Back in December when I finished the pizza oven, I made vermiculite-concrete (vermicrete?) to use as the final roof covering. I had come into a large amount of vermiculate straight from the mine at wholesale price, so vermicrete was the cheap way for me to go, plus it gave me some flexibility on the design (pic. 1).
Vermicrete was made of mix of 8 parts vermiculite to 1 part portland. Roof was done in a couple of hours and hardened up sufficiently in a few hours. We had a warm spell in December, so I didn't have to worry about it freezing before it fully set.
Now, 4 months later, can reccomend NOT following my example. We've had widely flucuating temps the past couple of months... a few 80s see-sawing down to the low teens... sometimes as much as 35-40 degrees in just 24 hours. Coupled with enough rain to fool me into believing our drought is ending.
What happens with the vermicrete is that it still soaks up a lot of moisture, then when the temps drop, little parts freeze up and flake off (PIC.2&3). The counter below the roof slope looks a small pile of grey snow from build-up of vermicrete runoff.
Weighing my options on the solution as eventually it'll all flake away. Gave some thought to gluing asphalt shingles down over the vermicrete, but now leaning toward just a covering of ferro-concrete. It'll be easy to cover with a couple layers of chicken wire and just mortar over the top.
Anybody ever use any powdered concrete dyes? Thinking that if I do the ferro-cement covering, I could use a dark dye and make it look like a massive piece if slate
Vermicrete was made of mix of 8 parts vermiculite to 1 part portland. Roof was done in a couple of hours and hardened up sufficiently in a few hours. We had a warm spell in December, so I didn't have to worry about it freezing before it fully set.
Now, 4 months later, can reccomend NOT following my example. We've had widely flucuating temps the past couple of months... a few 80s see-sawing down to the low teens... sometimes as much as 35-40 degrees in just 24 hours. Coupled with enough rain to fool me into believing our drought is ending.
What happens with the vermicrete is that it still soaks up a lot of moisture, then when the temps drop, little parts freeze up and flake off (PIC.2&3). The counter below the roof slope looks a small pile of grey snow from build-up of vermicrete runoff.
Weighing my options on the solution as eventually it'll all flake away. Gave some thought to gluing asphalt shingles down over the vermicrete, but now leaning toward just a covering of ferro-concrete. It'll be easy to cover with a couple layers of chicken wire and just mortar over the top.
Anybody ever use any powdered concrete dyes? Thinking that if I do the ferro-cement covering, I could use a dark dye and make it look like a massive piece if slate
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