justhumm
Structural
- May 2, 2003
- 111
A couple of weeks ago, I was inside a portion of a building constructed around 1927.
We were taking a core on an existing stairwell slab, which the GPR guy said was about 10" deep. The core cracked at about 2" down, at a material interface. And then cracked again at about another 2" down.
We didn't want to drill through the slab, so we called it there. Can anybody venture a guess as to what was below what we took out? Total thickness?
And other than rushing out and buying a textbook, can anyone recommend a good source of information for historical cinder concrete slab construction?
Thanks!
These were some interesting discussion of the topic:
[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.structuremag.org/?p=8405[/url]
[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.eng-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=281173[/url]
And here are full-sized images:
[URL unfurl="true"]https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=d6b615a7-9872-42fa-8d6b-fe3aaaf137e1&file=Capture.PNG[/url]
[URL unfurl="true"]https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=19ce9640-9c25-4120-97ff-6dec217067da&file=20200214_170332.jpg[/url]
[ul]
[li]All floors, including XXXX or future fourth floor to have cinder concrete slabs, reinforced with wire fabric of approved XXXXX having a sectional area of 17/100 sq. in. per foot in width of fabric.[/li]
[li]Floor slabs to be 4" thick for spans XXXX 6'-6" C to C of I-beams.[/li]
[li]Floor slabs for spans mre than 6'-6" C to C of I-beams to be 4-1/2" thick.[/li]
[li]XXXX[/li]
[li]Slab for loft floor and XXXX of connecting corridors and pent house to be 4" thick.[/li]
[li]All slabs to have 17/100 sq. in. of reinforcement.[/li]
[li]Live load for all floor not otherwise indicated: 100 pounds per square foot.[/li]
[/ul]
We were taking a core on an existing stairwell slab, which the GPR guy said was about 10" deep. The core cracked at about 2" down, at a material interface. And then cracked again at about another 2" down.
We didn't want to drill through the slab, so we called it there. Can anybody venture a guess as to what was below what we took out? Total thickness?
And other than rushing out and buying a textbook, can anyone recommend a good source of information for historical cinder concrete slab construction?
Thanks!
These were some interesting discussion of the topic:
[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.structuremag.org/?p=8405[/url]
[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.eng-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=281173[/url]
And here are full-sized images:
[URL unfurl="true"]https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=d6b615a7-9872-42fa-8d6b-fe3aaaf137e1&file=Capture.PNG[/url]
[URL unfurl="true"]https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=19ce9640-9c25-4120-97ff-6dec217067da&file=20200214_170332.jpg[/url]
[ul]
[li]All floors, including XXXX or future fourth floor to have cinder concrete slabs, reinforced with wire fabric of approved XXXXX having a sectional area of 17/100 sq. in. per foot in width of fabric.[/li]
[li]Floor slabs to be 4" thick for spans XXXX 6'-6" C to C of I-beams.[/li]
[li]Floor slabs for spans mre than 6'-6" C to C of I-beams to be 4-1/2" thick.[/li]
[li]XXXX[/li]
[li]Slab for loft floor and XXXX of connecting corridors and pent house to be 4" thick.[/li]
[li]All slabs to have 17/100 sq. in. of reinforcement.[/li]
[li]Live load for all floor not otherwise indicated: 100 pounds per square foot.[/li]
[/ul]