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An excavation in Type B soil is 10 feet deep. Using the simple slope method, what is the minimum horizontal distance required from the toe of the slope to achieve a safe 1:1 slope ratio?

Correct Answer

D) 10 feet

For Type B soil with a 1:1 slope ratio and 10 feet depth, the horizontal distance equals the vertical distance. Therefore, 10 feet horizontal distance is required from the toe of the slope.

Answer Options
A
7.5 feet
B
15 feet
C
5 feet
D
10 feet

Why This Is the Correct Answer

For Type B soil, OSHA's simple slope method requires a 1:1 slope ratio — meaning 1 foot of horizontal distance for every 1 foot of vertical depth. With a 10-foot deep excavation: Horizontal distance = 1 × Vertical depth = 1 × 10 = 10 feet. This 10-foot setback from the toe (bottom edge) of the slope to the top creates the required angle. Each side of the trench needs this 10-foot horizontal setback, making the total trench opening width = trench bottom width + 20 feet.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: 7.5 feet

7.5 feet would correspond to a 0.75:1 ratio, which is steeper than allowed for Type B soil (closer to a Type A slope ratio). This provides insufficient protection against cave-in in moderately stable soil.

Option B: 15 feet

15 feet would correspond to a 1.5:1 ratio, which is the requirement for Type C soil — the least stable classification. While this would be even safer than required, the question asks for the minimum distance for Type B soil at a 1:1 ratio.

Option C: 5 feet

5 feet would correspond to a 0.5:1 ratio (steeper than 1:1), which applies to Type A soil — the most stable category. Applying a Type A slope to Type B soil creates an unsafe, over-steep condition.

Memory Technique

For a 1:1 slope, horizontal always equals vertical — it's symmetrical. So for any 1:1 slope question: horizontal distance = depth. No conversion needed. For Type B at 10 ft deep: 1 × 10 = 10 ft. Simple ratio math.

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