DougWil
Well-known member
Ugh.. so your saying design every slab based on bad sub-base prep and based on non uniform loads and expect water, earthquake, and all other unknown issues.
Awesome.
No, I am saying that putting typical mesh in a slab will significantly shorten the life of the slab because it is inadequate for the stresses a slab will be subjected to.
That is compounded by how poorly the mesh frequently is placed as the OP pics shows. And that any cracks that do occur and have water or road salt water (not unusual in a garage or parking lot) seeping through will rust away a small wire much faster then a #4 bar.
^Then you have 2 slabs, or more.
The OP's slab already has cracks, it will have plenty more when loaded and it is doubtful that all the slab runoff or adjacent roof runoff will be directed away from what we hope is a theoretically perfectly compacted soil and base.
The soil will then become soft, lose load bearing capacity or expand.
Either is far from ideal but is realistic.
Which incidentally is the title of this thread.
So any slight benefit of reducing shrinkage cracks by using mesh to minimize the effects of thermal expansion in the uncured stage are insignificant compared to the costs of a much shorter slab life.
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