Golden40
Active member
Getting ready 2 pour outdoor concrete approaches. Should I lay down plastic before the pour or not? Thanks in advance



It makes no sense to put plastic under concrete outside. What does it do?
It's a complete waste of time to put poly under an exterior slab.

......I've placed thousands of yards of concrete for anything from houses to wastewater treatment plants and I've never seen a vapor barrier under a piece of exterior concrete.
One of my freinds builds grain bins and he says be sure to install a vapor barrier and not to forget the steel inside the concrete! He Has over 25 years experience in doing them this way!
Makes sense. I wouldn't think water vapor would be a good thing for stored grain. Different situation than the OP asked about though.

But if the top is open to the elements what would be the purpose of the vapour barrier underneath?
The top isn't open in a grain bin. It's a controlled environment that in many times includes heaters to keep moisture levels in grain at an optimum level.
If the top was open the grain would mold and/or ferment and/or germinate.
Did you actually read the first post?Ahhaa, all becomes clear. I was thinking 'inside'. Nope, no point doing it if it is an exposed outdoor slab of concrete.

It makes no sense to put plastic under concrete outside. What does it do?
I have been around concrete paving on roads for many years , they require you to place plastic or wet the grade down real good with water. If you pour on a dry grade ,the concrete will **** up what moisture that is there,if there isnt plastic or water on grade the concrete won't be as strong. That is the reason you put cure on top of concrete after pour , so to seal the top, so the sun won't soak up the moisture in top of concrete,and get hair line cracks.
Did you actually read the first post?![]()
Is this a driveway? 'Outdoor approach'? And not a building foundation?![]()
Well, concrete is mostly water. Concrete upon losing it's water, really does not set correctly, it needs the water to cure, that's why a lot of times you spray water on a nice deck. To give a better cure.
So if you use no plastic under your concrete all of your water leaches away, as much as 2 inches on the bottom does not cure correctly. On a 4 inch slab that's half.
..... The LESS water there is relative to cement the stronger the mix will be.
After concrete is placed, it should be protected from premature drying to ensure there is adequate water to complete the process. Spraying water on the slab just restricts evaporation and has nothing to do with hydration.
Of course LL, You and I know the reason the water is put in the mix at a high slump is to make it flow better cause the spreaders are not inspired. They can't do that with an engineered mix that is tested. Any spec mix is going to have samples pulled and the high slump will cause it to fail.
On a spec mix you get little top float because the engineered mix is low water content and you dont get a lot of "cream"
A DIY guy slab will for sure be higher water content, the guy pouring the slab will often have the truck add a ton of water, that will all float out and the slab will have a weak surface that spalls easily and micro cracks from that.
All I'm really saying is that if a DIY guy keeps from adding water to spread it and adds a bit of plastic he will have a better pour and a slightly stronger pad. Maybe.
The main reason you see a bad pad is cause you see the truck spinning for twenty minutes to add water cause the DIY guy crew is not inspired.
It honestly don't really make enough of a difference to be disagreeing with you. So I don't, it is not really required. The average DIY'er wrecks the whole job before the mix even hits the ground. I guess they like watching that drum spin while they sip a latte.
FrankthePlumber. I'm with you 100%. Everyone would be well advised to keep an eye on their floor crew. It's a tough job and a lot of them try to make it easier by adding too much water. I'd pony up a few extra bucks for a mid range water reducer before I let them pour a 6" slump with just water.
We probably did beat the issue to death. Always interesting to debate these things. Thanks for your thoughts.
Morrisman. Just to clarify, the OP asked about poly under EXTERIOR concrete. No disagreement about the need for a vapor barrier under interior concrete.

