ive seen some real bad advice here already. you almost NEVER need to add moisture to dirt for good compaction. 99% of the time, you want to get the moisture OUT of the dirt for good compaction. if your talking about minus rock, then moisture is good to a point. im in the excavating business, so this is one thing i know for sure. another big misconception is "sand is not a good fill", completely wrong. sand is 100% compaction the second it hits the ground, BUT it must be contained. like mentioned it is very fluid, so if its not contained it will move. clean rock is about 99% compaction as soon as it hits the ground, though soil engineers around here have started requiring it be dumped from a height of 5' when used to fill holes in the last few years.
make sure that the site is thoroughly stripped of the top 4"-6" and separated from the rest of the material. its full of topsoil, grass, roots etc that will decay over time causing the material to settle
theres a real easy way to be sure youre getting compaction, and thats not by listening to random advice online, but contact a soil engineering company and they can come out to your site, and check compaction for every lift of fill you put in. whether rock or dirt, they can test it. they have what we call a "nuke", portable x-ray so to speak, they drive a pin in the ground and slip this in the hole and it measures soil density. they are on all major excavating sites here. the good thing about it is that if you do get settling, they are responsible. engineered fill has a higher rate of compaction than natural ground
1 other option that we use for a multitude of reasons (high plastic soil, high moisture, etc) is soil stabilization. lime is spread across a lift and then mixed in with a large tiller or can be mixed in a pile and then spread. if you treat soil with lime, it gets so hard that you cant drive a stake in the ground. it gets hot when in contact with moisture in the ground and "cooks" the soil. in some subdivisions weve done, they forego the base rock underneath the street as long as the top 1' of dirt has been treated this way.
youll find that if you have the equipment available, its much cheaper to shape the land and use dirt to get the slab on grade than it is to pour a retaining wall and backfill with rock/sand. if you chose that route, than drain tile with weep holes at the bottom is recommended, especially if you use granular fill behind the wall
i could go on for a while with this stuff, if you have any specific questions let me know
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