Another concrete finishing question.
Trying to pour a level and flat concrete, I found puddle of water form in
the middle of the slap. I'm off about 1/16" to 1/8" when screening with a 2 x 4 lumber, hence the puddle of water. Any trick to finish the surface perfectly flat, level without slope and without pooling of water? |
Another concrete finishing question.
On May 8, 4:27 pm, "** Frank **" wrote:
Trying to pour a level and flat concrete, I found puddle of water form in the middle of the slap. I'm off about 1/16" to 1/8" when screening with a 2 x 4 lumber, hence the puddle of water. Any trick to finish the surface perfectly flat, level without slope and without pooling of water? Have to have forms perfect to start with including solid enough to stay in position during the pour and while screeding/finishing. A 2x4 would be unlikely to be straight within 1/8" over it's length unless you made it so. Normally, one would like just a little bit of crown or slope so water will run off if it's outside slab. Flat within 1/8" over any significant distance is going to take some serious equipment -- like professional screed if it's more than just a couple of feet in width. |
Another concrete finishing question.
"dpb" wrote in message oups.com... On May 8, 4:27 pm, "** Frank **" wrote: Trying to pour a level and flat concrete, I found puddle of water form in the middle of the slap. I'm off about 1/16" to 1/8" when screening with a 2 x 4 lumber, hence the puddle of water. Any trick to finish the surface perfectly flat, level without slope and without pooling of water? Have to have forms perfect to start with including solid enough to stay in position during the pour and while screeding/finishing. A 2x4 would be unlikely to be straight within 1/8" over it's length unless you made it so. Normally, one would like just a little bit of crown or slope so water will run off if it's outside slab. Flat within 1/8" over any significant distance is going to take some serious equipment -- like professional screed if it's more than just a couple of feet in width. One thing to consider is that water will puddle through surface tension as well - it doesn't necessarily mean you have a significant depression. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:58 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter