Munster1
Structural
- May 23, 2005
- 5
We just poured a concrete basement (new construction).
10' walls, 10" wide, on a 24" footer (@8" deep).
During pouring a form collapsed, concrete was knocked out and the form was reset. Pour was continued.
Unfortunately the concrete sat in the pump during this reform time and began to seperate giving some severe honeycombing all the way through both sides on top of what is now a cold joint. It's a wavy line about 25 feet long. We discovered this when we pulled the forms. Yes, he should have dumped it out and used fresh mix but he didn't. Trying to minimize $$.
Of course the contractor said "it'll be fine" but it looks like heck and I'm worried about both structural and water intrusion. He offered to cut it out and repour.
Would I be better with a planned vertical cold joint from the cut and repour (will it settle?, will it leak?) or should I try to have them repair the honeycomb along the joint?
I'm also concerned about breaking the footer if we try to remove it and just making my problem worse. Can you piece the footer without problems? It's a big project, and bulldozing and starting over would be very expensive.
What's the best way to fill the honeycomb if it's structurally okay?
This will be a finished basement with a 2 story on top or it. I don't want problems down the line.
Any help?
Hermon
10' walls, 10" wide, on a 24" footer (@8" deep).
During pouring a form collapsed, concrete was knocked out and the form was reset. Pour was continued.
Unfortunately the concrete sat in the pump during this reform time and began to seperate giving some severe honeycombing all the way through both sides on top of what is now a cold joint. It's a wavy line about 25 feet long. We discovered this when we pulled the forms. Yes, he should have dumped it out and used fresh mix but he didn't. Trying to minimize $$.
Of course the contractor said "it'll be fine" but it looks like heck and I'm worried about both structural and water intrusion. He offered to cut it out and repour.
Would I be better with a planned vertical cold joint from the cut and repour (will it settle?, will it leak?) or should I try to have them repair the honeycomb along the joint?
I'm also concerned about breaking the footer if we try to remove it and just making my problem worse. Can you piece the footer without problems? It's a big project, and bulldozing and starting over would be very expensive.
What's the best way to fill the honeycomb if it's structurally okay?
This will be a finished basement with a 2 story on top or it. I don't want problems down the line.
Any help?
Hermon