smyrna5
Member
Hello all. Great forum here. I had a problem with a concrete step that abuts my house and caused it to rot the wood. It required me to break out a piece 8.5'x1.5' from the slab they poured on the top of a concrete block wall about 4" thick to replace the wood. Altogether, this is only about 4.2 cubic feet (about half a yard) of concrete.
I cut the slab as deep as I could (about 2") with a masonry blade on an old circular saw before breaking it out, so the break is pretty clean at the top. Now, I want to repair the damage to the slab by re-pouring the section I broke out. I don't really care if it ties in perfectly the old slab, since I intend to put an expansion joint there to assist with drainage anyway. Although the original had no steel in it, I intend to put some mesh or rebar in the replacement piece just to be safe.
I have never done much concrete work, so I am not sure how fast I have to pour it for it to set up as one 8.5'x1.5' x 4" piece. I'd like to mix the 7-80# bags by hand to pour this, if I have enough time. Can I do this an still have the small part I am pouring be one monolithic sheet?
Here's a picture of it:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/smyrna5/10406572894/
I cut the slab as deep as I could (about 2") with a masonry blade on an old circular saw before breaking it out, so the break is pretty clean at the top. Now, I want to repair the damage to the slab by re-pouring the section I broke out. I don't really care if it ties in perfectly the old slab, since I intend to put an expansion joint there to assist with drainage anyway. Although the original had no steel in it, I intend to put some mesh or rebar in the replacement piece just to be safe.
I have never done much concrete work, so I am not sure how fast I have to pour it for it to set up as one 8.5'x1.5' x 4" piece. I'd like to mix the 7-80# bags by hand to pour this, if I have enough time. Can I do this an still have the small part I am pouring be one monolithic sheet?
Here's a picture of it:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/smyrna5/10406572894/
Last edited:

it took several trips... Took longer to get the materials in place than it did to mix and pour the concrete. We did add a shovelfull of portland to each mixer load, as Zeke suggested. Hasn't cracked or spalled yet.