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#1
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My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He
has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie |
#2
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On May 17, 6:53*pm, JIMMIE wrote:
My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie I would not use them because as they corrode they will at first get bigger (Think about the flakes that come off your drums & rotors). Then as they corrode further you could be left with a substantial void. If you don't want to take the junk to the scrapyard yourself then call the junk guy. Look in either Craigslist or your local paper usually in the cars for sale section. Cinder blocks are cheap and sometimes free, again try craigslist. |
#3
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On May 17, 6:53*pm, JIMMIE wrote:
My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. One reason is that you'd be ****ing away money. Call up a scrap dealer and ask what they pay for scrap iron, he's probably got a few bucks on the hoof there. Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. When it rusts it expands. This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Use rocks, brick, or other busted up concrete if you need some filler. R |
#4
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On Sun, 17 May 2009 15:53:11 -0700 (PDT), JIMMIE
wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie I don't think I would use what you have, someone would likely be happy to take them off your hands for the scrap value. On the other hand, I can remember my father using some old bed springs to re-enforce the front porch of our home about 60 years ago. It looks like that slab is still there in one piece. |
#5
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In article , Limp Arbor wrote:
On May 17, 6:53=A0pm, JIMMIE wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie I would not use them because as they corrode they will at first get bigger (Think about the flakes that come off your drums & rotors). Then as they corrode further you could be left with a substantial void. How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? |
#6
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In article , RicodJour wrote:
On May 17, 6:53=A0pm, JIMMIE wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. One reason is that you'd be ****ing away money. Call up a scrap dealer and ask what they pay for scrap iron, he's probably got a few bucks on the hoof there. Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. When it rusts it expands. This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar? |
#7
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Doug Miller wrote:
In article , Limp Arbor wrote: On May 17, 6:53=A0pm, JIMMIE wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie I would not use them because as they corrode they will at first get bigger (Think about the flakes that come off your drums & rotors). Then as they corrode further you could be left with a substantial void. How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? Big problem in Florida - lots of buildings with balconies have had to rework the concrete. Rebar rusted, expanded and cracked the concrete. Some problems with the issue in our condo, but nothing structural. Building down the street, about 12 storey, had a great deal of work done for the problem. |
#8
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On Sun, 17 May 2009 16:26:08 -0700 (PDT), RicodJour
wrote: Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. When it rusts it expands. This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. Who likes tension? I don't like tension! For gosh sakes shut up about the tension or I'll.... In other words it would tend to break up the steps. This is MM's sister. MM has been taken to the hospital and won't be available for posting until the court-ordered psychiatrist has examined him and filed his report. |
#9
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On Sun, 17 May 2009 20:33:40 -0400, "
wrote: Big problem in Florida - lots of buildings with balconies have had to rework the concrete. Rebar rusted, expanded and cracked the concrete. Haven't they been using rebar for 50 or 100 years? Did something change so that it rusts now? Some problems with the issue in our condo, but nothing structural. Building down the street, about 12 storey, had a great deal of work done for the problem. |
#10
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On May 17, 8:43*pm, mm wrote:
On Sun, 17 May 2009 20:33:40 -0400, " wrote: Big problem in Florida - lots of buildings with balconies have had to rework the concrete. *Rebar rusted, expanded and cracked the concrete. Haven't they been using rebar for 50 or 100 years? *Did something change so that it rusts now? No, you've been sleeping or in a coma. It's always rusted. R |
#11
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On May 17, 8:01*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote:
In article , RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 6:53=A0pm, JIMMIE wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. One reason is that you'd be ****ing away money. *Call up a scrap dealer and ask what they pay for scrap iron, he's probably got a few bucks on the hoof there. Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. *When it rusts it expands. *This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. *In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar? Hey, Sparky, if it doesn't take too much time away from you being snarky, why don't you Google "code concrete rebar coverage"? You'll learn something. R |
#12
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If he wants to get rid of the metal, just put it out by the curb on a
non-trash-pickup day and people driving by will pick it up as scrap metal to sell to a recycle yard. "JIMMIE" wrote in message ... My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie |
#13
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On May 17, 8:00*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote:
How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. Concrete is not waterproof. It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. Please, DAG. There's a hole in your education. R |
#14
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Doug Miller wrote:
