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Determining an Existing Foundation Thickness 1

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PEFLWI

Structural
Oct 23, 2012
120
I need to determine the thickness of an existing foundation. The original drawings are missing. Would a rebar locator be able to determine the thickness? What other ways could I determine the thickness of he foundation?
 
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I've done this before to check the thickness of an existing warehouse slab. Drill a hole with a hammer drill until you encounter dirt, stick a long paper clip or rod down the hole with the end bent at a 90 degree angle. Stick it all the way to the bottom of the hole and pull upward until the hook catches on the bottom of the slab. Make a tick at the top of the rod, pull out of the hole and measure.

"Engineers only know about 80% of the truth, the next 10% is very difficult to achieve, and the last 10% impossible. If we are bound to be wrong, we may as well be wrong simply and conservatively."
 
I'm with jersey here. I did it last week. Dig down to the bottom of the footing and use a measuring tape to figure out the distance from the bottom to the top. Don't try to get fancy with it - GPR will show you were voids are and, if you have a good operator, where rebar is, but rarely will it even tell you the size of the rebar much less the thickness of the concrete element.
 
For measuring the thickness of steel plate (as in, the tank industry), they have little ultrasonic thickness testers. But I have no idea if they are usable where the solid is not reasonably homogenous, or where the far surface is very rough.
 
80% has the right strategy for slabs, little wire hanger or something with a hook is great for checking a slab depth quickly and easily.

I do a ton of checking foundations for additions/ elevations and the first thing I tell people if they don't have original drawings is to dig a hole and call me when it's done.

I've used GPR on a number of jobs and about 75% of the time the results are inconclusive and we have to assume worst case/ not touch the existing structure. Those GPR guys are damn good salesmen though.
 
We have had good experiences with a local GPR company (central FL) for scanning CMU walls, slabs, foundations, concrete beams and columns, etc. The tolerances for rebar are within one size, rebar spacing within a couple of inches, and thickness also within an inch or so. I suppose like with everything, quality can vary greatly from company to company, and also depends a LOT on their equipment and experience. It also is relatively economical, enough so where I have used it on residential projects. If in doubt as to their ability, ask for an example report they recently did of something similar that you need.
 
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