StrucPatholgst
Structural
- Jan 23, 2013
- 158
Precast concrete foundation panels require a continuous bead of polyurethane sealant at each joint, but during assembly if the contractor bumps the open joint with the next panel or slides the next panel in too aggressively, he smears the sealant away. Final step involves beads at inside and outside edges of joints. But polyurethane sealants do not have an infinite life, and most panel installers only warranty the installation for 10 to 15 years, tops. So when the leaks start 10 or 15 years out, the only long-term, non-bandaid solution is to excavate and try to get the joint clean enough for a new bead of sealant to adhere. Even then, you're back to square one with a sealant that has a finite life.
You'd think a better way would be available, but nope. And I wonder what happens 50 years from now when the bolting hardware rusts away from the joints leaking.
You'd think a better way would be available, but nope. And I wonder what happens 50 years from now when the bolting hardware rusts away from the joints leaking.