Barn project - setting concrete piers

   / Barn project - setting concrete piers
  • Thread Starter
#31  
Kind of hard to compare a french drain with a hole in the ground that doesn't go anywhere.

Leech fields rely on the soil perculating, or absorbing the fluids in the lines. Depending on the soil, this might take a trench 100 feet long, or 300 feet long. It depends on the surface area and how well the soil absorbs moisture. This is also a very shallow trench designed to get the water to soak into the ground.

The reason a post rots out is moisture. Mostly the getting wet and drying out procces. This is why posts rot out at the surface, because the area around the post settles and becomes a bowl. If you can built up the soil or concrete around the post, it will shed water and in theory, last it maximum lifespan.

While I cant say that gravel at the bottom of the hole will hold enough water to cause any issues, I don't see where it will help anything. I think somebody got an idea that this will lead to allowing water to drain away from the post faster, but forgot that 3 feet down or more, the ground doesn't perk worth a darn and any water that gets in that hole, stays in that hole. Giving it more space to stay longer doesn't make any sense to me.

Eddie

Thanks again Eddie for your helpful and valuable input. I understand what you are saying. If this is the case then, from a moisture control perspective, it makes no difference what you put at the bottom of the hole because it is the native soil below which will determine how much moisture collects at the bottom. I have to believe though, that stone would not absorb moisture the way that concrete would. I only need to look at the floor in my garage on a humid day to see how the concrete absorbs moisture. Perhaps a large flat rock would be a better alternative for stability.
 
   / Barn project - setting concrete piers #32  
All of these ideas are confusing, but have merit for the praticular areas. What I look at is the utility poles, some of them have been in the ground for ever. The utility company digs around them periodicaly to check for rot or termites. I have seen pole barns done like this 40 or more years ago that are still sound, but have good drainage around them. They were backfilled with the original surrounding material. We all like things to last, but nothing lasts forever, maybe if they were made out of recycled plastic or vinyl!!! :laughing::laughing:
 
   / Barn project - setting concrete piers
  • Thread Starter
#33  
All of these ideas are confusing, but have merit for the praticular areas. What I look at is the utility poles, some of them have been in the ground for ever. The utility company digs around them periodicaly to check for rot or termites. I have seen pole barns done like this 40 or more years ago that are still sound, but have good drainage around them. They were backfilled with the original surrounding material. We all like things to last, but nothing lasts forever, maybe if they were made out of recycled plastic or vinyl!!! :laughing::laughing:

I think the utility companies may still have access to creosote. The government, in its great wisdom, has decided that us consumers are to irresponsible to be trusted with it.
 
   / Barn project - setting concrete piers #34  
Thanks again Eddie for your helpful and valuable input. I understand what you are saying. If this is the case then, from a moisture control perspective, it makes no difference what you put at the bottom of the hole because it is the native soil below which will determine how much moisture collects at the bottom. I have to believe though, that stone would not absorb moisture the way that concrete would. I only need to look at the floor in my garage on a humid day to see how the concrete absorbs moisture. Perhaps a large flat rock would be a better alternative for stability.

You are comparing apples to oranges.

The moisture you see on your concrete is condensation and it comes from the changing air temperature inside your building. It isn't that the concrete is absorbing the moisture, it's that the temperature of the concrete is cooler then what the moisture in the air can hold, at the concrete. Exact same thing that happens to a cold soda can on a hot day. The air next to the can cools and the moisture in the air becomes solid and forms on the can. Water goes from a gas to a liquid.

Inside the hole, the theory is that the gravel keeps the post off of any water that gets to the bottom of the hole and allows the end of the post to remain dry. This is a theory. Not something that I'm aware of that has ever been proven. "My" theory is that if any water gets to the bottom of the hole and there is gravel in there, it will hold the moisture longer then if there wasn't a place for it to go. Make the bottom of the hole solid and water wont be drawn to it or have a place to stay.

With poles, I think simple is better. There isn't any advantage or proven reasoning to over thinking it or putting extra money into it. Buy quality PT poles and dig your hole deep enough to avoid frost heave if that's a concern where you live. Back fill and compact with the dirt that came out if it's compactable, or use concrete if you are in sand or loam. Slope the top of the fill and keep the post dry.

Anything more just doesn't have the proof out there that it helps anything, and in some cases, it might hurt.

