I wish to discuss the various acceptability criteria for safe working
loads of piles from Pile load tests. The most commonly quoted
criterion is: "Safe working load is 50% of the load corresponding to
a settlement of 10% of pile diameter".
When we consider large diameter piles, say 1500mm, the load
corresponding to 150mm (nearly 6" would need to be obtained.
Testing for such large settlements is possible only if we have
separate 'test piles' not used in the project. What is the practice?
Some bridge engineers may be able to clarify.
Further, the settlement would be about 25-30% (30-50mm)
under operating loads. Is this information given to and used
by structural engineers in their analyses? I was trying a test
example, and the design bending moments could be drastically
different if the settlement is considered in a struture with
continuous beam elements supported on piles. This kind of
situation is likely in bridges and marine structures.
Any feedbacks?
Thanks in advance,
Hariharan
loads of piles from Pile load tests. The most commonly quoted
criterion is: "Safe working load is 50% of the load corresponding to
a settlement of 10% of pile diameter".
When we consider large diameter piles, say 1500mm, the load
corresponding to 150mm (nearly 6" would need to be obtained.
Testing for such large settlements is possible only if we have
separate 'test piles' not used in the project. What is the practice?
Some bridge engineers may be able to clarify.
Further, the settlement would be about 25-30% (30-50mm)
under operating loads. Is this information given to and used
by structural engineers in their analyses? I was trying a test
example, and the design bending moments could be drastically
different if the settlement is considered in a struture with
continuous beam elements supported on piles. This kind of
situation is likely in bridges and marine structures.
Any feedbacks?
Thanks in advance,
Hariharan