CivilEQuinn
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 14, 2006
- 6
Hi,
I am a site engineer for a local public utility. We are installing a new 14'x14' reinforced cast-in-place box sewer. Our contractor has previously blasted rock encountered but has recently requested shortening the distance of the blasting operations to freshly placed concrete.
My question is: what are the distance and vibration (peak particle velocity) limits that we should adhere to when the new box slab is placed in relation to the blasting operations. The slab will be 50-100 feet away from the blasting, while the highest PPV we're been getting from monitoring is <1 (.4 -.8 ppv)
I found a study from the early 80's by Ralph Spears ( and another ( Does anyone know of a more recent study/paper that might be relevant?
Thanks ahead for any assistance.
I am a site engineer for a local public utility. We are installing a new 14'x14' reinforced cast-in-place box sewer. Our contractor has previously blasted rock encountered but has recently requested shortening the distance of the blasting operations to freshly placed concrete.
My question is: what are the distance and vibration (peak particle velocity) limits that we should adhere to when the new box slab is placed in relation to the blasting operations. The slab will be 50-100 feet away from the blasting, while the highest PPV we're been getting from monitoring is <1 (.4 -.8 ppv)
I found a study from the early 80's by Ralph Spears ( and another ( Does anyone know of a more recent study/paper that might be relevant?
Thanks ahead for any assistance.