In article , RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 6:53=A0pm, JIMMIE wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. One reason is that you'd be ****ing away money. Call up a scrap dealer and ask what they pay for scrap iron, he's probably got a few bucks on the hoof there. Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. When it rusts it expands. This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar? Uh Huh. And I see plenty of bridge pillars around here (in salt country) where the rebar has rusted, expanded in diameter, and whole sections of surface concrete have spalled off, exposing the rebar grid. That is why they have switched to epoxy-coated rebar for road work in this part of country. Bulk iron buried deeply in the center fill of a porch stoop is less likely to cause problems, but, but it offers no advantages over a proper tied-and-blocked rebar armature to pour around. I'd haul it to scrap dealer (if convenient), or offer it on craigslist or freecycle, if I didn't feel like hauling it. -- aem sends... |
#15
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![]() "JIMMIE" wrote in message ... My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie Tell him not to throw parts under the trailer to begin with. Scrap metal is worth at least a 12 pack, that should get him moving. |
#16
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![]() "JIMMIE" wrote in message ... My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie There are worth a lot more at the recycle center. |
#17
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mm wrote:
On Sun, 17 May 2009 20:33:40 -0400, " wrote: Big problem in Florida - lots of buildings with balconies have had to rework the concrete. Rebar rusted, expanded and cracked the concrete. Haven't they been using rebar for 50 or 100 years? Did something change so that it rusts now? Perhaps the problem in Florida is with buildings not kept adequately painted, so there is more salt intrusion. Don't know the reasons. Some problems with the issue in our condo, but nothing structural. Building down the street, about 12 storey, had a great deal of work done for the problem. |
#18
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In article , RicodJour wrote:
On May 17, 8:00=A0pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. Concrete is not waterproof. It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. I guess all those engineers who've been building things with steel-reinforced concrete for all these years must be completely ignorant, huh? |
#19
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New Obama law, maybe. The Rusting of Rebar Act of 2009.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "mm" wrote in message ... On Sun, 17 May 2009 20:33:40 -0400, " wrote: Big problem in Florida - lots of buildings with balconies have had to rework the concrete. Rebar rusted, expanded and cracked the concrete. Haven't they been using rebar for 50 or 100 years? Did something change so that it rusts now? |
#20
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On May 18, 7:57*am, (Doug Miller) wrote:
RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 8:00=A0pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. *Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. *If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. *Concrete is not waterproof. *It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. *Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. *Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. *Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. I guess all those engineers who've been building things with steel-reinforced concrete for all these years must be completely ignorant, huh? From the results, some of them obviously were. Your stance is that you can throw steel into a concrete pour and it doesn't do anything because, hell, rebar is steel. That's like saying that you can pour gas anywhere into a car since a car runs on gas. You know, nonsense. Like I said, if you want to learn, Google the subject. I'll give you a head start. This is from Wiki on reinforced concrete: "Common failure modes of steel reinforced concrete Reinforced concrete can fail due to inadequate strength, leading to mechanical failure, or due to a reduction in its durability. Corrosion and freeze/thaw cycles may damage poorly designed or constructed reinforced concrete. When rebar corrodes, the oxidation products (rust) expand and tends to flake, cracking the concrete and unbonding the rebar from the concrete." And this is from the Canadian Research Council: "PREVENTING REBAR CORROSION IN CONCRETE STRUCTURES by Shiyuan Qian This article reviews the issue of rebar corrosion, discusses some of the preventive technologies available, and presents information on recent studies conducted by NRC’s Institute for Research in Construction. The corrosion of reinforcing steel bars is one of the main causes of deterioration of reinforced concrete structures in North America. It has become a serious, widespread problem, with repair costs now in the billions of dollars annually. Whether the corroding rebars are seen exposed on delaminated bridge decks or piers, or observed in damaged parking garages, engineers and contractors are all too familiar with the problem, as are anxious property owners who call on them to provide solutions." It's either odd that; 1). these guys are in collusion and making this stuff up or 2). you've never noticed it. My bet is on the second. The main reason that the OP shouldn't throw the scrap iron in the steps is because it is wasting money. The second reason is that the random steel "reinforcing" will eventually cause problems. I'm taking the liberty of cross posting this to some other groups with more knowledge on construction than this one. Let's see who weighs in and which way the verdict goes. R |
#21
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On May 18, 10:20*am, RicodJour wrote:
On May 18, 7:57*am, (Doug Miller) wrote: RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 8:00=A0pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. *Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. *If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. *Concrete is not waterproof. *It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. *Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. *Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. *Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. I guess all those engineers who've been building things with steel-reinforced concrete for all these years must be completely ignorant, huh? From the results, some of them obviously were. Your stance is that you can throw steel into a concrete pour and it doesn't do anything because, hell, rebar is steel. *That's like saying that you can pour gas anywhere into a car since a car runs on gas. You know, nonsense. Like I said, if you want to learn, Google the subject. *I'll give you a head start. *This is from Wiki on reinforced concrete: "Common failure modes of steel reinforced concrete Reinforced concrete can fail due to inadequate strength, leading to mechanical failure, or due to a reduction in its durability. Corrosion and freeze/thaw cycles may damage poorly designed or constructed reinforced concrete. When