Rhoadies
Structural
- Jan 28, 2010
- 8
I have thoroughly researched via Google and the forum searches here and I did not find anything of use to me on this topic.
With that in mind, here I go.
I have a building being supported on piers and gradebeams. The piers are 18" and 24" diameters respectively and are 25' long socketed a minimum of 3' into limestone. I do not have access to LPile (I am working on that) but I need to determine the lateral capacity of my piles to determine if the above sizes are adequate.
Per the geotech, I was given this information to determine lateral capacity.
depth k(pci)
0-8' ---
8'-13' 90
13'-20' 60
20'-22' 2000
22'-30' 4000 (socketed only 3' into this material)
Not having LPile I used RAM Advanse to set up my piers and grade beams as it would be in the field. I then broke the pier lengths into 1' sections with spring constants consistent with the values above modified to an 18" section (k*.85*18"*12").
By doing this, I was able to show that my lateral deflection was under 1/2".
Is this an acceptable analysis procedure? I know that the soil stiffness isn't linear, with that in mind, am I totally screwed without using LPile?
Oh, to tie in the subject line, if this is a rigid pile, how do you determine the lateral capacity for that? My geotech textbook from school was not helpful by any means. It said that long piers are L/D>35 whereas mine is 16. But, it quickly brushed by the short pier lateral capacity directly to the long piers.
Again thanks for reading, I appreciate any help you could lend to this subject. Have a great weekend!
With that in mind, here I go.
I have a building being supported on piers and gradebeams. The piers are 18" and 24" diameters respectively and are 25' long socketed a minimum of 3' into limestone. I do not have access to LPile (I am working on that) but I need to determine the lateral capacity of my piles to determine if the above sizes are adequate.
Per the geotech, I was given this information to determine lateral capacity.
depth k(pci)
0-8' ---
8'-13' 90
13'-20' 60
20'-22' 2000
22'-30' 4000 (socketed only 3' into this material)
Not having LPile I used RAM Advanse to set up my piers and grade beams as it would be in the field. I then broke the pier lengths into 1' sections with spring constants consistent with the values above modified to an 18" section (k*.85*18"*12").
By doing this, I was able to show that my lateral deflection was under 1/2".
Is this an acceptable analysis procedure? I know that the soil stiffness isn't linear, with that in mind, am I totally screwed without using LPile?
Oh, to tie in the subject line, if this is a rigid pile, how do you determine the lateral capacity for that? My geotech textbook from school was not helpful by any means. It said that long piers are L/D>35 whereas mine is 16. But, it quickly brushed by the short pier lateral capacity directly to the long piers.
Again thanks for reading, I appreciate any help you could lend to this subject. Have a great weekend!