sybie99
Structural
- Sep 18, 2009
- 150
Hi Guys,
Would like to hear your opinions on use of wet to dry epoxy to bond new concrete to existing.
When for example you are casting a suspended slab, the pour is too big to do in one hit, now you just let the concrete run off at 45 degrees at the line where you want the construction joint. Can you just clean this concrete surface and brush it off and cast next slab or must you use a wet to dry epoxy? I am not relying on any tensile strength in the concrete, only compressive, so why use wet to dry epoxy?
In the UK it was normal to just jet wash the existing pour end to remove loose aggregate and laitance and then cast next slab (of course you have rebar going through the joint). In South Africa engineers often use an epoxy.
Why use an epoxy, what is its purpose?
Thanks
Would like to hear your opinions on use of wet to dry epoxy to bond new concrete to existing.
When for example you are casting a suspended slab, the pour is too big to do in one hit, now you just let the concrete run off at 45 degrees at the line where you want the construction joint. Can you just clean this concrete surface and brush it off and cast next slab or must you use a wet to dry epoxy? I am not relying on any tensile strength in the concrete, only compressive, so why use wet to dry epoxy?
In the UK it was normal to just jet wash the existing pour end to remove loose aggregate and laitance and then cast next slab (of course you have rebar going through the joint). In South Africa engineers often use an epoxy.
Why use an epoxy, what is its purpose?
Thanks