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Ramcon Standard Procedures <br /> Standard Procedure 2 Remi 7195 <br /> Drilling and Sampling Soil Borings with Hollow-Stem Auger Drilling Equipment <br /> See Also Procedure: Typical Monitoring Well Detail, Sample Handling, Sample Equipment <br /> Decontamination <br /> Limitations: These procedures have been developed and adopted for utilization primarily <br /> for the assessment of fuel and motor oil constituents at underground storage <br /> tank or fuel spill sites. <br /> Conditions: The drilling location must be cleared of underground utilities by the property <br /> owners, representatives or USA alert. The location of overhead power lines <br /> may preclude all work. The first five feet of all borings will be hand augered <br /> to clear obstructions unless site utilities are well documented. <br /> Equipment: Iced Insulated Cooler Brass Sample Sleeves <br /> Plastic End Caps Teflon Sheeting <br /> Indelible Ink Marker Plastic Packing Tape <br /> Weighted Measuring Tape Logs and Field Note Book <br /> Electronic Water-Level Meter OVA <br /> Soil Borings <br /> Soil borings are advanced and sampled by truck-mounted drill rigs. The drill string will consist of pre-cleaned <br /> steel continuous flight hollow stem augers, drill rod and lead auger bit. The augers are rotated and advanced <br /> to the desired depth and lifted approximately 2- 3 inches off bottom. A split-barrel, or California-modified <br /> sampler containing three, six-inch long, 2'/z inch diameter brass sample sleeves is attached to one of two types <br /> of sampling mechanisms. With Central Mine Equipment Company (CME)-type equipment, the drill rod is <br /> withdrawn from the borehole and the sampler is attached to the end. The rod and sampler are re-inserted into <br /> the boring through the augers and run into the hole until bottom is tagged. The depth of the sampler is <br /> checked against the depth of the lead auger; they should be the same. When utilizing Mobile Drill - type <br /> equipment, the lead auger plug is withdrawn by wire line from the borehole bottom and retrieved to the <br /> surface. A sampler and down-hole hammer are attached and the apparatus is re-inserted into the borehole <br /> through the augers. The apparatus is run into the hole as described above. <br /> The sampler, once on bottom of the boring, is advanced with a cable or rope-cathead activated sampler with <br /> a 140-1b hammer and a 30-inch drop. The drops of the hammer, or blows are recorded. The first six inches <br /> to set sampler, second and third six-inch intervals are recorded, as blows per 6-inch. Typically 18-inch <br /> samplers with a 2.5 inch core bullet are utilized. Larger, longer split-barrel samplers up to 48 inches are <br /> utilized for continuous coring. Samples from the bottom(nose) and middle of the sampler are considered <br /> the most representative and undisturbed. The bottom, or deepest sample is used for laboratory analysis. The <br />