With reference to a foundation I poured yesterday...
All right, I'm not exactly in a panic. It is concrete after all. It's chalk-full of rebar and mesh, I can walk around on it without the slightest hint of a depression or general weakness. I mean, it's solid stuff, no doubt.
...however...
(Sakrete high strength concrete btw) The top quarter inch seems extremely dry and crumbly -- like petrified feta cheese I suppose -- not remotely smooth by any standard of concrete I have ever encountered. The attached photos somewhat illustrate my point; please zoom in on them to see their full macro detail.
I have been misting it with the hose periodically and keeping it covered with plastic btw.
During mixing, I relied primarily on the ball-in-fist method, shooting for a mud-ball that didn't crumble apart, but didn't swim and ooze. I thought I was doing a pretty good job, but now I think I made the entire thing way too dry and I'm not sure how that happened.
I admit, I didn't float it at all, I only screeded it. I really don't care what the foundation looks like (I'm flag-stoning or bricking it eventually) but if anyone wants to tell me that the sole cause of the result I got is a lack of floating, then I'll buy it; I just never would have anticipated floating could make so much of a difference. It seemed so chunky right after the pour-and-screed that I just couldn't imagine what effect rubbing a float around in circles could have ever had on it...but maybe I should have just done it anyway, I dunno.
I'm not too worried about it...I guess...but I would truly like to understand what happened so I can do a better job on the hearth. Did I mix it too dry or is the mix right and I just needed to float it or is there a third explanation?
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
All right, I'm not exactly in a panic. It is concrete after all. It's chalk-full of rebar and mesh, I can walk around on it without the slightest hint of a depression or general weakness. I mean, it's solid stuff, no doubt.
...however...
(Sakrete high strength concrete btw) The top quarter inch seems extremely dry and crumbly -- like petrified feta cheese I suppose -- not remotely smooth by any standard of concrete I have ever encountered. The attached photos somewhat illustrate my point; please zoom in on them to see their full macro detail.
I have been misting it with the hose periodically and keeping it covered with plastic btw.
During mixing, I relied primarily on the ball-in-fist method, shooting for a mud-ball that didn't crumble apart, but didn't swim and ooze. I thought I was doing a pretty good job, but now I think I made the entire thing way too dry and I'm not sure how that happened.
I admit, I didn't float it at all, I only screeded it. I really don't care what the foundation looks like (I'm flag-stoning or bricking it eventually) but if anyone wants to tell me that the sole cause of the result I got is a lack of floating, then I'll buy it; I just never would have anticipated floating could make so much of a difference. It seemed so chunky right after the pour-and-screed that I just couldn't imagine what effect rubbing a float around in circles could have ever had on it...but maybe I should have just done it anyway, I dunno.
I'm not too worried about it...I guess...but I would truly like to understand what happened so I can do a better job on the hearth. Did I mix it too dry or is the mix right and I just needed to float it or is there a third explanation?
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
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