The Civil Engineering Contractor June 2019 | Page 31

FEATURE Sonic drill rig in operation. site, the geology present, the loads that one is going to apply to the ground and the type of structure to be built, explains Dave Rossiter, non- executive chairman of the GeoGroup. Specialised equipment is used to access mountains, lakes and rivers and specialised drilling methods and in situ testing is required for specific types of structures. Generally, the more weathered the ground, the deeper one will have to investigate until sold rock is found. “For instance, the Fourways area is primarily granitic; Centurion dolomitic; the East Rand lies generally on Ecca series shale; and the south predominantly on andesite lava – and each rock type has different characteristics. “These different soil and rock types will have different characteristics which will determine how they are investigated. For instance, for lighter structures you can, in the generally shallow weathered granites, simply make use of a trailer mounted Dynamic probe super heavy (DPSH) rig to conduct a DPSH test to understand the bearing capacity of the soil. But in the dolomites, even for lighter structures, you will need information from greater depths to understand if there are cavities present due to the manner in which the dolomites weather,” says Rossiter. www.civilsonline.co.za A different proposition is posed by the lava rock in the south of Johannesburg, which weathers in spheroids, with large boulders sometimes interspersed in soft clay, ‘hard and soft alternating layers which can go on for about 30m, which is also a troublesome rock to build on because of its inconsistency, especially for dynamic loads’. “The dolomites are quite different in that there’s no consistency. Below a hard crust, there may be anything from a wet muddy cavity full of wad, to a fresh pinnacle of dolomite with a strength of 200Mpa or into a honeycomb mix of spoil and rock which can extend for as much as 80m below the surface,” he says. This challenge would generally be met with some geophysics testing and backed up with the cheapest form of drilling such as air drilling or percussion drilling. This method involves pumping air from a compressor down a rod string and into a ‘down the hole hammer’ which hammers the rock and blows the sample back up to the surface. Rossiter explains that for this investigation to be successful you must have information on sample return, air loss during drilling, water colour and speed of drilling as well as signs of sudden voids encountered while drilling. This can be best achieved by using the Jean Lutz (LT3) data collection system which collects a range of seven different parameters electronically during drilling. Manual recording of these parameters with a stopwatch is often misleading and confusing especially when cavities are present. During a recent piling project for a bridge on the Berg River at Val de Vie estate near Paarl, Geopile Africa (part of the Geogroup), found the underlying targeted Malmesbury shale to be covered with about 7m of large rounded quartzite boulders, which without the combination of the Atlas Copco Symmetrix drilling and grouting system, they could not have piloted stable holes through the boulders to accommodate the 170mm diameter ductile iron piles. “This is the same method that was successfully used on the Gautrain geotechnical investigation project, to install PVC ground penetrating radar tubes for Bombela on the dolomite rock in Centurion,” he says. “Geotechnical investigations for large span bridges or water extraction pipelines can often demand the use of jack-up platforms on which to drill from, over water. Geomechanics has conducted numerous geotechnical investigation in rivers and lakes CEC June 2019 | 29