Captain Spaulding
Well-known member
When I built my shop, we were 8 months from building a new house, so finances were a little tight. We had equipment and tools stored in the basement, at our parents homes, under tarps and at rented storage, so getting a building up was high priority even given our recent expenditures. To cut costs, I only had a 20x32 section of concrete poured, with the rest filled and ready for pouring. Several years later, we poured the rest of the floor, leaving a joint between the sections.
Over the 20 years since pouring the second slab, the joint got a bit wider. It’s about 1/4-3/8 wide and max 1/8” height difference now. Much of the height difference is because the edge of the original pour had a slightly rounded edge, and the new pour filled over it. No issue until the slabs shrank a little.
So what’s the point? The gap is an issue because several of my woodworking tools are on casters, and I pulled a latissimus dorsi muscle wrestling my table saw across the joint this morning. Hurts like hell to do anything that involves moving. Getting old.
So when I’m mobile again, and off the drugs, I want to fill the gap. Planning to do a little grinding to level some bumps, clean out the gap, and fill it. Everything I’m finding online is flexible to allow the slabs to move independently. I want a hard surface So things will roll over it. On these drugs, I will fight you if you tell me to use something rubbery
. Any product recommendations? I’m not opposed to mortar or concrete, maybe with backer rod underneath.
I apologize for the length of the post. My drugged brain is very chatty!
Over the 20 years since pouring the second slab, the joint got a bit wider. It’s about 1/4-3/8 wide and max 1/8” height difference now. Much of the height difference is because the edge of the original pour had a slightly rounded edge, and the new pour filled over it. No issue until the slabs shrank a little.
So what’s the point? The gap is an issue because several of my woodworking tools are on casters, and I pulled a latissimus dorsi muscle wrestling my table saw across the joint this morning. Hurts like hell to do anything that involves moving. Getting old.
So when I’m mobile again, and off the drugs, I want to fill the gap. Planning to do a little grinding to level some bumps, clean out the gap, and fill it. Everything I’m finding online is flexible to allow the slabs to move independently. I want a hard surface So things will roll over it. On these drugs, I will fight you if you tell me to use something rubbery
I apologize for the length of the post. My drugged brain is very chatty!

