On 10/13/2014 9:16 PM, Donald Chester wrote:
It doesn't look too bad from the photos. Surface rust is to be expected. I
would carefully inspect the base to see if most of the steel is still there.
Gotta figure out a way to measure that... maybe find someone with an
ultrasonic thickness meter?
The guy anchor looks OK as well, but I would inspect it right where it goes
into the concrete. Look for any signs of corrosion or cracks in the steel.
Will be clearing each excavation a little more and then putting a camera
right at the joint and getting good pictures of each.
What looks worrisome with yours is that it appears the base pier is below
grade, and the rest was back filled with dirt. I can't understand why whoever
constructed the tower didn't raise the base pier a few inches above the ground
just to make sure none of the steel would come in contact with the ground.
Perhaps someone added topsoil to the area after the tower was built.
It is on a slope below the building. What I think happened is that the
slope eroded down and slowly covered up the base and bottom of the
tower, and nobody thought that was a problem.
The slope continues below, and so my plan was to dig out a couple feet
around the base and down a couple inches, fill to the level of the base
with drain rock, and then install concrete retaining pavers on three
sides, backfilled with drain rock. The fourth side I'll just re-open to
the low side of the hill, and so no water will be able to collect in
there once I'm done.
Don't want to do that big a project if I need a new tower, though :)
If the integrity of the structure still looks good after careful inspection,
I'd clean everything off really well, and paint over the rusty metal with oil
base aluminium paint or cold-galv. I've found the aluminium paint to hold up
longer than cold-galv in the spray can, but the brush-on stuff might be better.
Then I'd dig a drainage ditch and remove the top soil down below the level of
the concrete for a radius of several feet round the base of the tower, assuming
the ground slopes downwards in at least one direction. Otherwise, you will need
a sump pump to keep the base dry, if you can't find some way to keep the water
flowing away naturally.
See above... really easy to get the water to just flow naturally away,
and to ensure that the base never gets covered back up with dirt.
One thing. DON'T even think about back filling the hole with concrete to get it
back up to grade. The base pin and plate is a far better way to do it than the
typical Hammy Hambone method of burying the bottom section of tower in the
concrete. You want the tower to be able to sway and give a little under high
wind conditions. Fixing the base solidly in the pier buried under concrete
causes movement of the tower under wind conditions to put all the stress on the
tower sections, possibly causing failure at the welds under extreme conditions.
Besides, back filling with concrete would be no guarantee of a perfect seal
between the old and new concrete, and any additional rust would then be hidden
from view - not good.
Yeah, that was my biggest concern... burying ongoing rust in concrete
just feels like a disaster waiting to happen with no way to monitor
what's going on.
Thanks for the input,
Matthew
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