AGGIE00
Gold Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2010
- Messages
- 449
What you are doing is using a failure of construction and assuming that it has something to do with another thing.
There are dozens of types of clay. Saying that clay is not stable is admitting that you don't understand compaction or soil types. Some clay is terrible to build on, other types are ideal. What has to happen when building is that the type of soil needs to be identified. Each soil type and each type of clay has a rating on what it can hold. Depending on the rating, the footings for the foundation are calculated. You can build on just about anything if you plan for it. When there is failure, it's not the soils fault, it's the builders fault.
When building, you either want to build on undisturbed soil or fill that is compacted. To compact soil, it needs a certain amount of moisture to hold it together. Too much and you have mush, not enough and you have powder. Compacting requies different techniqued depending on the soil type. Testing is done with a radiocative beam that is very similar to radar. It goes into the soil and bounces off. When I did this commercially, we had to be at 99 percent compaction to pass inspection. Nobody can do this with a farm tractor, but most can get fairly close and most houses are just fine. Some are not.
Once the slab is poured, no more water should EVER get under the slab. Over time, the moisture level in the soil will lower to just about nothing. This is why water does not come up through a slab.
As for evaporation on lawns, you missed my point. The moisture that you see on grass is dew. It is caused by condensation because of the air warming up faster then the ground. That dew remains as water on the grass, and then evaporates as the air warms up,and like you said, the wind dries it out.
My point was that the grass cannot get water out of the ground in it's roots to live because water in the ground does NOT come up to the surface.
Eddie
What you are refering to in laymen terms is plasticity index which is calculated by a geotechnical engineering firm and then a recomendation is given to the structural engineer on how to design the slab and pad. The geotechnical engineer then performes inspections by measuring moisture content and density in the field against a proctor that was taken from the pit where the borrow comes from, assuming the existing soil has a plasticity index above what is considered acceptable. Here, we want the PI to be between 7 and 15. I spent ten years as a superintendent building these pads for commercial construction and too much time defending our construction when there is a failure. It was not our job to design the pad, but to follow the plans as they were written. When the failure happens, usually caused by water infiltration, the finger is first pointed at the dirt contractor. The slab is then cored and depth checks are taken to verify that the minimum requirements were met for stable fill. Moisture content is also checked at the core locations and 9 times out of ten, the moisture level is much higher than the test reports showed at the time of construction. I'm not failing to understand anything, as this was my profession.
Also, compaction is relative to moisture content and anyone can exceed 100% compaction if the moisture content is below optimum, usually 4 points. Modified density curves do require 99% to pass, but also allow for less moisture which is never desired under a building. The amount of compactive effort needed to pass a modified density test will never be found on a residential slab and will eat your lunch on stabilized soil using 14ton pad foot and smooth drum vibratory rollers. Standard curve proctors require 95% density and a moisture content between -1 to +3.