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Bulking and Compaction Factors2024-03-12T12:57:08+13:00

Inaccurate bulking and compaction factors can add significant costs to all civil projects!

Commonly-used bulking and compaction factor charts provide generic estimates, and don’t necessarily reflect the actual state of the material being excavated. Incorrectly estimated or misunderstood factors can add significant costs to a project due to material measurement inaccuracies. One cubic from the borrow does not translate into one cubic dumped, nor one cubic compacted.

Excavation increases the volume of material, so material from the borrow expands when dumped into the truck bin, into site, or stockpiled. Conversely, material typically shrinks under compaction. Without accurate factors to determine the exact volume of material required to be loaded onto trucks to satisfy compacted contract volumes, supplied volumes may be incorrect and truck capacity not fully utilised.

Bulking & Compaction Factors

Typical bulking & compaction factor chart

MaterialTypical
Bulking
Factors
Typical
Compaction
Factors
Clay1.30.8
Soil1.250.9
Sand
& Gravel
1.120.88
Rock
(blasted)
1.51.3
MaterialTypical Bulking FactorsTypical Compaction Factors
Clay1.30.8
Soil1.250.9
Sand & Gravel1.120.88
Rock (blasted)1.51.3

Bulking and compaction factor charts are only generic estimates and potentially have a high error rate.

How factor conversion can impact volumes


⇒ 1m³ dry soil (banked)

 @1.25 bulking factor
⇒ swells up to 1.25m³ (loose)

 @0.9 compaction factor
⇒ becomes 0.9m³ (compacted)

Would you like the same benefits that other civil operators have enjoyed?

Bulking and Compaction Factors
Bulking and Compaction Factors
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