butch81385
Structural
- Dec 17, 2008
- 19
Hello,
I have weight (140 kip +) that will be sitting on a precast plank (yet to be designed). The end goal is to have a system with an "equivalent coefficient of friction" of 1.0, so that 140 kips of weight can resist 140 kips of lateral force. It was suggested to place plates at the end of the precast plank that protrude into the ground. Is there a way to design such a plate as part of an "equivalent coefficient of friction" as opposed to strictly relying on code maximum lateral bearing pressure (contact surface is 6" of 3/4" crushed aggregate on top of 18" of pit run, on top of existing soil with mostly unknown properties).
I am afraid that using the AASHTO friction factor for concrete on gravel = 0.6, and designing the plates for 200psf/f of lateral bearing, the plates will need to be way too large or too much extra weight will have to be added.
Any help is appreciated.
I have weight (140 kip +) that will be sitting on a precast plank (yet to be designed). The end goal is to have a system with an "equivalent coefficient of friction" of 1.0, so that 140 kips of weight can resist 140 kips of lateral force. It was suggested to place plates at the end of the precast plank that protrude into the ground. Is there a way to design such a plate as part of an "equivalent coefficient of friction" as opposed to strictly relying on code maximum lateral bearing pressure (contact surface is 6" of 3/4" crushed aggregate on top of 18" of pit run, on top of existing soil with mostly unknown properties).
I am afraid that using the AASHTO friction factor for concrete on gravel = 0.6, and designing the plates for 200psf/f of lateral bearing, the plates will need to be way too large or too much extra weight will have to be added.
Any help is appreciated.