Geelong Au
Geelong, Australia

Grain Size Analysis (Sieve + Hydrometer) in Geelong

In Geelong, we often see construction projects hit unexpected ground conditions because the soil profile shifts dramatically between the Barwon River flats and the volcanic basalt ridges to the north. A proper grain size analysis separates the coarse fraction from the fines, telling us exactly what we’re dealing with. Without that data, you’re guessing on compaction, drainage, and bearing capacity. We run both sieve and hydrometer methods in our NATA-accredited lab, covering particles from boulders down to 0.001 mm. For projects on the Bellarine Peninsula, where marine clays dominate, the hydrometer phase is critical. Complement this with a resistivity survey to map layer boundaries before drilling.

Illustrative image of Granulometria in Geelong
In Geelong’s mixed alluvial and basalt soils, a bimodal grading curve is common — sieve alone misses the clay fraction without hydrometer follow-up.

Scope of work in Geelong

We follow AS 1726-2017 for sampling and classification, using mechanical sieves for particles above 75 µm and the hydrometer method for the silt and clay fractions. In Geelong, where Quaternary alluvium sits over Tertiary basalt, the grading curve often shows a bimodal distribution. That means you get coarse sand and gravel mixed with plastic clay — a tricky combination for fill placement. Our process includes oven drying, mechanical shaking, sedimentation timing, and temperature correction. We also run the CBR test for pavements when the grading points toward subgrade applications. Results include D10, D30, D60 coefficients, uniformity coefficient Cu, and fines content. We report everything against AS 4678 for earth-retaining structures and AS/NZS 1170 for foundation design.
Grain Size Analysis (Sieve + Hydrometer) in Geelong
ParameterTypical value
Sieve range75 mm to 75 µm (AS 1289 sieves)
Hydrometer range75 µm to 0.001 mm (AS 1289)
Sample mass (coarse)500 g to 5 kg per AS 1289.3.6.1
Sedimentation time30 s, 1 min, 2 min, 4 min, 8 min, 15 min, 30 min, 1 h, 2 h, 4 h, 24 h
Dispersion agentSodium hexametaphosphate (40 g/L)
Coefficients reportedD10, D30, D60, Cu, Cc, fines content (%)

Typical technical challenges in Geelong

The most common mistake we see in Geelong is relying solely on mechanical sieving for soils with high fines content. The Barwon River floodplain has silty clays with 40-60% passing the 75 µm sieve. If you skip the hydrometer, you classify it as silt when it actually behaves as a low-plasticity clay. That changes your compaction curves and your CBR estimates. We’ve seen road pavements fail within two years because the subgrade was treated as non-plastic. The hydrometer phase takes longer, but it’s the only way to get the real particle size distribution for fine-grained soils.

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Email: contact@geotechnicalengineering1.vip
Applicable standards: AS 1726-2017 (Geotechnical site investigation), AS 1289.3.6.1 (Particle size analysis — sieving), AS 1289 (Hydrometer analysis)

Our services

We offer two complementary testing services for grain size analysis in Geelong, both performed under NATA accreditation.

Mechanical Sieve Analysis

Dry and wet sieving for particles from 75 mm down to 75 µm. Suitable for sands, gravels, and crushed rock. Includes washing on the 75 µm sieve to remove fines before stacking. Results reported as cumulative percentage passing for each sieve size. Used for concrete aggregate, road base, and filter design.

Hydrometer Analysis

Sedimentation test for particles finer than 75 µm. Covers silt and clay fractions down to 0.001 mm using AS 1289 methodology. Includes dispersion with sodium hexametaphosphate, temperature correction, and meniscus adjustment. Essential for plasticity classification and compaction control in Geelong’s alluvial clays.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between sieve and hydrometer analysis?

Sieve analysis separates particles larger than 75 µm using stacked mechanical sieves. Hydrometer analysis measures the settling rate of particles smaller than 75 µm in a water column. Both are needed for a complete grain size distribution in soils containing clay and silt.

Why is grain size analysis important for Geelong construction?

Geelong has variable soil profiles — from sandy alluvium near the bay to stiff clays on the basalt plains. Grain size data determines compaction requirements, drainage characteristics, and bearing capacity. Without it, you risk differential settlement or pavement failure.

How long does a complete grain size analysis take?

Mechanical sieving takes about one working day. The hydrometer phase requires sedimentation readings over 24 hours, so a full analysis typically takes two to three business days. We prioritize urgent projects with same-day sieving if only coarse data is needed.

What is the cost range for grain size analysis in Geelong?

The typical range is between AU$140 and AU$270 per sample, depending on whether you require sieve only or sieve plus hydrometer. Volume discounts apply for multiple samples from the same project. Contact us for a firm quote based on your scope.

Coverage in Geelong