hausfxr
Member
Arguably the best thing you can do is put construction joints in every 12’ or so and lap one side’s ends of rebar over the joint. And that rebar that extends into the next slab needs to be greased and sleeved so the joint can move. And we simply drop the pex below the joint into the foam board at the joint, but I've never done a job with hydronics that did not have at least 3" (code minimum here) to 4" of XPS. Someone has already pointed out that the joints can be bad for small wheels (it’s one reason you see mostly thin control joint used over construction joints in big box stores, however, the base below those slabs is very well prepared and compacted with very large rolling vibrators, and the soil below that is tested and compacted as needed.), but a 20’ by 36’ slab on grade is huge and needs to be allowed to move. With a slab as large as yours you are guaranteed to get cracks and many of them, if not most, won’t follow control joints – stresses go in all directions. If you doubt any of this from your own experience, then you need to just revisit 50 or so slabs any concrete company has poured in the last 5 to 10 years after they are finished. You’ll see cracks in all of them, but especially those that were poured on grade.
Also, most people don’t realize how much organic matter there is in the top few feet of soil, and they think taking off that top darker layer is all they need, but once you cut off plant growth and all the organisms that give that soil structure, it will shrink for years, if not for decades later.
So, will your slab crack? Absolutely, and those cracks will be large and probably offset vertically over time. Fortunately, pex is pretty darn tuff, so the chances that you'll get a tear are slim - just not a chance I'd take myself.
Also, most people don’t realize how much organic matter there is in the top few feet of soil, and they think taking off that top darker layer is all they need, but once you cut off plant growth and all the organisms that give that soil structure, it will shrink for years, if not for decades later.
So, will your slab crack? Absolutely, and those cracks will be large and probably offset vertically over time. Fortunately, pex is pretty darn tuff, so the chances that you'll get a tear are slim - just not a chance I'd take myself.
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