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Pile Design and Construction Practice, Fifth edition

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176 Resistance of piles to compressive loads<br />

Settlement of pile head (mm)<br />

10<br />

20<br />

30<br />

40<br />

50<br />

60<br />

70<br />

80<br />

90<br />

0<br />

480 mm<br />

bored pile<br />

4.6 m long<br />

200<br />

Load on pile (kN)<br />

400 600 800<br />

510 mm dia precast<br />

concrete pile<br />

driven to 4.0 m<br />

480 mm bored pile<br />

9.1 m long<br />

10.06<br />

10.36<br />

Borehole<br />

record<br />

S<strong>and</strong>y clay fill<br />

Soft clayey<br />

peat with<br />

pockets of<br />

silty fine s<strong>and</strong><br />

Dense medium<br />

s<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />

gravel<br />

(N=47)<br />

Very dense silty<br />

fine s<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />

gravel (N=86)<br />

Very dense silty<br />

fine s<strong>and</strong><br />

with thin layers<br />

of silty clay<br />

(N=70)<br />

Stiff laminated<br />

silty clay with<br />

partings of<br />

silty fine s<strong>and</strong><br />

Figure 4.17 Comparison of compressive resistance of driven piles <strong>and</strong> bored <strong>and</strong> cast in-situ piles in<br />

dense to very dense coarse soils.<br />

very sensitive to the values of the angle of shearing resistance of the soils. These values are<br />

obtained from in-situ tests made in boreholes, <strong>and</strong> if the boring method has loosened the<br />

soil, which can happen if incorrect techniques are used (see Section 11.1.4), then the base<br />

resistance of any form of driven pile is grossly underestimated. It is very unlikely that the<br />

boring method will compact the soil, <strong>and</strong> thus any over-estimation of the shearing resistance<br />

is unlikely.<br />

A reliable method of predicting the shaft friction <strong>and</strong> base resistance of driven <strong>and</strong> driven<br />

<strong>and</strong> cast-in-place piles is to make static cone penetration tests at the site investigation stage<br />

(see Section 11.1.4). This equipment produces curves of cone penetration resistance with<br />

depth (Figure 4.18). Extensive experience with pile predictions based on the cone<br />

penetrometer in the Netherl<strong>and</strong>s has produced a set of design rules which have been<br />

summarized by Meigh (4.25) .<br />

0.91<br />

2.74<br />

5.49<br />

6.40

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