c6fan
Well-known member
I'm putting in a new shop and the floor did not turn out so well. There should have been 2 trucks for the pour. The second truck did not show so the first truck had to go back and get the 2nd load. Then the cement company may have shorted one of the loads because it ended up requiring a 3rd truck and according to my GC cost him an additional $500. The concrete guys claimed also that the last load did not have the correct amount of hardener and would not set up. They could not use the machine on this area because it would just gouge the wet concrete. The end result was a pretty choppy floor.
I wasn't there during the whole thing but I did come for lunch and the 1st truck was just leaving and there wasn't another one there. When I got home at 5:30 they were still working on it and I could see where they had tried to use the machine on it and it was gouged up pretty bad but was still wet enough to be corrected (for the most part). They worked on it until it got too dark to see. The contract I have with the GC is very loosely written and does not specify how smooth the surface was suppose to be but he has verbally acknowledged that the floor is not right.
His first attempt at fixing the lumpy floor was using what he called "Featherlite" (sp??) which should have leveled the low spots and troweled into a feather edge. This failed badly. See pics.
It was my opinion that the floor needed to be ground but the GC didn't want to do it saying there would be grind marks. I'm going to do epoxy when it's done anyway so I don't know if the coating will hide imperfections or accent them. I was hoping some of the experts could look at the pics and share some opinions.
These are just a few pics of the floor in general and of the 2 places where the Featherlite was used. This does not show the slow waves because they are almost impossible to photograph and really that part didn't bother me too much.
Unfeathered edge of Featherlite spot #1
Featherlite spot #1
This was in the wet area so most of the floor does not have these dimples
Featherlite spot #2
Unfeathered edge of Featherlite
Unfeathered edge of Featerlite edge #2
Didn't need a pencil to show the waves in this pic
The last 3 are just peaks and valleys in the floor
I wasn't there during the whole thing but I did come for lunch and the 1st truck was just leaving and there wasn't another one there. When I got home at 5:30 they were still working on it and I could see where they had tried to use the machine on it and it was gouged up pretty bad but was still wet enough to be corrected (for the most part). They worked on it until it got too dark to see. The contract I have with the GC is very loosely written and does not specify how smooth the surface was suppose to be but he has verbally acknowledged that the floor is not right.
His first attempt at fixing the lumpy floor was using what he called "Featherlite" (sp??) which should have leveled the low spots and troweled into a feather edge. This failed badly. See pics.
It was my opinion that the floor needed to be ground but the GC didn't want to do it saying there would be grind marks. I'm going to do epoxy when it's done anyway so I don't know if the coating will hide imperfections or accent them. I was hoping some of the experts could look at the pics and share some opinions.
These are just a few pics of the floor in general and of the 2 places where the Featherlite was used. This does not show the slow waves because they are almost impossible to photograph and really that part didn't bother me too much.
Unfeathered edge of Featherlite spot #1
Featherlite spot #1
This was in the wet area so most of the floor does not have these dimples
Featherlite spot #2
Unfeathered edge of Featherlite
Unfeathered edge of Featerlite edge #2
Didn't need a pencil to show the waves in this pic
The last 3 are just peaks and valleys in the floor
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