PG
Prince George, Canada

Laboratory CBR Testing for Subgrade and Pavement Design in Prince George

We still see pavement designs in Prince George fail early because someone assumed a CBR value from a textbook instead of running the actual lab test on the local subgrade. The silty-clay tills that dominate the Fraser-Nechako lowlands can drop from a compacted CBR of 8% down to less than 2% after a single freeze-thaw cycle. That gap alone can double the required granular base thickness. The lab CBR test under ASTM D1883 is not a formality, it is the measured resistance of your specific material to penetration under controlled moisture and density. When we combine it with a Proctor compaction curve determined on the same bulk sample, the design CBR becomes a defensible number rather than a guess. For granular borrow sourced from the Nechako River deposits, the soaked CBR often exceeds 20%, but that performance disappears if fines content is higher than 12%.

A soaked CBR of 3% versus 6% can mean the difference between 300 mm and 200 mm of granular base in Prince George's freeze-thaw environment.

Methodology applied in Prince George

A practical observation from years of testing Prince George materials: the four-day soak prescribed by ASTM D1883 hits glacial lake silts much harder than it hits the cleaner tills. We routinely see CBR values drop 40 to 50% between unsoaked and soaked condition on the same remolded specimen. That is why we always recommend the soaked test for any formation level within 1.5 m of the final subgrade. The lab procedure itself is straightforward: a 1935-gram rammer compacting material in a 6-inch mold at modified or standard effort, a 0.10-inch-per-minute penetration rate, and load readings at 0.1-inch increments up to 0.5 inch. The ratio to the standard crushed-stone reference gives the CBR percentage. But the real value shows up when the grain-size distribution and Atterberg limits flag a material as moisture-sensitive, because then the soaked CBR becomes the critical parameter for selecting lime or cement stabilization.
Laboratory CBR Testing for Subgrade and Pavement Design in Prince George
Laboratory CBR Testing for Subgrade and Pavement Design in Prince George
ParameterTypical value
StandardASTM D1883-21
Mold diameter152.4 mm (6 in)
Compactive effortStandard (12,400 ft-lbf/ft³) or Modified (56,000 ft-lbf/ft³)
Penetration rate1.27 mm/min (0.05 in/min)
Soaking period96 hours submerged (standard soaked CBR)
Surcharge mass4.54 kg minimum annular surcharge
Typical reportingCBR at 0.1 in and 0.2 in penetration, corrected if needed
Specimen preparationRemolded at OMC ±1% and specified density ratio

Typical technical challenges in Prince George

The lab CBR setup in our Prince George facility uses a calibrated load frame with a 50 kN capacity and a displacement-controlled drive running at exactly 0.05 inches per minute. The soaking tank maintains water at 20±2°C with continuous circulation, and each mold carries the specified annular surcharge plates to simulate overburden. The biggest risk we see is clients submitting bag samples that have dried out during transport, which changes the remolding water content and compactive response. A sample that leaves the site at 14% moisture and arrives at the lab at 9% will give an artificially high CBR that does not represent field conditions. For frost-susceptible silts common in the Hart Highlands area, we insist on sealed-sample submission and run the test within 48 hours of extrusion.

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Applicable standards: ASTM D1883-21: Standard Test Method for California Bearing Ratio (CBR) of Laboratory-Compacted Soils, ASTM D698-12(2021): Standard Test Methods for Laboratory Compaction Characteristics of Soil Using Standard Effort, ASTM D1557-12(2021): Standard Test Methods for Laboratory Compaction Characteristics of Soil Using Modified Effort, CSA A23.1: Concrete Materials and Methods of Concrete Construction (referenced for pavement quality control), BC Supplement to TAC Geometric Design Guide (pavement structural design section)

Our services

Beyond the standard soaked and unsoaked CBR determination, our Prince George lab provides a complete suite of supporting tests that turn a single CBR number into a reliable pavement design input.

Soaked CBR with Swell Measurement

Full 96-hour soak with daily swell readings via tripod dial gauge. Critical for moisture-sensitive silts and clays found in the PG bowl area.

CBR at Multiple Compactive Efforts

Three-point compaction curve with CBR at each point (standard, intermediate, modified). Builds the CBR-vs-density relationship for value-engineering base thickness.

CBR on Cement- and Lime-Stabilized Soils

Treated specimen preparation with 7-day moist cure followed by 4-day soak. Evaluates stabilizer effectiveness on local tills before field trials.

Combined CBR and Resilient Modulus Correlation

CBR plus repeated-load triaxial on companion specimens to develop local Mr-CBR correlations for MEPDG inputs, calibrated to Northern BC materials.

Frequently asked questions

What is the turnaround time for a lab CBR test in Prince George?

Standard soaked CBR reporting takes 7 business days from sample receipt because of the 96-hour mandatory soak plus compaction and penetration testing. Unsoaked CBR can be reported in 3 business days. For time-sensitive projects, we can run preliminary unsoaked values within 48 hours and follow with the final soaked report.

How much does a laboratory CBR test cost?

A single-point soaked CBR test including moisture-density relationship runs between CA$150 and CA$330, depending on whether standard or modified compactive effort is specified and the number of points on the compaction curve. Three-point CBR packages for developing density-CBR relationships are priced proportionally.

Do I need soaked or unsoaked CBR for my Prince George project?

For any subgrade within the frost zone, which in Prince George extends to about 1.8 m depth, soaked CBR is the conservative and recommended choice. The native silty tills and glaciolacustrine deposits lose significant strength when saturated, and the ASTM D1883 soak simulates the worst-case moisture condition the subgrade will see during spring thaw. Unsoaked CBR may be acceptable for granular borrows placed above the water table with positive drainage.

Coverage in Prince George