Kevin9679
Geotechnical
- Aug 4, 2020
- 26
Hello,
I am not a driller, I am your book-smart white-collar geotechnical engineer. I am located in NY. Drillers are typically limited to your standard, 2" spoon, 3" spoon, retainer baskets on the spoons, NX, NQ, HQ. Let's ignore clay samples for now. I'm asking for master drillers because I'm trying to glean little secrets that us bookworms will never learn from the book.
1. If you have recognized a pattern of success/failure recovering high quality samples (as far as disturbed samples go) in debris fill FROM DRILLING, what are the little things that aren't discussed in your typical text book? What I'm planning is to take a 2" spoon, and when there's low recovery with the 2" go down with a 3". Use a retainer basket for both. But that has limitations as well.
2. How do you keep the borehole from sloughing in when going through intermittent loose soil and cobbles/boulders? Are there advantages/disadvantages to spinning casing instead of driving, besides worse "cut-off?" What causes sloughing in loose Sand even when the borehole is cased or Revert is used? I heard that if the drill bit is pulled out too quickly, it can create suction and pull soil up with it. Is there any truth to that?
3. Coring in fractured rock. Some drillers can recover rock with RQD = 100% even as a vertical fracture runs through it. Others can't recover jack. Us bookworms have this belief that triple barrels will obtain better results. I have a personal belief that H size samplers will provide a higher quality run, although the RQD would have to be determined differently. But does any of that matter when running through a 70 degree sub-vertical fracture or fault? Why do some drillers go right through that as smooth as you can imagine, and others struggle like there's no tomorrow? It's like the samples are falling out of the bit and then being ground up or something. What are the invisible things that the books simply don't cover?
4. Is there a driller's manual that discusses these things in detail? All I ever find online is literature written by engineers.
Thanks,
Kevin
I am not a driller, I am your book-smart white-collar geotechnical engineer. I am located in NY. Drillers are typically limited to your standard, 2" spoon, 3" spoon, retainer baskets on the spoons, NX, NQ, HQ. Let's ignore clay samples for now. I'm asking for master drillers because I'm trying to glean little secrets that us bookworms will never learn from the book.
1. If you have recognized a pattern of success/failure recovering high quality samples (as far as disturbed samples go) in debris fill FROM DRILLING, what are the little things that aren't discussed in your typical text book? What I'm planning is to take a 2" spoon, and when there's low recovery with the 2" go down with a 3". Use a retainer basket for both. But that has limitations as well.
2. How do you keep the borehole from sloughing in when going through intermittent loose soil and cobbles/boulders? Are there advantages/disadvantages to spinning casing instead of driving, besides worse "cut-off?" What causes sloughing in loose Sand even when the borehole is cased or Revert is used? I heard that if the drill bit is pulled out too quickly, it can create suction and pull soil up with it. Is there any truth to that?
3. Coring in fractured rock. Some drillers can recover rock with RQD = 100% even as a vertical fracture runs through it. Others can't recover jack. Us bookworms have this belief that triple barrels will obtain better results. I have a personal belief that H size samplers will provide a higher quality run, although the RQD would have to be determined differently. But does any of that matter when running through a 70 degree sub-vertical fracture or fault? Why do some drillers go right through that as smooth as you can imagine, and others struggle like there's no tomorrow? It's like the samples are falling out of the bit and then being ground up or something. What are the invisible things that the books simply don't cover?
4. Is there a driller's manual that discusses these things in detail? All I ever find online is literature written by engineers.
Thanks,
Kevin