Bretny
Well-known member
OP, Looks like someone snapped a photo of your concrete finishers in action...
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=1029309&d=1594138464
Lol....
OP, Looks like someone snapped a photo of your concrete finishers in action...
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=1029309&d=1594138464
In my humble opinion, for me replacement is the only fix.Even if I had to pay for it.
****** job. No need to call the lawyer as the first horse out of the chute. Depends on what the contractors reaction to this is.
Simple question for the OP since it keeps getting mentioned, are you planning on installing a lift ?
You were expecting a Mustang (rightfully so), but they delivered a Pinto.

This isn't jabbing at anyone, or putting you all down, I'm trying to get a genuine understanding of what you are thinking.
Why, if the final product would look, act, and perform like the originally spec'd concrete floor, would you absolutely not want it? Enough that you would shell out $15,000+ more to not have it? Is this a ritually unclean situation, once you have seen it, you won't take it no matter if it's corrected? Is this like new house buyers seeing the house during construction, and refusing to buy because they saw dings in the wall and dirt in the tubs and now they won't buy it but will buy one just like it, with the same construction process, that they didn't see during construction?
If a properly constructed, new surface is placed over that rough base, and finished to original specifications, why would it be unacceptable? Other than it is "ritually unclean" due to the process it took to get to that final surface? A topped slab, done correctly, will be stronger than the originally spec'd floor, will have the same smoothness and flatness and finish, will have even more thickness for concrete anchorage, and will be a few more inches above grade, which isn't a bad thing because the dirt was too close to the finish floor on one side anyway on this slab.
The only detriment that I can see to a thicker, topped slab is there's more thermal mass, so there will be a slightly greater lag in the heat response. But, that will be balanced out with a longer cool-down, which is in itself a benefit.
Yes, in an ideal world, the slab would be done right the first time. But, now, dealing with the reality of what is there, not what should be, does it have to be removed and replaced? Couldn't it just be corrected to the same performing or even better final product?
Thanks for all the insight Dave. I am working with an engineer and the current plan is to surface grind, shallow pin, lay down a bonding agent and grid #4 bar set mid depth in a 5 inch 5500 fiber slab on top of the existing "slab" as long as the current one doesnt show any honecombing and passes the sounding test
T I am working with an engineer and the current plan is to surface grind, shallow pin, lay down a bonding agent and grid #4 bar set mid depth in a 5 inch 5500 fiber slab on top of the existing "slab" as long as the current one doesnt show any honecombing and passes the sounding test and the leftover concrete passes a test at the local university lab. I understand this is probably overkill but I've always been a believer in the overkill is underrated mantra which in this nightmare will help me sleep at night.
If you go with this I would suggest that you pressurize the heat tubing before the process starts to confirm that it has no leaks. Then keep it pressurized during the process so that if the system is compromised then it can be dealt with before it is covered by a second layer of concrete.
lg
no neat sig line
To be frank, overkill is what got you into this mess. There is absolutely no need to use 5500 psi concrete on a garage slab.....none. A slab on grade is not a structural member. It depends on the base under it for support. From a structural standpoint, 2000 psi concrete would probably be fine. 3000 psi is standard. I recommend 4000 only because the added cement makes for a more durable surface. 5500 is not only overkill, it's likely to result in similar problems on the overlay if the temps are in the 90's again. We wouldn't even attempt it.
I don't know who is advising you and maybe it doesn't matter if it's on your contractor's dime but I don't know what "honeycombing", "a sounding test" and "leftover concrete passes a test at the local university lab" has to to do with anything. If you are placing a new 5" slab, what difference does it make about the concrete slab underneath? It's obviously stronger than soil.
It your contractor is paying, carry on but it this plan is on your dime, I'd tap the brakes. The basic plan is fine but overkill is costly and unnecessary if your are paying the bill. Why surface grind a roughly finished slab? What is fiber and rebar going to accomplish? If i was paying, I wouldn't even bother with a bonding agent or shallow pins, whatever that is.
