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[email protected] January 17th 06 12:36 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?


Brian Whatcott January 17th 06 02:43 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
On 16 Jan 2006 16:36:55 -0800, wrote:

I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?



If the piers go down 18 inches to rock substrate, you're home n dry.

Brian Whatcott Altus OK

Rusht Limpalless January 17th 06 03:40 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
Iff u r on solid rock outcropping no foundation piers at all is required. Up
here in Central canada where frost heave reaches down 4-1/2' frost
projections must go down 4' in soil. or until solid rock.
"Brian Whatcott" wrote in message
...
On 16 Jan 2006 16:36:55 -0800, wrote:

I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?



If the piers go down 18 inches to rock substrate, you're home n dry.

Brian Whatcott Altus OK




SQLit January 17th 06 04:58 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?


Piers and footings where I live are considered by depth into undisturbed
soil.



Al Bundy January 17th 06 05:19 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
"SQLit" wrote in
:


wrote in message
oups.com...
I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle
of a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to
level a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native
soil is about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small
dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna
have alot of problems?


Piers and footings where I live are considered by depth into
undisturbed soil.




"undisturbed soil"


Dems the buzz words I heard from a town inspector/engineer.

[email protected] January 17th 06 01:35 PM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
I suppose what I'm having trouble believing is that if the piers are
not on undisturbed soil or on rock then how do they help any, won't
they shift and settle? Isn't the point to put them on rock or at least
undisturbed soil so that they don't shift or settle as much ?

On one side of the pad, they will hit rock quick, but down the hill, at
the other end of the pad, if they only go down 18", then there is still
6"+ of disturbed soil between the pier and the undisturbed soil surface.


Jim January 17th 06 01:49 PM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
Like others stated, "undisturbed soil" are keywords for piers.

18" is minimum soil to subfloor clearance.

Admittedly, on the contractors point of view, leveling out the building site
soil prior to pouring the piers is a bit easier initially. Most don't do it
this way. Rather survey, designate pier locations, dig the holes, pour the
piers, then backfill.

A easy way to dig holes for piers is to use a machine used for utility pole
placement. A few places rent these. They need the proper auger bit to
drill through rocky soil. The diameter of the piers depends on the weight
of the structure and anticipated weight within after move-in, number and
placement of the piers. Auger bits come in 12, 18, and 24 inches diameter.

The depth of the pier in undisturbed soil should be equal or greater than
the amount of pier in length above it. The bottom should be slightly flared
for a footing. A chair of some sort should be fabricated out of rebar at
the bottom pier location in the undisturbed soil. The tops of the piers
should be at the proper height to support the subfloor. All the piers
should be in proper alignment horizontally to support the subfloor without
veering in/out demonstrably, as this will affect support and any skirt
applied afterwards. The subfloor should be physically tied to the piers,
not just resting on the piers. The tying methods and hardware vary, but
should hold up to exterior weather environments for the life of the
structure it supports.

.............
Jonny
wrote in message
oups.com...
I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?




Goedjn January 17th 06 05:34 PM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
On 16 Jan 2006 16:36:55 -0800, wrote:

I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?


I think you should drive pilings all the way to
bedrock, on both ends. How far is it to rock,
on the downhill side?




Al Bundy January 18th 06 04:28 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 
wrote in
oups.com:

I suppose what I'm having trouble believing is that if the piers are
not on undisturbed soil or on rock then how do they help any, won't
they shift and settle? Isn't the point to put them on rock or at
least undisturbed soil so that they don't shift or settle as much ?

On one side of the pad, they will hit rock quick, but down the hill,
at the other end of the pad, if they only go down 18", then there is
still 6"+ of disturbed soil between the pier and the undisturbed soil
surface.


Wose yet. Codes are often stated that footings and the like have to put
xx" into undisturbed soil.

He said "the non-native soil is about 18"-24" deep." So if the soil is
disturbed 24" and say the code said 24" into undisturbed soil then they
would have to do down 48".

Anyone feel free to correct me on this. I'm not a builder, engineer,
inspector or the like. Just a professional wanna-be. And a damn good one
at that!

ameijers January 18th 06 04:38 AM

Pier and Beam, piers only 18"?
 

"Goedjn" wrote in message
...
On 16 Jan 2006 16:36:55 -0800, wrote:

I am having a manufactured home put up in North Texas, in the middle of
a drought.

My site is on the side of a hill, and the mobile home retailer
contracted some guys to dig out the the hill and use that dirt to level
a spot for the home. On one end of the pad, the non-native soil is
about 18"-24" deep. On the other end, almost solid rock.

All they did to pack the soil was to drive over it with a small dozer.

I have no experience in this and asked several people if this will
work, most said it is a bad idea.

So on the suggestion on many, I decided to go pier and beam. All the
pier and beam guys I called will only go down to 18" piers max.

My questions is, if you put 18" piers in soil that isn't packed that
good, am I getting any benefit from the piers, or am I still gonna have
alot of problems?


I think you should drive pilings all the way to
bedrock, on both ends. How far is it to rock,
on the downhill side?

Not disputing what anyone else has said, but remember that you're gonna be
crawling under this thing on a regular basis. I'd put a slab in, if the
concrete truck is gonna be there anyway. If you have pilings or piers taking
the weight, the slab doesn't need to be thick.

aem sends....



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