Anyway, and I apologize if this has come up before (no way I'm reading this whole thread!) but... 3" rebar at 48" on center? That just doesn't make any sense to me. First, that would be a #24 bar (24 eighth-inches), which is a non-standard size so it would be very expensive; and second, spacing bars that far apart doesn't sound like a good idea -- you'd have big gaps of concrete between the bars where the steel was essentially having no effect, and it would require extra steel just to hold that concrete together. Using a #18 bar (the largest standard size) at 24" OC would be the same steel area, but cheaper, and it would distribute the steel better. (And actually, using a smaller bar, closer, say #12 at 12" OC, would be better still.)
So, can you imagine some reason why the engineers came up with that bizarre design? Why build a wall that was so unnecessarily expensive, yet less efficient than a cheaper wall? Umm... maybe to reduce the number of C4-coated rebar welders they'd go through?