Testguyaugusta
Materials
- Sep 27, 2022
- 2
thread261-445671
You can't get 105%. That's a bad proctor, gauge, or user error and maybe a combination of all three.
I've spent too many hundreds of hours behind rollers running densities trying to get material to 100% with a good proctor. Most companies won't even accept a 105%. Only someone without the practical hands on knowledge and thinks theoretical is reality would say that. Every tester worth his salt knows you can't hit a 105% with an accurate MDD. Check your moisture, calibrate with a sand cone and make sure your depth is correct and no offsets are plugged into the gauge. Run a one point if you can, take the material under the gauge from where you did your shot back to the lab and run another D 698 on it.
A 105% is just testing 101, first day stuff you learn to know you've got a bad proctor. Never once in thousands of tests I've done has a 105% been real. Drawing it on a curve on a screen isn't the same thing as actually making it happen in the field.
You can't get 105%. That's a bad proctor, gauge, or user error and maybe a combination of all three.
I've spent too many hundreds of hours behind rollers running densities trying to get material to 100% with a good proctor. Most companies won't even accept a 105%. Only someone without the practical hands on knowledge and thinks theoretical is reality would say that. Every tester worth his salt knows you can't hit a 105% with an accurate MDD. Check your moisture, calibrate with a sand cone and make sure your depth is correct and no offsets are plugged into the gauge. Run a one point if you can, take the material under the gauge from where you did your shot back to the lab and run another D 698 on it.
A 105% is just testing 101, first day stuff you learn to know you've got a bad proctor. Never once in thousands of tests I've done has a 105% been real. Drawing it on a curve on a screen isn't the same thing as actually making it happen in the field.