DocsMachine
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,863
My shop has a large French drain in one bay, basically they cast the floor around a 55 gallon drum without ends. It's simply filled with gravel and was intended to simply give snow melt from a car a place to go.
I'm setting up some machine tools in that bay, a long-term prospect, and I'm worried if one of them leaks a bunch of coolant or cutting oil. It'd basically head right for the gravel, and from there into the ground.
As the drain will likely never be used again, at least for a good number of years, I was thinking of just capping it with a sack or two of Sackrete or the like.
Simple enough, but the floor itself sinks toward the drain, which is at least two inches lower than the rest of the floor.
Is there something, or a technique, with which I could both fill the drain and raise the surrounding concrete up an inch or two?
The original concrete is an easy 40years old, and I believe was sealed, but has not been painted. the area to be filled is small, maybe 6' on a side. (It'd be a roughly circular patch.)
I'm not expecting pool-table flat, but if I could at least take some of the low away, that'd help.
Doc.
I'm setting up some machine tools in that bay, a long-term prospect, and I'm worried if one of them leaks a bunch of coolant or cutting oil. It'd basically head right for the gravel, and from there into the ground.
As the drain will likely never be used again, at least for a good number of years, I was thinking of just capping it with a sack or two of Sackrete or the like.
Simple enough, but the floor itself sinks toward the drain, which is at least two inches lower than the rest of the floor.
Is there something, or a technique, with which I could both fill the drain and raise the surrounding concrete up an inch or two?
The original concrete is an easy 40years old, and I believe was sealed, but has not been painted. the area to be filled is small, maybe 6' on a side. (It'd be a roughly circular patch.)
I'm not expecting pool-table flat, but if I could at least take some of the low away, that'd help.
Doc.