To me the biggest challenge is dealing with your existing floor drains. If you can figure that out, I'd throw up an edge form, lay some wire and place a good ole 4", 4000 psi slab and continue with the rest of the build. All that is required is good construction practices such as limiting mix water, controlling cracks and curing. Simple stuff.
Looks like the company owes you a new slab, & pex etc.
X2. That's why you only hire bonded, insured contractors.
Tommy
This is what I would say also.It's the plant's fault. However, your concrete contractor should be the one dealing with them, not you. You deal with the concrete guy and he deals with the plant. That's how it should work, anyways.
The problem is that most people don’t understand how bonds work and unless The contractor specifically purchased a bond for that particular project then saying you have a bond is useless
A bond is basically an insurance policy that generally needs to be purchased for each project
Of course there are many, many different types of bonds
So saying that a contractor is bonded is kind of like saying That a person is insured.....are we talking health insured? Life insured? Car insured? Long term care insured? Simply saying that you are bonded is too vague and a purchased bond needs to be specific to the job
The proper bond is a performance bond
A performance bond, also known as a contract bond, is a surety bond issued by an insurance company or a bank to guarantee satisfactory completion of a project by a contractor.
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The problem is the potential gap between "demand" and "get". In a perfect world, the solution would be to wave a wand, the old would go away, and the new would appear, perfect and at no cost to the owner.
Unfortunately, in the real world, the cost of tear out and replace is quite a bit of money to everybody involved, and may make it tough to bridge between what should happen and what does. We don't know the financial end of this at all.
I sure wouldn’t want the guys that did that to be fixing it.
With regard to performance bonds, My experience was that bonds were purchased on a project by project basis but have learned on here that some states require a contractor to obtain a blanket type of bond that covers all their work as a condition of their contractor's license. That apparently doesn't apply to this case.
And, the cost of that bond is 3 to 5% of contract cost, and will be passed on and paid by the customer.
The problem is that most people don’t understand how bonds work and unless The contractor specifically purchased a bond for that particular project then saying you have a bond is useless
A bond is basically an insurance policy that generally needs to be purchased for each project
Of course there are many, many different types of bonds
So saying that a contractor is bonded is kind of like saying That a person is insured.....are we talking health insured? Life insured? Car insured? Long term care insured? Simply saying that you are bonded is too vague and a purchased bond needs to be specific to the job
The proper bond is a performance bond
A performance bond, also known as a contract bond, is a surety bond issued by an insurance company or a bank to guarantee satisfactory completion of a project by a contractor.
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It's like 1:35. We need an update.
It's like 1:35. We need an update.
There are lots of guys here who know more about tiles than me... but it can work great IF you get the right tile and install it properly. For instance, most tile is very slippery compared to concrete... so you want to be careful about that. And if you want to be able to drop a hammer on it without it cracking, again, that involves careful choices. All I am saying is, don't just sling some tile in there: using tile in a working garage is a whole decision tree of it's own.I am not very familiar with tiled garage floors or other coatings so if anyone has any opinions on what to finish it with I'm all ears.
I didn't realize I had such loyal followers! We all met and the contractor tried to smooth things over while the engineer chiseled away at my dried out play-doh slab surface. The engineer said grind 2 inches off the top and then if it passes a compressive strength test we can lay a 5 inch reinforced slab on it and all sleep better at night. I'm praying the concrete underneath is good and the engineer seemed to be confident that it would be. They never lifted the pex off the bottom so a weird victory there in that they shouldn't grind through my tubes. I'm looking forward for the nightmare to end and to put all of this nonsense in the past pending the compressive testing goes well. Lots of lessons learned and egg on everyone's face but I still hold on to some optimism as does the engineer. I will continue to update after the grind, thanks again everyone and enjoy the weekend!
grind 2 inches off the top
