Re: George's Pompeii progress
OK, I decided to pour the concrete up to to level of the vermiculite insulation pad. I pulled out the interior forms and hand mixed 8 bags of concrete yesterday and poured around 75% of the dome.
I'm basically killing time till I can cure my dome and I have other stuctural issues to deal with anyway. I took out the forms under the concrete hearth slab today. I had a vision of the whole 2 tons falling in on me while I was knocking out the legs under the plywood. I'm stll here! Amazing.
Still having the cantalevered entryway to deal with, I couldn't come up with any plan to pour this section than to rip up my vent/archway floor and vermiculite layer, then build new forms, place rebar in order to have enough mass sitting on the original hearth slab that the cantalevered section won't be subject to fracture. I'm just a little short of where I'd like to be to include a decorative arch out front and need more space, so I've kind of painted myself into a corner on this one. I've got to do something, I think.
So after a day of deliberation, I pulled up those floor bricks and went to work. I hit the vermiculite layer with a masonry saw blade. It went right through but left moist mud debris in the saw blade guard. The stuff is still wet in there after 3ish weeks! Regardless, I used a chisel and hammer to remove the vermiculite from the concrete slab. I comes out pretty easily.
On other fronts, I still can't remove the forms from the concrete pour yesterday so I'm waiting, less than patiently, to get going again. and frame in my cantalevered entryway.
In the mean time, I decided to do a casted vent, to which I will attach a double walled chimney,that will have to rise some 8ish feet to clear the house with 2 feet of clearance. God, this seems to go on and on.......
Pics are coming soon.
G'night
George
OK, I decided to pour the concrete up to to level of the vermiculite insulation pad. I pulled out the interior forms and hand mixed 8 bags of concrete yesterday and poured around 75% of the dome.
I'm basically killing time till I can cure my dome and I have other stuctural issues to deal with anyway. I took out the forms under the concrete hearth slab today. I had a vision of the whole 2 tons falling in on me while I was knocking out the legs under the plywood. I'm stll here! Amazing.
Still having the cantalevered entryway to deal with, I couldn't come up with any plan to pour this section than to rip up my vent/archway floor and vermiculite layer, then build new forms, place rebar in order to have enough mass sitting on the original hearth slab that the cantalevered section won't be subject to fracture. I'm just a little short of where I'd like to be to include a decorative arch out front and need more space, so I've kind of painted myself into a corner on this one. I've got to do something, I think.
So after a day of deliberation, I pulled up those floor bricks and went to work. I hit the vermiculite layer with a masonry saw blade. It went right through but left moist mud debris in the saw blade guard. The stuff is still wet in there after 3ish weeks! Regardless, I used a chisel and hammer to remove the vermiculite from the concrete slab. I comes out pretty easily.
On other fronts, I still can't remove the forms from the concrete pour yesterday so I'm waiting, less than patiently, to get going again. and frame in my cantalevered entryway.
In the mean time, I decided to do a casted vent, to which I will attach a double walled chimney,that will have to rise some 8ish feet to clear the house with 2 feet of clearance. God, this seems to go on and on.......
Pics are coming soon.
G'night
George
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