A Discussion on the Importance Bearing Capacity of Soil
Soil plays an important role when pouring footing. Footing helps in spreading the weight of the house and allows the soil to carry the load. At a 45-degree angle the load spreads out within the footing. It then spreads out at a steeper angle in the soil, around 60-degrees from the horizontal.
When the load under the footing gradually spreads out, the pressure on the soil decreases. It is important to compact the soil as it takes the maximum load under the footing. Due to the spreading of the load, the pressure on the soil beneath the footing is the greatest.
If we go down the width equal to the footing width the unit of pressure on the soil drops by around half. If you go down further the same distance the pressure on the soil drops again by two-thirds. Therefore, the soil under the footing is the most crucial as it is the portion receiving the maximum load.
During excavation of footings, the teeth of the bucket stir up the soil and add air into it thereby reducing its density. Along with it, there is also the risk of soil falling from the embankment into the trench. Loose soil has much less bearing capacity than original soil.
Which is why compacting the trench bottom is extremely important. For sand and gravel soil use a vibrating plate compactor, for silt and clay use a jumping jack compactor. Lack of compacting of soil could lead to ? inch of settlement in just 6 inches of soil.