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Default Cold, cold questions

By the way, if you have freeze/thaw cycles, you will have frost heaving.
This means solid foundations below the frost line. In flat work such as
sidewalks, this means a good well drained base under the concrete. Even with
all the precautions, some frost damage is inevitable, here in Canada we see
it all the time, despite a lot of fancy engineering to prevent it.

"Steve B" wrote in message
news:PITFf.24988$JT.5530@fed1read06...
I went to my cabin over the weekend to check on things. It is at 7500',

and
it had about a foot of snow around it. Everything was fine, save that we
had to walk through the snow for the last 1/8 mile.

I am anxious for spring to begin some repairs and some new work.

My question is about concrete.

I have lived most of my life in the Southern Nevada desert. The biggest
problem we have had with problems is that it dries too fast.

I have noticed in that part of the country that the concrete varies

wildly.
Some of it looks great after years, and some of it is flaking off and the
aggregate showing. Some looks good, and some looks like crap.

Part of what I want to do involves some concrete works. Some steps, and
some flat work.

What's the secret to getting concrete that will last through freeze and

thaw
cycles? There is no real problem with frost heave in this part of the
country. Is it the mix, the sack content? The aggregate? The working of
the concrete? Is it best to buy delivered concrete, or will doing it
yourself be okay if you do it right?

Or do I just resign myself to the fact that as it ages, it peels off?

I like doing things once, and would like to do the best from the start so

it
lasts the longest.

Thanks in advance.

Steve