Eddie
 
   / Barn project - setting concrete piers
  • Thread Starter
#35  
You are comparing apples to oranges.

The moisture you see on your concrete is condensation and it comes from the changing air temperature inside your building. It isn't that the concrete is absorbing the moisture, it's that the temperature of the concrete is cooler then what the moisture in the air can hold, at the concrete. Exact same thing that happens to a cold soda can on a hot day. The air next to the can cools and the moisture in the air becomes solid and forms on the can. Water goes from a gas to a liquid.

Well yes but in the case of the concrete, the condensed moisture is absorbed and does not sit on the surface like on a soda can. The concrete acts like a sponge.
 
   / Barn project - setting concrete piers #36  
Inside the hole, the theory is that the gravel keeps the post off of any water that gets to the bottom of the hole and allows the end of the post to remain dry. This is a theory. Not something that I'm aware of that has ever been proven. "My" theory is that if any water gets to the bottom of the hole and there is gravel in there, it will hold the moisture longer then if there wasn't a place for it to go. Make the bottom of the hole solid and water wont be drawn to it or have a place to stay.

I think part of the issue here is soil type, part is location, and part is post type...and by that I mean people might be confusing barn posts with fence posts.

As to soil type, it makes a difference if the soil is mostly clay, mostly loam, or mostly sand, as each holds and reacts to water differently, as well as holds onto posts differently to resist downward pressure from weight and upward pressure from wind. This affects the size of the footing under the posts (none, gravel, or a precast disk) and whether spikes or a crossbar is used to keep the post in a concrete collar.

Frost also has bearing on all of this, as here in New England it can get under concrete and push it out of the ground, particularly if it is only at the top of a post, and how deep the frost action goes. What works in GA or TX doesn't always work in VT or MT or wherever. I saw a stretch of I-80 in western PA where all the sloped leading edges of every stretch of guardrail were concreted in place according to Federal "best practice" for highways. And every single one had been pushed back out of the ground by frost, for miles and miles, all pointed so that oncoming cars would hit a chunk of concrete, not just the sloping end of the rail as intended.

And lastly, fencepost vs. building post. Growing up in MA, we'd never put a fencepost in concrete all the way to the bottom. It would guarantee that water running down the post, or wicking in from the wood above would never leave the post and you'd have a concrete cup full of mush, even with treated posts. The same post straight in the dirt or set on gravel and then with concrete to hold it upright would be fine, as there was somewhere for the water to go. But people don't usually put roofs over and regrade drainage around fence posts (well, they may heap them up some, but not like you would with a barn) and the loads up and down on a fence post are usually less. So if you have the same post in a barn, with a roof over it and the ground sloped away, you might be better off than out on a fence line. Or you might get a roof full of snow melting against the walls with the ground still frozen not allowing it to drain away and be right back where you started.

Maybe it's just me, but I don't think there are any easy absolutes here, and so people will still need to keep asking "sand or clay? any frost out your way? can you increase the slope away from the barn at all? are you going to have an overhang?" when answering questions about poles.
 
   / Barn project - setting concrete piers #37  
I'm working through plans to erect a barn and there is something I haven't been able to "get a handle" on. I'm thinking of setting PT 6x6 posts on concrete piers as footings. How can I set the concrete piers or forms in place and be sure that the PT posts will all sit in perfect position, such that they will all be plum and aligned? I know how to "square up" a footing and align the holes for the piers, but it seems nearly impossible that you could fill tubes with wet concrete, insert post brackets, and have everything so precisely aligned that all of the columns would be perfectly plum when finished. If I set concrete piers like this for a large barn (say 28 x 40? with metal receptacles for the wood posts embedded in the concrete, IJust cannot image achieving the kind of precision needed to avoid having to tap the columns into plum.Just

Am I missing something here?

Thanks!

Just finished 13 piers using batter boards/string. Set string for the outside edge of my
piers. Marked and cut cardboard pier forms to length, cut forms about 1/4 inch short. Placed form on concrete footing. Filled form with about a foot of concrete. Leveled and adjusted position, filled to about half. Loosely backfilled to stabilze, topped off and screeded. Leaving the forms slightly short allowed just enough adjustment to plumb into alignment. I had similar idea and will be using a 6X6's for a base as I might need to move building in future. The piers are to provide better support by getting below my loose fill and frost line.

t. Placed PPlaced form
 

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