pago cruiser
Well-known member
For any good experienced concrete guys...
Have a problem just cropped up today.
Obtained Pre-Slab inspection today, and the Contractor is going to be pouring Wednesday.
Garage is freestanding, 36x26, 2'x2' footers, #4's at 12"OC on 2.5" dobies (should have heard the Contractor whine about using these...), 6" 4000 psi slab. Double Halos in the footers.
I live on a hilltop at just over 4000' elevation. IRC windspeed design is 105 MPH. I have personally measured 70 MPH in gusts 2X in the last 10 years.
The engineer has (2) 48"W Bracing Panels at all corners, as well as between the overhead doors, and slightly off center in the back wall. Sill bolts are 1/2" x 14", min 48" OC, with a true 12" embedment. Several other internal steel members at TJI's to top plate and studs to bottom plate.
Each one of the (3) 48" Panels in the front (corner, between doors, corner) has about 8100# of force applied by a true 100MPH wind; each of these Panels has (3) Sill Bolts. The bolts are not overloaded. The monolithic pour footer/slab has sufficient mass to resist this; I need 162 cubic feet and I have 180 cubic feet in the footer length; same numbers on the back wall, and similar numbers to the sidewalls.
Now the Contractor wants to pour in 2 steps. Footers first, slab last. This is about a 42-yard pour, and these is some problem with the trucks, I guess. he did not elaborate before he hurried off.
Problem:
1. How are you going to insert 12" sill bolts when the 6" slab is poured on top of the previous days 24" footers?
2. I will still need that 162 cubic feet of mass; the 6" slab will provide about 20 cubic feet, assuming 12' of length for bearing of each Bracing Panel. I asked him this - just before he left the site in a hurry after disclosing the non-mono pour, and he said they would "place vertical rebar into footers, bend them over, and place about mid thickness of the slab". Seriously? (2) #4 rebar at each panel does not appear sufficient to join the slab to the footer with an uplift of 8000 lbs. I do not see how this will suffice.
Wish I knew more.
I have invested too much into this to have it compromised by sloppy workmanship at this most critical point.
Speaking of workmanship, we get down to the 20's each night, and he has no plans to use, and does not own, any concrete blankets. "We never use them, and have never had a problem". So I pre-purchased the roofing for the garage, and have sitting in a stack near the slab. Once he leaves, I will cover the slab with the (32) 5/8" plywood sheaths, and cover that with plastic. I am pretty confident that will avoid any surface freezing.
Sigh.
Am I missing something with the rebar?
TIA
Have a problem just cropped up today.
Obtained Pre-Slab inspection today, and the Contractor is going to be pouring Wednesday.
Garage is freestanding, 36x26, 2'x2' footers, #4's at 12"OC on 2.5" dobies (should have heard the Contractor whine about using these...), 6" 4000 psi slab. Double Halos in the footers.
I live on a hilltop at just over 4000' elevation. IRC windspeed design is 105 MPH. I have personally measured 70 MPH in gusts 2X in the last 10 years.
The engineer has (2) 48"W Bracing Panels at all corners, as well as between the overhead doors, and slightly off center in the back wall. Sill bolts are 1/2" x 14", min 48" OC, with a true 12" embedment. Several other internal steel members at TJI's to top plate and studs to bottom plate.
Each one of the (3) 48" Panels in the front (corner, between doors, corner) has about 8100# of force applied by a true 100MPH wind; each of these Panels has (3) Sill Bolts. The bolts are not overloaded. The monolithic pour footer/slab has sufficient mass to resist this; I need 162 cubic feet and I have 180 cubic feet in the footer length; same numbers on the back wall, and similar numbers to the sidewalls.
Now the Contractor wants to pour in 2 steps. Footers first, slab last. This is about a 42-yard pour, and these is some problem with the trucks, I guess. he did not elaborate before he hurried off.
Problem:
1. How are you going to insert 12" sill bolts when the 6" slab is poured on top of the previous days 24" footers?
2. I will still need that 162 cubic feet of mass; the 6" slab will provide about 20 cubic feet, assuming 12' of length for bearing of each Bracing Panel. I asked him this - just before he left the site in a hurry after disclosing the non-mono pour, and he said they would "place vertical rebar into footers, bend them over, and place about mid thickness of the slab". Seriously? (2) #4 rebar at each panel does not appear sufficient to join the slab to the footer with an uplift of 8000 lbs. I do not see how this will suffice.
Wish I knew more.
I have invested too much into this to have it compromised by sloppy workmanship at this most critical point.
Speaking of workmanship, we get down to the 20's each night, and he has no plans to use, and does not own, any concrete blankets. "We never use them, and have never had a problem". So I pre-purchased the roofing for the garage, and have sitting in a stack near the slab. Once he leaves, I will cover the slab with the (32) 5/8" plywood sheaths, and cover that with plastic. I am pretty confident that will avoid any surface freezing.
Sigh.
Am I missing something with the rebar?
TIA



