Setting posts below frost

   / Setting posts below frost #1  

dustinfox

Gold Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2011
Messages
386
Location
New Hampshire
Tractor
Kioti CK35 HST
So.... If I need to set some posts at 48 inches deep to get below frost level, and in one of my holes I hit a boulder at 36 inches, but I know for sure that boulder is more than 12 inches thick, would that point be considered acheiving the 48 inch depth requirement?
 
   / Setting posts below frost #2  
Are these fence posts?
 
   / Setting posts below frost #3  
I think you answered your own question when you said the hole with the boulder is thirty six inches deep. The post cannot go past your anticipated frost level even though the boulder may.
 
   / Setting posts below frost #4  
Depends -- Is a building inspector going to be looking in these holes? If it's for a pole building or deck, for example, I'd count the boulder as part of my foundation and overall depth.
 
   / Setting posts below frost #5  
for a building... no.
Anything else, sure.
 
   / Setting posts below frost
  • Thread Starter
#6  
I think you answered your own question when you said the hole with the boulder is thirty six inches deep. The post cannot go past your anticipated frost level even though the boulder may.
Yes that was my logic but I just wanted some reassurance that my logic was not flawed. Since I would have gone down 48 inches and then poured a concrete tube, and since we know the boulder is not going to freeze, then my thinking is that essentially the thickness of the boulder will fulfill the remaining 12 inches.

and no, this is not under a building... It's for added support under some deck stairs.
 
   / Setting posts below frost #7  
For added insurance you might drill that boulder so as to accept some rebar B4 pouring any concrete as that way the boulder and post will one otherwise frost could grab your post and still heave it upwards.
 
   / Setting posts below frost #8  
Yes that was my logic but I just wanted some reassurance that my logic was not flawed. Since I would have gone down 48 inches and then poured a concrete tube, and since we know the boulder is not going to freeze, then my thinking is that essentially the thickness of the boulder will fulfill the remaining 12 inches.

and no, this is not under a building... It's for added support under some deck stairs.
I'm in the same frost belt as you, for deck and porch stairs I simply pour a 4" slab at ground level. There's no need to excavate below the frost line for a stair footer. In 30+ years my slabs/stairs have not moved. If this was for a deck post, or any type of structural foundation, yes, 4' would be my minimum.
 
   / Setting posts below frost #9  
My understanding is the frost grabs a hold of things so to speak and can move it up or down. In your case it could upheave the post and pull it away from the boulder. That’s in theory and in your case for what you doing it will be fine.
 
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