On 5/16/14, 8:44 AM, Mike Reublin NF4L wrote:
Thanks Dave. It's a crank-up and has a rebar cage that the tower bolts to.
Then you don't need to do anything special for a Ufer.. the tower bolts
to the cage which presumably has many feet of rebar in it, and that
makes the connection to the concrete, which in turn contacts the
culvert, which in turn contacts the soil surrounding the culvert.
If there happened to be a void between concrete and culvert, the current
density that point is low enough (since the lightning impulse has
"spread" from the point of entry at the tower bolt), it won't boil the
water in the void, so spalling or steam expansion isn't likely.
And dropping $1000 of culvert into the hole is probably cheaper in
materials and labor than trying to build forms, etc. Especially labor..
Same backhoe that digs the hole picks up the culvert from the truck and
drops it in the hole, then puts the rebar in, and you're done.
Sounds like a great way to solve the "soft soil and water table" thing.
You've got a contractor who knows how to do stuff.
-----Original Message-----
From: TowerTalk [mailto:towertalk-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Mike
Reublin NF4L
Sent: Friday, May 16, 2014 12:39
To: towertalk reflector
Subject: [TowerTalk] Tower base/Ufer ground
I have a proposal from a contractor to pour the concrete into a piece of
48" diameter x 12' long piece of steel culvert capped on the bottom end with
a plywood disc. Very high ground water is the reason.
Will this constitute a Ufer ground?
73, Mike NF4L
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