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concrete floor question

Danbo56

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Joined
Mar 22, 2011
Messages
5
Hi fellas...
I'm the the initial planning and design process for a garage. (~Two cars and a small work shop.) I'd like to put a lift in for my car/truck. How thick should the concrete floor be and how high do i need to make the ceiling to accomodate the lift?

tanks :thumbup:
 
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Danbo56

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Joined
Mar 22, 2011
Messages
5
Hi
Yeah... i figured it was hot topic. I figure 4-5 " thick with #4 bar 18" OC. The Rebar is what gives the floor strenght in tension. The bottom 1/2 is in tension when loaded from the top. But you guys know a boat load more about the real world of garages..... I'd like to get smarter on the subject
 

mobetta

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Feb 10, 2010
Messages
370
Location
twin cities, mn
check w/ lift manufacturer's.

mostly i think you'll find-

12' ceilings. you can get away with less height. depends on what vehicles youre lifting, you may want more.

4" of 4000psi concrete.
 

holdover

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Feb 15, 2011
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750
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VA
as stated 12' ceiling min, but you can get the height using sissor trusses with sidewall height less
 
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Stuart in MN

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Sep 8, 2005
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Minneapolis
You need to let us know what kind of lift is planned (two or four post, what size, etc.) as well as what kind of vehicles - a Miata requires less headroom than a lifted F-350.
 

wssix99

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Mar 2, 2011
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5,161
Location
Chicago, IL
Hi
Yeah... i figured it was hot topic. I figure 4-5 " thick with #4 bar 18" OC. The Rebar is what gives the floor strenght in tension. The bottom 1/2 is in tension when loaded from the top. But you guys know a boat load more about the real world of garages..... I'd like to get smarter on the subject

Reinforcement is normally put in a slab on grade in the middle of the slab in order to prevent shrinkage cracking. The bottom of a floor is usually only reinforced if its off the ground or if its taking extreme loads like a highway. If you want a slab that will look good for a long time, make sure you have ample reinforcement accurately placed in the middle of the slab.

For a slab on grade, the ground gives a lot of support and strength to the system. For a common lift, footers are not necessary because the steel plates distribute the load just like a the tire contact patch does on the car. The most important detail is to have a continuous slab under the lift, without control or expansion joints. Particularly if you go with a two post lift, the continuous slab will give you the needed strength to keep it stable. The thicker the slab the stronger.

I'd suggest picking out the lift you want first. The ceiling height and floor requirements can be very different depending on the size and type of lift you go with.
 

walrus

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Joined
Nov 12, 2008
Messages
11,679
Location
Maine
Hi fellas...
I'm the the initial planning and design process for a garage. (~Two cars and a small work shop.) I'd like to put a lift in for my car/truck. How thick should the concrete floor be and how high do i need to make the ceiling to accomodate the lift?

tanks :thumbup:
Depends on the lift but rule of thumb, ceiling height of 12 ft 2", this gives you some clearance.

Concrete thickness, 6" if I'm working under the lift. 4000 psi, #4 rebar every 12"
 

Falcon67

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Jun 11, 2009
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18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
1" more thickness adds not quite 4 yards on a 30x40, so if the slab is small your added expense to go from 4" to 5" is minimal, considering the entire expense.
 
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