Trade School: What You Need to Know About Helical Piles

We teach all aspects of the construction trades at the Idea'l Trade Institute trade school. Today our trade school students got to learn about the helical pile technology that will support the tiny homes they are building once those homes are purchased by the public. The learning never stops (being amazing).
Learn the construction trades with us at the Idea'l Trade Institute trade school. Call us for more information and an in-person or virtual tour at the ideal trade institute trade school:
www.idealtrade.institute/
(520) 909-6869
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Пікірлер: 27

  • @gregben
    @gregben5 ай бұрын

    I felt sorry for the students while I watched this video because they weren't told what the basic purpose of the piles is. They are screwed into the ground to provide support for the structure that will be placed above it. The helical plates welded to the square shaft transfer weight from the structure above into the soil. The helical pile or piles are driven in until a certain torque value is reached which is a good indicator that the soil has sufficient capacity to hold the verticl load that'll be placed on it. That torque value would be reached very quickly (short vertical depth) if the soil is rocky, but it might require two or three helical piles driven into softer, less supportive soils.

  • @robertcarpenter8077

    @robertcarpenter8077

    4 ай бұрын

    Excellent point. Am I right to understand that the meter on the driving head is giving the load bearing capacity by multiplying the recorded torque by some conversion constant ?

  • @Kenword69420

    @Kenword69420

    3 ай бұрын

    4mins into the video and he never explained it so I check the comments thanks for saving me 10mins of time!

  • @ybarramedia
    @ybarramedia Жыл бұрын

    All the learning that goes on at the Idea'l Trade Institute. Wow. We hope that you can jump aboard with us as a student. Reach out with the info in the description of the video.

  • @ybarramedia

    @ybarramedia

    Жыл бұрын

    you WON'T be disappointed

  • @aaronbott1670
    @aaronbott167025 күн бұрын

    Square shaft helical piers were intended for tensile loads. The pinion shaft and couple are weak in compression and tend to buckle under loads. Additionally, the square shaft is weaker that hollow circle (pipe) under torsion. Them recommending not to exceed the torsion limit is smart. Steel is very strong, but once it has been pushed passed its yield strength it can only bounce back so much. If you’ve exceeded the recommended limit of a structural component, that component should be replaced and is no longer capable of supporting the designed load.

  • @passtheparcel2024
    @passtheparcel20249 ай бұрын

    This guy, sure knows his stuff!

  • @idealtradeinstitute8093

    @idealtradeinstitute8093

    8 ай бұрын

    He sure does, thank you so much for checking out the video. We appreciate you being here.

  • @melissamarkquart6691
    @melissamarkquart6691Ай бұрын

    where are the hard hats and steel toed shoes???

  • @Sidicas
    @Sidicas7 ай бұрын

    oh look, its the square shaft that the other videos tell you not to use for building foundations.

  • @danieltoth6119
    @danieltoth61194 ай бұрын

    How much pressure can that nut and bolt handle at the coupling? 13:33

  • @patmos7521

    @patmos7521

    Ай бұрын

    that's what i was wondering. guess that's what he meant when he said it'll snap below ground. that's the weakest point.

  • @friskyanderson
    @friskyanderson2 ай бұрын

    students 20 feet away wearing hard hats, guys beside the 2 ton bell, trucker hats haahaha classic

  • @2olvets443
    @2olvets4437 ай бұрын

    Good hard soil doesn’t mean a thing. When they screw into the soil it loosens up that soil allowing water to pass through easily. When soil gets wet it becomes soft allowing sinking of the pile. Granted kaliche (sp) is some hard soil. Most of the time these aren’t down to bedrock which is a better install.

  • @uberdash007

    @uberdash007

    3 ай бұрын

    Alot of homes are still standing without structural issues without piles.

  • @johnkingery403
    @johnkingery4035 ай бұрын

    I quit watching when he tried to tighten the nut going in the loosie direction.

  • @impactodelsurenterprise2440
    @impactodelsurenterprise244010 ай бұрын

    Won't the 1-3/4" shaft break from 15k ftlb of torque?

  • @idealclay

    @idealclay

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, that one is rated to 8k

  • @idealclay

    @idealclay

    10 ай бұрын

    Actually that one I think was 10k

  • @L-presidente
    @L-presidente10 ай бұрын

    Where is your trade school?

  • @idealtradeinstitute8093

    @idealtradeinstitute8093

    10 ай бұрын

    HI @L-presidente currently we are located in Tucson, AZ

  • @L-presidente

    @L-presidente

    10 ай бұрын

    @@idealtradeinstitute8093 is it a virtual learning experience or on site?

  • @wyattgeary4397
    @wyattgeary4397 Жыл бұрын

    The milk man!

  • @stephenc2296
    @stephenc22968 ай бұрын

    Those helicals will NEVER be rated for 100 kips. But I do think he believes the stuff he spewing… Before you question me… I’ve installed helicals on 10,000 Homes.

  • @idealclay

    @idealclay

    7 ай бұрын

    You can go to chance helicals and look at the engineering. They list them all online and show kips rating.

  • @stephenc2296

    @stephenc2296

    7 ай бұрын

    @@idealclay Rating them at 100 kips.. I would question that.. I have dug them up and replaced them because they bend. The average pier is a flight at the bottom of a 2 7/8” pipe. These I believe are 1” or 1 1/8”. Even though they are solid it doesn’t stop them from bending. The foundation sitting on the seat causes an outward pressure bending the pier.

  • @stevegarbauski8124

    @stevegarbauski8124

    4 ай бұрын

    He didn’t know which way to turn a nut