bmwpowere36m3
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2012
- Messages
- 1,125
Trying to finish before winter sets in (located in CT)... so far:
Plan Forward:
Since I wasn't thrilled with the first concrete guys work (different reason), I've been looking for another. I found one and have spoken on the phone. Seems knowledgeable, mentioning: slump, admix for reduced water, vapor barrier, 12" oc #4 rebar or 4x4" 4-6 ga mesh etc...)
The foundation was poured such that the openings for doors are at or below bottom of desired slab. Thus the slab would sit on top of the stem wall at those openings. My father's garage foundation was poured the same way, by different guys, so I assume its the norm in the area.
This new concrete guy recommend tieing the slab rebar horizontally into stem walls by drilling and hammering in rebar. Thoughts? I didn't mention the slab on stem wall to him.
Second, does the vapor barrier around the edges need to be taped/adhered to the stem wall?
Third, every cross of rebar needs to be tied?
Keeping the cold out will be the challenge and getting everything done before it gets too cold (current highs 30s, lows 20s). Any final tips related to slab prep or cold weather? Thanks
- Excavated, foundation poured, back-filled and compacted
- Rough framing complete
- Roof shingled
- Door/Window openings covered with plywood/tarp
Plan Forward:
- 15 mil vapor barrier, seams taped
- #4 rebar on 18" oc (concrete guy likes 12" oc)
- 3" plastic chairs 36" oc (Hercules)
- 24' Polylok trench drain
- 6" slab, no fiber, 4-5k PSI, power-troweled
Since I wasn't thrilled with the first concrete guys work (different reason), I've been looking for another. I found one and have spoken on the phone. Seems knowledgeable, mentioning: slump, admix for reduced water, vapor barrier, 12" oc #4 rebar or 4x4" 4-6 ga mesh etc...)
The foundation was poured such that the openings for doors are at or below bottom of desired slab. Thus the slab would sit on top of the stem wall at those openings. My father's garage foundation was poured the same way, by different guys, so I assume its the norm in the area.
This new concrete guy recommend tieing the slab rebar horizontally into stem walls by drilling and hammering in rebar. Thoughts? I didn't mention the slab on stem wall to him.
Second, does the vapor barrier around the edges need to be taped/adhered to the stem wall?
Third, every cross of rebar needs to be tied?
Keeping the cold out will be the challenge and getting everything done before it gets too cold (current highs 30s, lows 20s). Any final tips related to slab prep or cold weather? Thanks
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A slab on grade isn't a beam where the bottom is in tension between supports and the top is in tension over the supports. It depends on uniform support from below to function.