CivilEQuinn
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 14, 2006
- 6
Hi all. My first post, but I've enjoyed reading many other posts and answers. I have a question of my own:
We are repairing cold joint horizontal cracks on a number of dolphins on a river. The river is subject to tidal motions which put the cracks a few feet below the water line at high tide and in the dry at low tide.
My question is which method of repair is best? The spec. is instructing us to use epoxy injection yet I've got a few different views from a couple subs. One says a polyurethane injection material would be more appropriate. While another is saying that why even bother injecting because the joint will just crack again due to the nature that it is a cold joint in the first place.
Thanks
We are repairing cold joint horizontal cracks on a number of dolphins on a river. The river is subject to tidal motions which put the cracks a few feet below the water line at high tide and in the dry at low tide.
My question is which method of repair is best? The spec. is instructing us to use epoxy injection yet I've got a few different views from a couple subs. One says a polyurethane injection material would be more appropriate. While another is saying that why even bother injecting because the joint will just crack again due to the nature that it is a cold joint in the first place.
Thanks