Have gotten different input from contractors on prepping below a slab. For a 20 x 28 garage, red clay soil... is gravel necessary, is a moisture barrier necessary? Thought yes but not everyone says so. Thanks.
Hello, first I would jumping-jack compact any soil which was disturbed and placed back under the slab. Yes I would place at least 4" thick of "#57 stone" which is secret code for washed crushed limestone 3/4" nominal (no fines = not crusher run). Rough level this, wet down lightly with garden hose and then plate-compact. Then place vapor barrier, I recommend 10 mil so it doesn't get shredded. Then place reinforcing steel. Saw cut the next morning after the pour into 10-12' squares. Wet cure or apply curing sealer to the concrete as soon as it can be walked on without damage (likely late in the day of the pour). Note this isn't the cheapest method and will get you a lot of "we've always done it our way and never had any problems" statements but I think its a reasonably simple formula to get a good job.
The vapor barrier serves two purposes, one to keep ground moisture from wicking up thru the slab long-term, and two, in the shorter-term, to keep water in the concrete mix so it can cure properly. If there's no vapor barrier the water that needs to be included in the crystal lattice structure for the concrete gets pulled away by the stronger force of diffusion into the drier subgrade.
..... But, if one short-circuits the process and bombs over it once with a plate compactor and pours 2 days later there's a very good chance the fines will start settling *after* the slab is poured and in my thinking that's directionally wrong. The angular washed stone won't settle any more unless the subgrade gives way.
its actually a micatious silt, looks like clay so that is what most people call it.Not familiar with your soils, red clay. If it expands when wet you need to overdig and replace it with compactable material. Seen many big heaves, cracks do to this, one of the most costly fixes to repair. Check by constructing a small open top wooden box, fill it with the red clay, compacted with a wide face hammer or similar tool. Submerge in water for an hour, pull it out. If it blows out your fasteners don't try to build directly on it.
Been there, repaired that.
Jim
Clay will wash out easily, leaving voids.
dont use 57 stone.. use GAB or crusher run. you can compact it to a consistant elevation and walking on it doesn't create potholes in it the way 57 stone does.
Hello, first I would jumping-jack compact any soil which was disturbed and placed back under the slab. Yes I would place at least 4" thick of "#57 stone" which is secret code for washed crushed limestone 3/4" nominal (no fines = not crusher run). Rough level this, wet down lightly with garden hose and then plate-compact. Then place vapor barrier, I recommend 10 mil so it doesn't get shredded. Then place reinforcing steel. Saw cut the next morning after the pour into 10-12' squares. Wet cure or apply curing sealer to the concrete as soon as it can be walked on without damage (likely late in the day of the pour). Note this isn't the cheapest method and will get you a lot of "we've always done it our way and never had any problems" statements but I think its a reasonably simple formula to get a good job.
The vapor barrier serves two purposes, one to keep ground moisture from wicking up thru the slab long-term, and two, in the shorter-term, to keep water in the concrete mix so it can cure properly. If there's no vapor barrier the water that needs to be included in the crystal lattice structure for the concrete gets pulled away by the stronger force of diffusion into the drier subgrade.
Curious what adding water to a clean 3/4” stone lift will do? There is no fines so the water has no effect except getting the ground wet.
Well the local excavator guy that I used, striped off all the top soil, and brought in 350 yards of clay to raise my shop foot print higher than the surrounding area. That base was like concrete. Vapor Barrie's, ridged foam, mesh, pex, concrete. Dry as a bone. No gravel.
Gravel is good, it will tolerate some moisture / drainage issues if it gets under the slab.
Clay will wash out easily, leaving voids. And as stated previously, if it's expansive clay you've got problems.
If you never have any drainage issues.. no worries.
For slab sub grade materials it's best to use a fill material that has been processed and that the processor has Proctor Compaction Data on file. That way you know what your getting.
Well the reason I went with the clay was his reasoning that they make dams out of clay.....at least his clay in NE Ohio. Had other contractors wanting to do sand. Sand never dried.....always wicking moister. It's ben up 6 years and no problems and my floor is dry.
Moderate to poor, but not good.
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Moderate to poor, but not good.
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Your chart shows it’s difficult to pack that’s about it. I wouldn’t put a foundation in packed clay. I would add a buffer that can supply an even compaction. If clay is packed properly it will seal out the water and become basically cement. Building practice here is to clean off black dirt to a good undispured clay. Then building up. I would build foundations on undisturbed clay.
Undisturbed? The topic here is choice of fill material.
The chart shows that clay is a poor to moderate choice for a fill material.
Your addressing my “building block” response not as fill. I have said I wouldn’t use it as fill. That I would use clean rock.
Clay is a good building block. It should not be the only thing under your slab. It takes a bit of work to get it proper as well. Needs to be packed real good and dry.
Well, you did write "Needs to be packed real good and dry" And that reference is to fill... undisturbed soil is already compacted.
Just clarifying. I'd sure hate for somebody to use clay as a fill, based on the previous threads, when there are a plethora of better choices.
