rochplayer
Geotechnical
- Jan 2, 2004
- 32
Here in Alaska we deal with oversized granular material that makes sampling with SPT problematic. A common solution here is to use a 3" OD, 2.5" ID oversized split spoon sampler driven with a 340-lb hammer falling 30". The resulting blows "approximate" the SPT, plus we are able to collect larger samples.
The only documentation I have on this is a chart of sampler driving resistance vs. relative density that plots on log-log paper sampler-hammer ratio Rs (1X10^-5 ft^2/lb) on the y-axis and driving restistance (blows/ft) on the x-axis. I believe the chart was produced by Dames and Moore in the early 80s. I also have a xerox copy of figure 1.21 from section 1.12 of "Foundation Engineering" by an unknown author and unknown publication date that plots the same information.
Rs is defined as (Do^3-Di^3)/(144*W*H) where
Do= sampler outside diameter (inches)
Di = sampler inside diameter (inches)
W = weight of hammer (lbs)
H = hammer drop (inches)
For a given relative density, the ratio between SPT and the "Alaska setup" is ~1.1. Therefore, to get "SPT" blows, it is necessary to multiply the field blows by 1.1.
I have been in Alaska for two years and this appears to be common practice, at least among the engineers I have worked with. I would like more comfort level on this subject, so if there are any other references or similar practices you all are aware of, please let me know.
Thanks!
The only documentation I have on this is a chart of sampler driving resistance vs. relative density that plots on log-log paper sampler-hammer ratio Rs (1X10^-5 ft^2/lb) on the y-axis and driving restistance (blows/ft) on the x-axis. I believe the chart was produced by Dames and Moore in the early 80s. I also have a xerox copy of figure 1.21 from section 1.12 of "Foundation Engineering" by an unknown author and unknown publication date that plots the same information.
Rs is defined as (Do^3-Di^3)/(144*W*H) where
Do= sampler outside diameter (inches)
Di = sampler inside diameter (inches)
W = weight of hammer (lbs)
H = hammer drop (inches)
For a given relative density, the ratio between SPT and the "Alaska setup" is ~1.1. Therefore, to get "SPT" blows, it is necessary to multiply the field blows by 1.1.
I have been in Alaska for two years and this appears to be common practice, at least among the engineers I have worked with. I would like more comfort level on this subject, so if there are any other references or similar practices you all are aware of, please let me know.
Thanks!