TheEnginerd
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 19, 2012
- 34
Hello,
We usually do not get involved with mounding analysis for our infiltration basin designs - unless required by the reviewing engineer.
Our NJ state requirement for infiltration basins is to have a 2 foot separation to groundwater, and to "halve" the percolation rates of the soil for the design.
Our geotechnical engineer has followed the simple USGS mounding analysis spreadsheet available here
tells me that the mound of water is 9 feet in the center of the basin and that the basin will overtop and it fails.
My question is, doesn't the HYDROCAD program take into account the impact of the underlying groundwater on the basin's ability to infiltrate? The HYDROCAD program asks me for the infiltration rate of the soil, the separation to seasonal high GW, and when I input the 100 year storm. Usually when the program tells me that the water reaches a certain level during the 100 year storm, that's as far as we go.
Does this mean that we've been designing basins without looking at the other half of the puzzle for all of these years, or is the geotechnical engineer completely wrong?
I feel that the two programs are calculating two different things, but I don't know enough to discuss intelligently with the geotech engineer.
We usually do not get involved with mounding analysis for our infiltration basin designs - unless required by the reviewing engineer.
Our NJ state requirement for infiltration basins is to have a 2 foot separation to groundwater, and to "halve" the percolation rates of the soil for the design.
Our geotechnical engineer has followed the simple USGS mounding analysis spreadsheet available here
My question is, doesn't the HYDROCAD program take into account the impact of the underlying groundwater on the basin's ability to infiltrate? The HYDROCAD program asks me for the infiltration rate of the soil, the separation to seasonal high GW, and when I input the 100 year storm. Usually when the program tells me that the water reaches a certain level during the 100 year storm, that's as far as we go.
Does this mean that we've been designing basins without looking at the other half of the puzzle for all of these years, or is the geotechnical engineer completely wrong?
I feel that the two programs are calculating two different things, but I don't know enough to discuss intelligently with the geotech engineer.