BigH
Geotechnical
- Dec 1, 2002
- 6,012
Just saw (and responded to) a thread on earth pressures on a retaining wall if the backfill is geofoam. . . argued that there will be "some" lateral earth pressure if the geofoam is compressible . . . I just don't get it . . . guess I'll be enlightened . . . doesn't seem to me that, other than surcharge loading and cover soil that there is any real pressure at all - especially given that geofoam comes in big blocks . . . Am I off base???
Reminds me of a time when I was in Indonesia (1983) and we were seeing effective friction angles pf clays reported from triaxial testing with pore water pressure measurements of about 8deg whereas the undrained friction angle was 6deg. I was only a few years out of school and EVERY lab in Indonesia was doing the same including the professors from ITB (Institute of Technology of Bandung). Got to a point where I was wondering "what did I know?" - well, later, when visiting one of the labs I found out that they were measuring porewater pressures but were still failing the samples in 15 to 20 minutes . . . . case closed!
Reminds me of a time when I was in Indonesia (1983) and we were seeing effective friction angles pf clays reported from triaxial testing with pore water pressure measurements of about 8deg whereas the undrained friction angle was 6deg. I was only a few years out of school and EVERY lab in Indonesia was doing the same including the professors from ITB (Institute of Technology of Bandung). Got to a point where I was wondering "what did I know?" - well, later, when visiting one of the labs I found out that they were measuring porewater pressures but were still failing the samples in 15 to 20 minutes . . . . case closed!