Will your score on this month’s quiz make you happy this NEW YEAR? Here’s the January 2023 Pop Quiz for Engineers. Are you smarter than an undergraduate?
Questioning the answer to number 5 and would like to hear a response.
Question 5: The process of using trench boxes or other types of supports to prevent soil cave-ins is referred to as __________.
I answered shoring, and supposedly the answer is ‘shielding’. Isn’t shielding more to protect workers after a collapse, and shoring is a preventive method that would ‘prevent’ a cave-in using supports per the question?
Not directly in my wheel-house, but let me know your thoughts.
Question 5: The process of using trench boxes or other types of supports to prevent soil cave-ins is referred to as __________.
shielding
spoiling
sloping
shoring
Can someone confirm? I think of shoring as preventative of a collapse and shielding as protection in case of collapse. So I think D would be the answer, but it isn’t.
Here’s some language available about trench boxes “They aren’t designed to shore or prevent a trench wall from collapsing. Instead, they’re designed to protect workers from the pressure and weight of soil in the event of a cave-in”.
That seems to contradict the question, that says “prevent cave-ins”
Questioning the answer to number 5 and would like to hear a response.
Question 5: The process of using trench boxes or other types of supports to prevent soil cave-ins is referred to as __________.
I answered shoring, and supposedly the answer is ‘shielding’. Isn’t shielding more to protect workers after a collapse, and shoring is a preventive method that would ‘prevent’ a cave-in using supports per the question?
Not directly in my wheel-house, but let me know your thoughts.
Question 5: The process of using trench boxes or other types of supports to prevent soil cave-ins is referred to as __________.
shielding
spoiling
sloping
shoring
Can someone confirm? I think of shoring as preventative of a collapse and shielding as protection in case of collapse. So I think D would be the answer, but it isn’t.
Here’s some language available about trench boxes “They aren’t designed to shore or prevent a trench wall from collapsing. Instead, they’re designed to protect workers from the pressure and weight of soil in the event of a cave-in”.
That seems to contradict the question, that says “prevent cave-ins”