainty exists regarding whether this is for driven or bored piles)
- Silt: 0.2-0.3
- Loose sand: 0.2-0.3
- Medium sand: 0.3-0.5
- Dense sand: 0.4-0.6
Question: Is there a more detailed reference for estimating beta values for silty clayey sand or sandy clayey silt?
2. The N values I employ are uncorrected as reported by the driller. The categorization into loose, medium, and dense conditions may remain the same regardless of whether one uses N, Ncorr, or N(60).
Question: In principle, should one use raw N values, Ncorr, or N(60) regardless of the above?
3. I have noted in other discussions that the Tomlinson or Fellenius method of design was recommended by BigH.
Question: Tomlinson advocates for a constant friction below a critical depth, whereas Fellenius considers this a fallacy. Do these two methods converge in practice?
Thank you for your assistance.
1. I am utilizing the Canadian Foundation Engineering Manual (CFEM), which provides the following beta values for cast-in-place piles:
- Clay: 0.25-0.32 (uncertainty exists regarding whether this is for driven or bored piles)
- Silt: 0.2-0.3
- Loose sand: 0.2-0.3
- Medium sand: 0.3-0.5
- Dense sand: 0.4-0.6
Question: Is there a more detailed reference for estimating beta values for silty clayey sand or sandy clayey silt?
2. The N values I employ are uncorrected as reported by the driller. The categorization into loose, medium, and dense conditions may remain the same regardless of whether one uses N, Ncorr, or N(60).
Question: In principle, should one use raw N values, Ncorr, or N(60) regardless of the above?
3. I have noted in other discussions that the Tomlinson or Fellenius method of design was recommended by BigH.
Question: Tomlinson advocates for a constant friction below a critical depth, whereas Fellenius considers this a fallacy. Do these two methods converge in practice?
Thank you for your assistance.