jeffmoor
Electrical
- Feb 23, 2011
- 2
Hello All,
This concerns cutting a hole in an existing concrete floor, then pouring a new sunken pad in the hole. The application is an automotive shop with a new semi-portable hoist that the owner would like to have sit flush with the floor level when down.
The existing floor is a 4" concrete pad, roughly 20' x 20', reinforced with steel mesh. It was poured on a compacted gravel bed, on top of clay soil.
What we envision is a rectangular hole, roughly 52" (4.33') x 112" (9.33'). The finished surface would be 5.5" below the existing floor surface.
The hoist is a scissor type, rated to lift 6000 lbs. All the load weight is across the width on a steel bar at one end, and split between two large steel casters at the other. Our intent is to embed 1/2" (or better) steel pads on the surface of the new concrete both so add strength and to prevent wearing of the floor at the load points.
I'm an electronics guy, so well out of my element on this. I know enough not to start digging and pouring blindly, though. I'd appreciate any advice on any of the questions below, or anything else folks might think of...
1. The new surface must be lower than the bottom of the existing pad. Should the pads be tied together? Does this require diging out under the old pad's edges and filling the space between? Making the hole larger and pouring "walls" tied to the old slab?
2. The new pad will be on the same hard clay, of course, with compacted gravel underlayment. Anything foolish about this?
3. Assuming 3500 psi concrete, steel mesh reinforced, and taking the 1/2" steel in to consideration, what seems a reasonable thickness for the pad? Over 6"?
Thanks again for any advice you all may be able to provide.
Regards,
Jeff
This concerns cutting a hole in an existing concrete floor, then pouring a new sunken pad in the hole. The application is an automotive shop with a new semi-portable hoist that the owner would like to have sit flush with the floor level when down.
The existing floor is a 4" concrete pad, roughly 20' x 20', reinforced with steel mesh. It was poured on a compacted gravel bed, on top of clay soil.
What we envision is a rectangular hole, roughly 52" (4.33') x 112" (9.33'). The finished surface would be 5.5" below the existing floor surface.
The hoist is a scissor type, rated to lift 6000 lbs. All the load weight is across the width on a steel bar at one end, and split between two large steel casters at the other. Our intent is to embed 1/2" (or better) steel pads on the surface of the new concrete both so add strength and to prevent wearing of the floor at the load points.
I'm an electronics guy, so well out of my element on this. I know enough not to start digging and pouring blindly, though. I'd appreciate any advice on any of the questions below, or anything else folks might think of...
1. The new surface must be lower than the bottom of the existing pad. Should the pads be tied together? Does this require diging out under the old pad's edges and filling the space between? Making the hole larger and pouring "walls" tied to the old slab?
2. The new pad will be on the same hard clay, of course, with compacted gravel underlayment. Anything foolish about this?
3. Assuming 3500 psi concrete, steel mesh reinforced, and taking the 1/2" steel in to consideration, what seems a reasonable thickness for the pad? Over 6"?
Thanks again for any advice you all may be able to provide.
Regards,
Jeff