That design is not provided in their literature. The pre-existing slab design is incomplete and very wasteful of steel. The "new" retrofit slab is a complete design, but more massive than it would need to be for smaller capacity lifts and monolithic castings.Because we are not talking about a pre existing slab, we are talking about a new pour
Sorry for all the crappy answers globalmax. Thickening the entire bay is a waste, and you are still in need of a reinforcement design. If it were my garage I would only thicken the slab near the lift in a capital I or H-shape that tapers to the 4" typical slab. I already designed the rebar for the slab for my 10K future lift, about 9" thick under the baseplates, and the amount of reinforcement is quite low. You could hire a "concrete specialist" as the manufacturers suggest, but they really mean structural engineer. This is such an easy design for us. Too bad the design you need isn't in the lift literature. Call them.Having additional 2 inches of concrete only in one bay is a possibility?
Who cares? Engineered solutions pencil out in huge projects, not so much in simple residential projects.That design is not provided in their literature. The pre-existing slab design is incomplete and very wasteful of steel. The "new" retrofit slab is a complete design, but more massive than it would need to be for smaller capacity lifts and monolithic castings.
Sorry for all the crappy answers globalmax. Thickening the entire bay is a waste, and you are still in need of a reinforcement design. If it were my garage I would only thicken the slab near the lift in a capital I or H-shape that tapers to the 4" typical slab. I already designed the rebar for the slab for my 10K future lift, about 9" thick under the baseplates, and the amount of reinforcement is quite low. You could hire a "concrete specialist" as the manufacturers suggest, but they really mean structural engineer. This is such an easy design for us. Too bad the design you need isn't in the lift literature. Call them.
Another half baked wrong approach at analysis.I call ******** on this one. The compressive strength of typical 4” thick concrete is 3500 psi, or 504, 000 lb/sf. So double that if you have a two post lift with one square foot pads on each post. Then add normal rebar reinforcement.
Then consider that the slab isn’t hanging in the air like a bridge, but is supported underneath by a compacted gravel base.
Pretty much every shop with a lift is on a 4, maybe 5" tops slab.No it is not plenty. The manufacturers allow the thinner pre-existing slabs only if reinforced with a highly unprobable amount of reinforcement. So the retrofit slab design is required in every case for 2-post lifts. Having run the design computations on 2-post lifts myself, there is no way the thickened areas of the slab are going to be less than about 8" or 9". Manufacturers require 12".
Why do you think they switched to in ground?i have built alot of car dealerships the last twenty years, properly 15 or more, all are big name dealership. I have notice they all switch to in ground lifts. so mechanic bay concrete thickness has been normal, nothing special
So they don’t have to pay for door damage when it hits the post.Why do you think they switched to in ground?
i have built alot of car dealerships the last twenty years, properly 15 or more, all are big name dealership. I have notice they all switch to in ground lifts. so mechanic bay concrete thickness has been normal, nothing special
Concrete is a liquid. the extra 2 inches goes into a hole in the ground, and that hole can be made in 10 minutes with a $10 shovel. The benefit of extra thickness is that your pullout force could be distributed into more material. It's only the material in a cone around the bolts that is affected. You deep spot just needs to be a couple of feet wide, where the bolts are.It is 30 length x25 feet wide 2 bay garage. Lift is going to be on one bay only. Having additional 2 inches of concrete only in one bay is a possibility?
Even if that is the case, they are building a house and there are more spaces to put concrete from the second truck![]()
#6 bar 12”OC?, that’ll certainly limit your chances of hitting a bar or two with an anchor![]()
you know what you are doing. some first year out of school came up with the chart so you get nonsensical stuff that isn't buildable.I think the rebar shown in the chart is odd.
Speccing 3/4" (#6) bars in a slab as thin as 4 1/2"??
And the the same rebar size for all slab thicknesses?
I think smaller bars at closer spacing makes more sense with respect to bond development, splices, location in the slab and handling.
That's scary, isn't it?you know what you are doing. some first year out of school came up with the chart so you get nonsensical stuff that isn't buildable.
I don't get all the heartache over the $2500 extra. It may in fact be highway robery for adding the 2" to the slab, but you are building a house. $2500 is a roundoff error in the house construction cost. pay it and move on.
These round off's can end up as considerable amount of money eventually depending on the number of changes that happens. Agree that in the big scheme of things, $2500 shouldn't be a big deal.you know what you are doing. some first year out of school came up with the chart so you get nonsensical stuff that isn't buildable.
I don't get all the heartache over the $2500 extra. It may in fact be highway robery for adding the 2" to the slab, but you are building a house. $2500 is a roundoff error in the house construction cost. pay it and move on.
I'm not advocating that you should just **** it up but you also need to choose your battles. go back to them with what you think is reasonable and have them explain how they got to the number and see what they say.These round off's can end up as considerable amount of money eventually depending on the number of changes that happens. Agree that in the big scheme of things, $2500 shouldn't be a big deal.
I am fine with highway robbery. At least both parties know what's going onWhat annoys me the most is when someone takes advantage of you just because they are in a position to do it and think that you can't figure it out
been there done that. someone putting #6 bars at 12" o.c. in a 4.75" slab has never tried to build concrete anything before.That's scary, isn't it?
I've trained first year graduates in our Engineering design office. They don't know how little they actually know.
The last one quit after six months to go into a sales job when he realized the real world is different that college exercises.
He asked how anyone runs six jobs and trains him all at the came time. The real world....
I know this thread is old, but somehow I came across it again, and now realize I misread the original post and did not account for the fact this pour was still in planning. Therefore, my reply of some weeks ago was off base and I apologize for my tone, and inappropriate and unhelpful response....
Garage is part of the overall home build considering 4" concrete garage floors. The quote I got for additional 2 inches of concrete is $2500 !!!. Does additional 2" of concreate involve so much additional labor, what am I missing? Guess he is mixing gold hence this price![]()
