NinerStruct
Structural
- Nov 5, 2012
- 36
I have a project where it appears that the contractor ordered the wrong concrete for a ~2000 ft^2 slab on grade and placed the slab with air entrained concrete.
The air content was 6.5% air, but the slump was only 3". The strength was already over the specified 28 day f'c at seven days. A walk-behind power trowel was used to finish, but I don't know how soon they got on the slab to trowel.
I found a few other threads that reference this type of situation, so my first question: Is this even an issue? Or at what point is air in the slab an issue? I read an article from Concrete International that listed the majority of slabs displaying issues, as having between 4.5% to 7.5%. I don't want the client to have a faulty slab, but I also don't want to be making much ado about nothing and go chicken little here.
After reading articles and the other threads, I had initially decided to have the testing agency provide a chain drag test, and depending on the results either selectively repair, or remove the slab if worse came to worst. But after speaking with his superiors, my contact at the testing agency said their opinion is that there isn't really an issue, so what would additional testing really prove.
So... I bring this up because I'm concerned that the testing agency is somewhat trying to cover their own miscue. They did not catch the air entrainment error, because their techinician believed (for some reason) that this was going to be a garage floor. I noticed it in the 7 day break test, and notified them, so now the contractor has been continuing on with work and has interior walls down. I think they're worried that if errors are found, the contractor will try to go after them for part of any additional costs, because they didn't bring this to his attention either before the slab was poured or at least before he had walls in place.
I'm still leaning towards the chain drag test and selective repair, I just wanted to get opinions of those that have no vested interest. Thanks for the help.
The air content was 6.5% air, but the slump was only 3". The strength was already over the specified 28 day f'c at seven days. A walk-behind power trowel was used to finish, but I don't know how soon they got on the slab to trowel.
I found a few other threads that reference this type of situation, so my first question: Is this even an issue? Or at what point is air in the slab an issue? I read an article from Concrete International that listed the majority of slabs displaying issues, as having between 4.5% to 7.5%. I don't want the client to have a faulty slab, but I also don't want to be making much ado about nothing and go chicken little here.
After reading articles and the other threads, I had initially decided to have the testing agency provide a chain drag test, and depending on the results either selectively repair, or remove the slab if worse came to worst. But after speaking with his superiors, my contact at the testing agency said their opinion is that there isn't really an issue, so what would additional testing really prove.
So... I bring this up because I'm concerned that the testing agency is somewhat trying to cover their own miscue. They did not catch the air entrainment error, because their techinician believed (for some reason) that this was going to be a garage floor. I noticed it in the 7 day break test, and notified them, so now the contractor has been continuing on with work and has interior walls down. I think they're worried that if errors are found, the contractor will try to go after them for part of any additional costs, because they didn't bring this to his attention either before the slab was poured or at least before he had walls in place.
I'm still leaning towards the chain drag test and selective repair, I just wanted to get opinions of those that have no vested interest. Thanks for the help.