morgwreck243
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 23, 2013
- 21
My question is can anyone point me to some previous specifications for backfilling the pipe's trench. I have not overseen many pipeline installations in my time, but the few that I have have mostly been for gravity / stormwater pipes (pond outlets / inlets).
I've taken over as the field QC for my company's project in southern Ohio. Part of the work is to install at 12-inch PVC raw water line and construct a sediment pond for the future landfill. I'm currently baby-sitting the water line installation and I believe the specifications are too restrictive / not producing the quality that they want to get. Currently, for the backfilling, we are required to backfill, with sand, in 6" lifts up to 9-in above the pipe. From there we will backfill with the excavated spoils (clay material) and compact in 4-in loose lifts and testing for 95% density test (ASTM D6938). The testing starts with the 2nd clay lift. Due to the depth of the pipe the clay fill will be approximately 3.5 ft to 4 ft thick.
This water line is not within any road ROWs, rather just out in the country-side.
One idea I have is to take a test area (roughly 50 LF) and try compaction at different thicknesses (8-in or 12-in) and test these areas to prove they will achieve the desired density.
My other is to try and present what others are doing / requiring for backfilling.
--morgwreck243
I've taken over as the field QC for my company's project in southern Ohio. Part of the work is to install at 12-inch PVC raw water line and construct a sediment pond for the future landfill. I'm currently baby-sitting the water line installation and I believe the specifications are too restrictive / not producing the quality that they want to get. Currently, for the backfilling, we are required to backfill, with sand, in 6" lifts up to 9-in above the pipe. From there we will backfill with the excavated spoils (clay material) and compact in 4-in loose lifts and testing for 95% density test (ASTM D6938). The testing starts with the 2nd clay lift. Due to the depth of the pipe the clay fill will be approximately 3.5 ft to 4 ft thick.
This water line is not within any road ROWs, rather just out in the country-side.
One idea I have is to take a test area (roughly 50 LF) and try compaction at different thicknesses (8-in or 12-in) and test these areas to prove they will achieve the desired density.
My other is to try and present what others are doing / requiring for backfilling.
--morgwreck243