Re: Concrete Slab Depth and Reinforcement
Getting the rep out there sounds like a great idea, unless they're going to charge you for it!
I would suggest the problem is this; your mix may have been slightly dry when you poured it, but then the really critical part is that the concrete wasn't vibrated thoroughly. Have you ever seen a stiff mix of concrete being vibrated? It behaves like a liquid, and flows into all corners and around the reo. Without some kind of immersed vibration, dryish concrete even if tamped down, will potentially set with voids all through it. Check out this Youtube clip showing some relatively dry concrete being vibrated to see what I mean; Concrete Sample under Vibration
I'm the Precast Concrete engineer for a large freeway construction project here in Melbourne, so I play with concrete all day! The key to working with stiff concrete is to vibrate it into place (among other things we use pencil vibrators - looks like a brush cutter with a big... well.. 'thick metal rod' on the end that vibrates like mad). If you don't use one of these, at least get a trowel or shovel or something and just give the mix a really good 'poking', this will help the cement slurry work its way around the aggregate and allow air bubbles to work their way to the surface. Definitely do this when you pour your hearth slab, and you'll see the difference.
Getting the rep out there sounds like a great idea, unless they're going to charge you for it!
I would suggest the problem is this; your mix may have been slightly dry when you poured it, but then the really critical part is that the concrete wasn't vibrated thoroughly. Have you ever seen a stiff mix of concrete being vibrated? It behaves like a liquid, and flows into all corners and around the reo. Without some kind of immersed vibration, dryish concrete even if tamped down, will potentially set with voids all through it. Check out this Youtube clip showing some relatively dry concrete being vibrated to see what I mean; Concrete Sample under Vibration
I'm the Precast Concrete engineer for a large freeway construction project here in Melbourne, so I play with concrete all day! The key to working with stiff concrete is to vibrate it into place (among other things we use pencil vibrators - looks like a brush cutter with a big... well.. 'thick metal rod' on the end that vibrates like mad). If you don't use one of these, at least get a trowel or shovel or something and just give the mix a really good 'poking', this will help the cement slurry work its way around the aggregate and allow air bubbles to work their way to the surface. Definitely do this when you pour your hearth slab, and you'll see the difference.
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