can anyone tell me why Portland comes in a 94 lb. bag ? Why 94, not 100 not 80 Just curious if there is any special reason ?
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Re: ***94 lbs.***
The info I found says that it is 1 cubic foot. Sounds like a reasonable number. Interesting question.
Les...Last edited by Les; 06-17-2009, 06:54 PM.Check out my pictures here:
http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/les-build-4207.html
If at first you don't succeed... Skydiving isn't for you.
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Re: ***94 lbs.***
I believe Les is correct, at least what he says agrees with what my concrete books say.
Concrete was/is mixed by volume rather than by weight thus it was easy to have recipes that could be easily duplicated. The simple 1-2-3 mix is a good example. That's one cement, two gravel and three sand. Having one cubic foot per bag made computation of mixing larger batches easy. I'm sure glad one cubic foot of cement doesn't weigh more!
Wiley
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Re: ***94 lbs.***
Wiley,
I think you have your mix formula incorrect!
Over here we have 20kg bags of cement rather than the larger (pre metric) 94 lb bags and are a lot easier to handle.
Incidentally, 94 lb bags are 24 to the ton, or one pallete!
Our mixes as printed on every bag are:
Cement: sand: Aggregate or 20kg bags/ cubic metre
Structural cement 1 : 2 : 3 or 20 20kg bags/ cubic metre
Paving 1 : 2.5 : 3.5 or 16 20kg bags/ cubic metre
Render 1 : 4 : - or 24 20kg bags/ cubic metre
Mortar 1 : 6 : +1 lime or 12 20kg bags/ cubic metre
RastysLast edited by Rastys; 06-18-2009, 04:03 AM.If you don't succeed the first time, try again and again until you get it right!
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