|
retaining wall - quick tables for preliminary design
hi
i am doing quite a few retaining walls at the moment and the ground conditions vary. the project is very preliminary and i don't want to spend too much design time on it at this stage. i was wondering if anybody has quick design table for retaining walls. i have spread sheets but tables would be quicker.
thanks
crsi
ditto
mike mccann
mmc engineering
hi guys
not familiar with crsi not used in my part of the world . can i download the tables from a website?
i can point you in the right direction for a simple and quick design spreadsheet for uk. very fast for preliminary design.
thanks vinny7
i have the uk rcc spread sheets for retaining walls. what i am really looking for is retaining wall tables which are used in north america. these tables would be very useful to me.
finnb-
are you talking about a reinforced concrete retaining wall or a segmental retaining wall (srw)that is unmortared and does not have a concrete footing?
finnb:
when you get the time, as retaining walls are a very common structures in the business, you should invest in developing your own retaining wall tables for various conditions. over the past 25 years, they have saved me far more hours than it took to develop them. whether youwrite your own program or buy one to do it, it is really money and time well spent.
mike mccann
mmc engineering
this may be a place to start:
nkt
thanks for the chart this is what i was looking for. do you know what soil conditions the retaining wall is designed for - the soils angle of internal friction.
couldn't quite make it out but am assuming the wall thickness is denoted as "f".
concretemasonry
the walls are insitu concrete cantilever retaining walls.
mike
i agree with the idea of a library of retaining walls i've done so many and every time i get a wall i'm starting from scratch.
had another look at the chart and now see cases for differnt bearing pressures on the toe. also see that f is bar spacing. |
|