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Default concrete patch vs. rain

hello.

yesterday, around 2pm, I patched two huge cracks in my driveway that
ran the legnth of the individual pads. It couldn't wait any longer,
imo, because they were starting to shift and become like little
"steps".. I used quikrete vinyl patch. I was done around 3:30.. and it
started to get cloudy. I didn't think nothing of it.. I just left the
patches as they were, and didn't cover them. around 3:30am today, it
was raining outside.. I looked at the patches around 6am and they
seemed to be still intact.. I touched one area and it was solid, and
another one was a little soft..
Do I have any worries about the patches getting ruined by rain? I
actually found out it is going to be raining off and on for the next
few days... I was actually thinking that the rain will be good for
them to keep them from hardening to quickly.. (also, being that it was
between 55-66 degrees outside, I made the mix a little thicker so that
it dry a little faster in the cooler weather..

Thanks.
Chris
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Default concrete patch vs. rain


"Chris" wrote in message
...
hello.

yesterday, around 2pm, I patched two huge cracks in my driveway that
ran the legnth of the individual pads. It couldn't wait any longer,
imo, because they were starting to shift and become like little
"steps".. I used quikrete vinyl patch. I was done around 3:30.. and it
started to get cloudy. I didn't think nothing of it.. I just left the
patches as they were, and didn't cover them. around 3:30am today, it
was raining outside.. I looked at the patches around 6am and they
seemed to be still intact.. I touched one area and it was solid, and
another one was a little soft..
Do I have any worries about the patches getting ruined by rain? I
actually found out it is going to be raining off and on for the next
few days... I was actually thinking that the rain will be good for
them to keep them from hardening to quickly.. (also, being that it was
between 55-66 degrees outside, I made the mix a little thicker so that
it dry a little faster in the cooler weather..

Thanks.
Chris



Back in my wooden tugboat days. I used vinyl concrete patcher on the
underwater part of the hull to patch worm holes I saw the boat out of the
water about 9 years after I sold it and the patches were still holding
strong. I might add that I did this once when the boat was beached on a low
tide and the patch only had a couple of hours to dry, again no problems.

Waldo Point,

www.tugboatsf.us


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Default concrete patch vs. rain

Chris wrote:
hello.

yesterday, around 2pm, I patched two huge cracks in my driveway that
ran the legnth of the individual pads. It couldn't wait any longer,
imo, because they were starting to shift and become like little
"steps".. I used quikrete vinyl patch. I was done around 3:30.. and it
started to get cloudy. I didn't think nothing of it.. I just left the
patches as they were, and didn't cover them. around 3:30am today, it
was raining outside.. I looked at the patches around 6am and they
seemed to be still intact.. I touched one area and it was solid, and
another one was a little soft..
Do I have any worries about the patches getting ruined by rain? I
actually found out it is going to be raining off and on for the next
few days... I was actually thinking that the rain will be good for
them to keep them from hardening to quickly.. (also, being that it was
between 55-66 degrees outside, I made the mix a little thicker so that
it dry a little faster in the cooler weather..

Thanks.
Chris

Hate to rain on your parade, but if the parts of the slab were becoming
'stepped', your patch likely will, at best, slow the problem down
slightly. Shifting in the vertical plane means improper substrate and
drainage. A common problem here in the north- water gets under a chunk,
freezes, and pushes it up. My mother's old house had a garage floor that
visibly humped in winter, and settled back flat in summer. (Cheap SOB
cookie-cutter builder didn't bother with a foundation or footers under
the door edge of the garage slab.)

Hey, it's cheap, and it may buy you some time. But be aware a
replacement is probably in your future.

aem sends...
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Default concrete patch vs. rain

drainage is most likley the cause of this-- the original drain line
for the gutters and sump pump was under the driveway, and had to be
replaced-- it was cracked.. and it was probably like that for years.

this is the aftermath.. Hopefully the patchs will stop the rain from
getting down in there and causing more problems..

thanks..


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