Kevin9679
Geotechnical
- Aug 4, 2020
- 26
This has probably been treaded before. For infinite load surcharge, we often take an equivalent height of soil, aka active wedge method. For finite strip loads, we're told by every textbook to use 2q in soils. But that leads to a maximum pressure that is 3x as much as with the Active Wedge method. In many cases, the entirety of the load acting on the wall/whatever is much higher than that calculated by the Active Wedge method. This would especially be true if it was an infinite strip calculated using Bousinesq.
In Geotech we have equations, but in real life the "most realistic" answer doesn't vary by a factor of 3 for the exact same condition. I would have to believe that many people have done full-scale load cell measurements. Has anyone seen that first hand or in papers, and like to chime in?
In Geotech we have equations, but in real life the "most realistic" answer doesn't vary by a factor of 3 for the exact same condition. I would have to believe that many people have done full-scale load cell measurements. Has anyone seen that first hand or in papers, and like to chime in?