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How to plug holes

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shin25

Structural
Jul 4, 2007
430
I am currently working on a retrofit project for which I need to drill some holes and epoxy in some rebars for a bridge barrier.

But, the problem is, due to some unavoidable reasons I have to drill the holes ahead of time and install the bars after few months. I want to plug the holes during this period, so that in the winter months the water does not get in the holes freezes and cracks the concrete. Just before installing the bars, I shall remove the plugs and proceed. Since its for bridge barrier the plugs need to be tough but easy to remove.

Can you guys advise some plug materials which are easily available?
 
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Wax? A thin layer of grout, drill out later? Silicone or urethane caulking?
 
COEngineer,

The only reason I want it tough because I do not want it to wear out. I am expecting heavy construction and traffic on top of it.
 
It sounds like you need to solve the scheduling issue rather than finding a way to plug the holes. If you make it durable plug then it will be hard to take it out. It seems like it is defeating the purpose of drilling the holes early.

Sea Water Intake and Jetty Construction
 
I would look at installing a threaded insert, put a cap screw in, then when you are ready, take out the screw and put in a threaded rebar.

Don't like any of the above ideas, particularly the wax and sealant, as your epoxy then won't work.
 
I personally liked the dayton-richmond stuff (A58). I think it should serve my purpose. Thank you all.
 
That is probably pretty expensive. Based on your description, I bet you will have a lot of holes. (if only a few, you will probably drill it just before you epoxy it). Good luck

Sea Water Intake and Jetty Construction
 
ahh nevermind, i thought each plug had that metal piece. Looks like a solution but rubber isnt what I had in mind when you said it has to be strong.

Sea Water Intake and Jetty Construction
 
Even though it is rubber, the catalog says it can bear the pressure of 70' of water head.
 
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