So the metal mesh (about a 6in spacing) and the rebar are suspended off the ground at about the half the height of poured concrete, whether the foundation or the hearth (I suppose the hearth doesn't call for mesh, but whatever). In pictures and videos I always see people standing in the concrete so they can reach all areas of the slab while raking the concrete across the pour. This stand-in-the-middle method will be particularly crucial for me because my design because my foundation is right up against the corner of a retaining wall so from two sides I won't be able to directly access the slab (In fact, I'm a little unsure how I'll screed it for this same reason).
Question is, how do you stand in the concrete and walk around in it for several hours without crushing the metal mesh to the ground and completely deforming the rebar into a mess. You might not necessarily bend the rebar, but I can easily imagine that as you accidentally (you can't see it after all, since its embedded in the pour) kick it or step on it you would completely mess up your original placement.
This seems like such a silly question, but I'm rather confused about it at the moment.
Thanks.
Question is, how do you stand in the concrete and walk around in it for several hours without crushing the metal mesh to the ground and completely deforming the rebar into a mess. You might not necessarily bend the rebar, but I can easily imagine that as you accidentally (you can't see it after all, since its embedded in the pour) kick it or step on it you would completely mess up your original placement.
This seems like such a silly question, but I'm rather confused about it at the moment.
Thanks.
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