Re: Starting new 36" build
Dennis,
What you experinced with the "slump" of the counter top mix with it's recomended amount of water is very interesting. I found this video a few days ago.
Concrete countertops: How cement particles are like socks. - YouTube
The video refers to Superplasticizer. That is above my paygrade and I am still going to school on that one. I had already decided to make my own countertop mix from white portland cement. I have already bought a fortifier made by sylka which replaces the water added to to the concrete. I plan to do a small test with it before I commit. Maybe someone else can shine some light on the fortifier/plasticizer subject.
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Countertop update:
I got the concrete for the countertops poured yesterday afternoon! Well, more like "positioned" as the countertop mix is pretty stiff stuff. It would hold it's shape when dumped into the form out of a bucket. Very little slump! I tried using the recommended amount of water per the instructions (1g per 80lb bag) and it would not even mix in. I probably added 50% more water than called for in order to get it to mix with some workable consistency. At the end, I didn't have any water at the surface so I think it will be ok. I guess what I did was technically GFRC, since I used both fiber mesh and cut strands in the concrete.
The cast-in-place section went well. I hard troweled the finish and I think it looks pretty good. Where the concrete meets the existing wall, I used a piece of galvanized "z" flashing with some double stick tape as a temporary form to create a slot. For the final join, I bought some Schluter metal tile edging that will go into the slot created by the flashing for the finished product. I plan to secure it with Silicone Caulk. I did make a mistake with the pigment - adding only one of the ziploc bags to each batch instead of two. So the final product will be a bit lighter than planned, but I can live with that. It was also tough to screed the section, since there was no back wall - but I laid tape there as a guide before the pour and I think I got it pretty level. Passed the eyeball test which was all I needed
Pouring the precast section for the landing was super easy. Two bags of concrete, easy screed, and easy to vibrate the mix into the form. I did not use any aggregate in either section - but in this one I decided I wanted to put a tile mosaic in front of the oven opening - so I placed a piece of ~4.5' x 8" x 3/4" piece of melamine inside the form to create a space for an inlay. It's going to say "I Cinquanta Passi" (Italian for "The Fifty Steps") - which is what I call my oven since there are fifty steps from the street to my backyard. The picture shows the bottom of the counter - and you can kind of see the grid from the Glass Fiber that I used for strength.
Looking forward to getting the forms off and the first pass with the grinder to see how things look.
Russell - if you see this, can you provide a link to the sealant you chose for your counters? Would love to piggyback your research!
Dennis
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Originally posted by dvm View PostI can't help with the answer to the fiberglass additive question - though I am looking forward to the answer. I don't think you will need any luck with the cement pour - your skills will win the day... the Bamboo however could be a big problem. I once waged a 4 year battle with Bamboo at a rental house in Davis CA while attending grad school - the Bamboo won - Good Luck with THAT!
Russell -
thanks for the tip on the calculator. I found that and used. I have a "5 Lb" color, so it's quite a bit of pigment. You definitely don't want that stuff to get on anything! I put down a big sheet of paper, and covered the scale in plastic. Still got all over my hands.
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Stone work looks very nice. Good luck tomorrow, fyi there is a pigment calculator on directcolor's web site for calc pigment per bag of concrete. I have been polishing with 50 grit now moving to 100, going to prepare some colored slurry to fill in the bug eyes. Looking forward to seeing the counters
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Originally posted by deejayoh View PostI lost a day to digging out the bamboo that had grown under a retaining wall in into my yard. It grew thru 4 feet of dirt! I dug a 5 foot deep hole, picked out all the rhizome I could find, and poured in some herbicide for good measure (I don't have anything growing that deep...) Capped the place where it got into my yard with 8 inches of concrete. Hopefully that will do the trick! Running bamboo is not something you want in your yard around here. It grows all too well.
Tomorrow I will get my forms all corner caulked, the reinforcement in place, the concrete on site, and the pigment weighed in prep for an early sunday pour.
Wish me luck
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Following Russell's approach here - I got the pigment and the fiberglass additive all weighed out and bagged for the big pour. 250g of "Smokestack" pigment per 80lb bag of mix, and 10g of the fiberglass. The second one seems pretty minimal - but the instructions called for 1lb per *yard* of concrete. 45 bags per yard, so each bag gets 0.02 lb of fiberglass. Hopefully my math is right, or someone will correct me!
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Phew!! Lots of work done this week. I didn't post any updates because the progress was slow. Stone work and finish brick work takes forever.
I got most of the veneer on, and my decorative arch is now in place. I also mounted all the stainless storage doors/drawers in the kitchen area.
I had hoped to get my counters poured tomorrow, but it is looking like that will be a sunday activity instead. I lost a day to digging out the bamboo that had grown under a retaining wall in into my yard. It grew thru 4 feet of dirt! I dug a 5 foot deep hole, picked out all the rhizome I could find, and poured in some herbicide for good measure (I don't have anything growing that deep...) Capped the place where it got into my yard with 8 inches of concrete. Hopefully that will do the trick! Running bamboo is not something you want in your yard around here. It grows all too well.
Tomorrow I will get my forms all corner caulked, the reinforcement in place, the concrete on site, and the pigment weighed in prep for an early sunday pour.
Wish me luck
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Originally posted by GianniFocaccia View PostBeautiful, Dennis! Is there a name to the ledgestone you're installing? I really like the look.
It's pretty easy to work with
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Beautiful, Dennis! Is there a name to the ledgestone you're installing? I really like the look.
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Thanks Russell and Irelande
I got a bit more of the stone laid yesterday, but spent a whole lotta time fitting the cabinet door. It's coming out better than I had hoped.
Off to HF this morning to pick up some supplies. I am taking the week off to finish up as much as I can before the weather goes south here. Expect to see lots of progress updates.
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Re: Starting new 36" build
wow, nice brick arch. I am pouring counters tomorrow....wish me luck!
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Re: Starting new 36" build
Originally posted by UtahBeehiver View PostHey DJ,
........if you are interested, Cheng goes over accents on some of his YouTube videos. It is at least worth looking at. Even one or two color stones/crystals/fossils or accent could add bang to you hearth.
I am planning to use "cross section" sea shells and some "home made fossils" (if I can figure that one out) .
Cheng, Buddy Rhodes, and a host of others out there have run the gamut on ideas. It is up to us to figure out what will accent our ovens without going "over board".
However, with all that is going on with the complexity of a pompeii, I don't think that a plain concrete gray counter would take away from the final product: a WFO
Just preaching to myself .
PS, Great job! on the arch. I wouldn't call that a "faux arch". That is the real deal .Last edited by Gulf; 09-21-2012, 04:58 AM.
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