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Water in foundation block

woodie

Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2010
Messages
5
I'm in the midst of a 24' x 6' addition to my 24' x 24' garage. In order to fit within city guidelines - a foundation under the addition.

I didn't have a problem with the thought of a foundation under the addition, but the existing structure was on a slab with an 8" rat wall. I didn't want my garage to split apart every winter and thought it necessary to have a foundation under the whole garage. I rolled the garage forward 20' into the driveway (right up against the house). We've dug, poured a 10" footer, layed 4 row of block for the foundation, poured a 6" floating floor, and am in the process of watching the slab dry...

I ran a sprinkler for about a week, it rained some and now my blocks have water in them...

Should I pump it out somehow?

Displace it with sakcrete, sand, mortor or something?

I'm in NW Ohio with some cold, snowy weather coming soon and wouldn't want something to happen to my new block during the freeze...
 

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2chipped

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2009
Messages
641
Location
Jesup Ga USA
Quikrete $3.50 for 80# at lowes and home depot, dump in the cells till it soaks up all moisture. I would think that sand wouldn"t soak up as much as quikrete or portland cement.
 
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woodie

Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2010
Messages
5
So, that'll be around 130 80lb bags of quikcrete to fill all my block?

Any other suggestions?

Am I worrying too much?
 

Torque1st

MEMBER EMERITUS
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
5,668
Location
KC Metro, Kansas
Pump it out and then keep the open block covered.

Water will freeze, even with sand, and bust your blocks. Concrete or cement will chemically combine with the water.
 
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bmwpower

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
12,578
Location
NJ
You can vacuum it out but you will never get it all out. Water has likely spilled down into crevices you won't be able to get to.
 

jhelrey

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
7,261
Location
MN
It will dry up. It's what you cannot see that I would worry about. Think of how often homes are built, etc. and the water does the same thing.
 

Herb

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 15, 2006
Messages
739
Location
CT
Yeah, fill them with some type of cement/ mortar/ concrete. The termites and carpenter ants will have one less place to live.
 
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