Feature · Field Supervisor+
Log pile ID, design elevation, final elevation, blow count, and deviation — one pile at a time, in the field, with GPS coordinates. Inspector-grade as-built documentation at the end of every day.
Import or manually enter your design pile schedule — pile IDs, design elevations, and tolerance. Takes minutes to set up for the whole job.
As each pile is driven, log the final elevation and blow count. GPS coordinates are captured automatically. Deviation from design is calculated instantly.
Red flags appear immediately for any pile outside tolerance. Add remediation notes and photos. Your super sees the issues in real time from the office.
When the zone is complete, generate the pile as-built PDF. Share via link or download for the IFC closeout package.
Verify every pile against tracker tolerance specs. Catch deviations before the racking crew arrives and before the inspector shows up.
Document driven and helical pile installations with the precision your structural engineer needs for sign-off.
Review pile deviation summaries by zone or row in real time. Know before site visit whether the field is on track.
Gradelog records pile ID/label, pile type, design elevation, final driven elevation, deviation from design, blow count (if applicable), GPS coordinates, crew member, and notes. All fields are logged per pile and exportable as a pile schedule report.
Yes. Solar EPC contractors use Gradelog to verify pile elevations against design tolerances (typically ±25mm for tracker systems). The app flags piles outside tolerance immediately so the crew can reshoot or remediate before moving on.
Yes. The pile log exports as a formatted PDF showing all piles with design elevation, final elevation, deviation, and pass/fail status. This document is used for IFC closeout packages and owner/inspector sign-off.
Yes. If you have the Gradelog RTK add-on, pile elevation shots can be captured with centimeter-grade GPS accuracy. Without RTK, you can manually enter elevations from your level rod or total station readings.