Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

gravel and slab on soft soil?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • adivol
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Well, after reading the thread first thing you want just make a surface more stable and strong, to achieve that a concrete surface should be fixed after digging a foot.

    Leave a comment:


  • bluecrow
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    I built a level stand per provided suggestions and was able to move the previously cast hearth slab to the new base without incident. -Not the recommended order-of-operations of course, but this is the second time in 8 months I've had to move a very heavy WFO related item a few meters. The first move was for a friend.

    I have a few days to work on the oven now!

    Thanks again to all.

    Don

    Leave a comment:


  • bluecrow
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Wow, saved by the community from making a poor choice again. Thank you. I'm pleased that I scrubbed the slab tonight, but went no further.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tscarborough
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    What he said.

    Leave a comment:


  • azatty
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    That almost sounds like a drainage slope to me; a bit over 1/4 inch per foot, but close enough to be intentional. I might suggest that you don't level the slab, fix half of the slope with the block mortar bed, and make up the rest with mortar joints on the stand. Then for the "finish floor" outside the stand, set some cheap slate and float out the drop over the area of the slab.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tscarborough
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Really it isn't. First you can't featheredge portland/sand, and second anything over an inch really needs a larger aggregate. They do make polymer modified repair mortars for that application, and while a little pricey they will last, especially in a freeze-thaw wear application such as you have.

    Leave a comment:


  • bluecrow
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    It is out about 0.375"/foot across the width of the base (a little more than 1.5" total). I think a wet slab and a portland mix with cold water spread in the early morning should be strong and durable enough.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tscarborough
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    How much out of level is it? For the area of the base itself, 1" +/- can be taken care of with the mortar bed.

    Leave a comment:


  • bluecrow
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    I was checking the compressive strength of the leveling compounds. My local masonry supplier thought a portland mix with fine sand would be okay as a leveler.

    Leave a comment:


  • azatty
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Is there any reason you can't simply use self leveling compound. Under the oven itself you could probably work out an inch or two just with mortar joints on the block.

    Leave a comment:


  • bluecrow
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Thanks for all the sage advice. I researched and read about some of the possible solutions. ( I am trained in geophysics, but not an engineer). None seemed achievable for a site beyond the reach of machinery. I can move the oven site to a 50 year-old, 6 " reinforced slab. I know that the concrete is very strong, and reinforced, because I had to cut some pieces out a few years ago.

    I need to level the slab a bit, so I am researching steel and concrete options for leveling, now.

    Don

    Leave a comment:


  • Neil2
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Three piers not four. (Four is statically indeterminate).

    See my build for details:

    http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f21/...ucer-3033.html

    As Tscarborough notes, the reinforcing transition from the piers to the suspended slab is not something normally done in oven builds, but if you are competent in placing and bending rebar and in concrete pours this is an option.
    Last edited by Neil2; 06-27-2012, 11:57 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Faith In Virginia
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Don't go for the slab on fill dirt. If you get unlucky enough to get half on the fill and half on undisturbed soil you will have problems that won't quit. I have run across this a lot especially with homes on basements. You would need to dig down 10' just to find something solid. You can dig deep piers down to something solid is one option but once you get past the 4' mark and your still on fill the piers will be a real challenge. One thing you can do if your fill is deep is get some 10' sections of galvanized pipe and drive them like a fence post into your loose soil. Drive them hard until they find something solid and won't go any more. If they don't go all the way in cut them at a level that will allow you to incorporate them into the slab.

    The other way its to move the oven to solid ground. I would take this option if possible.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tscarborough
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    I am not an expert on frost conditions living where we do not get more than a couple of minor freezes a year, but my understanding is that you have two options:

    Dig down below frost level, which could be 4' in NY, pour a footing and then build stem walls to finish grade and pour a suspended slab.

    Excavate below frost level, fill with compacted sharp gravel and build a floating slab.

    A piered structure would have to be engineered which is normally beyond the scope of an oven. There are other designs using insulation and floating slabs with less fill, but they also have to be engineered.

    Leave a comment:


  • bluecrow
    replied
    Re: gravel and slab on soft soil?

    Thanks for the replies. A bar cannot be pushed down so easily in typical soil conditions here (glacial drift). The specific area was beneath a garden bed and has suffered little traffic since fill leveled the space. It was formerly a hillside. I probably have firm ground at 4-5 feet. I'll check tomorrow.

    If so, is the procedure to pour four footed piers with re-bar, then gravel up to the tops of the piers, then a reinforced slab tied to the piers?

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X