rebar corrodes, the oxidation products (rust) expand and tends to flake, cracking the concrete and unbonding the rebar from the concrete." And this is from the Canadian Research Council: "PREVENTING REBAR CORROSION IN CONCRETE STRUCTURES by Shiyuan Qian This article reviews the issue of rebar corrosion, discusses some of the preventive technologies available, and presents information on recent studies conducted by NRC’s Institute for Research in Construction. The corrosion of reinforcing steel bars is one of the main causes of deterioration of reinforced concrete structures in North America. *It has become a serious, widespread problem, with repair costs now in the billions of dollars annually. *Whether the corroding rebars are seen exposed on delaminated bridge decks or piers, or observed in damaged parking garages, engineers and contractors are all too familiar with the problem, as are anxious property owners who call on them to provide solutions." It's either odd that; 1). these guys are in collusion and making this stuff up or 2). you've never noticed it. My bet is on the second. The main reason that the OP shouldn't throw the scrap iron in the steps is because it is wasting money. *The second reason is that the random steel "reinforcing" will eventually cause problems. I'm taking the liberty of cross posting this to some other groups with more knowledge on construction than this one. *Let's see who weighs in and which way the verdict goes. R RicodJour, You do realize you're wasting your time, don't you? |
#22
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On May 18, 7:20*am, RicodJour wrote:
On May 18, 7:57*am, (Doug Miller) wrote: RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 8:00=A0pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. *Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. *If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. *Concrete is not waterproof. *It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. *Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. *Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. *Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. I guess all those engineers who've been building things with steel-reinforced concrete for all these years must be completely ignorant, huh? From the results, some of them obviously were. Your stance is that you can throw steel into a concrete pour and it doesn't do anything because, hell, rebar is steel. *That's like saying that you can pour gas anywhere into a car since a car runs on gas. You know, nonsense. Like I said, if you want to learn, Google the subject. *I'll give you a head start. *This is from Wiki on reinforced concrete: "Common failure modes of steel reinforced concrete Reinforced concrete can fail due to inadequate strength, leading to mechanical failure, or due to a reduction in its durability. Corrosion and freeze/thaw cycles may damage poorly designed or constructed reinforced concrete. When rebar corrodes, the oxidation products (rust) expand and tends to flake, cracking the concrete and unbonding the rebar from the concrete." And this is from the Canadian Research Council: "PREVENTING REBAR CORROSION IN CONCRETE STRUCTURES by Shiyuan Qian This article reviews the issue of rebar corrosion, discusses some of the preventive technologies available, and presents information on recent studies conducted by NRC’s Institute for Research in Construction. The corrosion of reinforcing steel bars is one of the main causes of deterioration of reinforced concrete structures in North America. *It has become a serious, widespread problem, with repair costs now in the billions of dollars annually. *Whether the corroding rebars are seen exposed on delaminated bridge decks or piers, or observed in damaged parking garages, engineers and contractors are all too familiar with the problem, as are anxious property owners who call on them to provide solutions." It's either odd that; 1). these guys are in collusion and making this stuff up or 2). you've never noticed it. My bet is on the second. The main reason that the OP shouldn't throw the scrap iron in the steps is because it is wasting money. *The second reason is that the random steel "reinforcing" will eventually cause problems. I'm taking the liberty of cross posting this to some other groups with more knowledge on construction than this one. *Let's see who weighs in and which way the verdict goes. R From what I've seen (& read) working in the civil structural field for since 1988, the major cause of reinforced concrete failure is inadequate coverage. Followed by poor quality concrete. Depending on the "exposure" & environmental conditions, as little as 2" of coverage is spec'd, harsher conditons 3"+ or more. Epoxy coated rebar is a "new, hot" thing but I'm not convinced that it is "the" solution. Epoxy coating can get damaged during placement, leaving bare steel. ![]() I'll put my money on extra cover and good concrete, designed for the local conditions. Rebar that is fully encased in sound concrete with adequate coverage will last a LONG time. Too little coverage or poor quality concrete will allow the rebar to begin to rust....the rusting rebar will "disassemble" the rest; quickly at first as it attacks the surface rebar but much more slowly as it progresses to the deeper rebar. The Huntington Beach, Ca pier (the original one....ca1900) needed to be replaced due to impending structural failure. One of the engineers on the project (evaluation of the old pier) told me that IF the coverage had been adequate, the peir could have been repair and served another 50 years or more. But due to poor coverage the pier had to be demo'd and replaced. cheers Bob |
#23
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Doug Miller wrote:
In article , RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 8:00=A0pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. Concrete is not waterproof. It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. I guess all those engineers who've been building things with steel-reinforced concrete for all these years must be completely ignorant, huh? I think it is a matter of construction and maintenance, not engineering. On our condo, there have been several areas where rust caused bursting of the concrete. Perhaps rebar was too close to the surface, or cracks in stucco not patched and painted, allowing moisture and salt intrusion. Another place was a concrete sill by a patio slider. We also have iron railings on our balconies and atrium deck which are embedded in structural concrete. They are the same railings used inside condo units - the anchor is embedded and then the railings bolt onto the achors. The exterior ones rusted badly years ago, to the extent that some rusted through and the attachment was no longer identifiable. Along the atrium deck (second story), several places where the anchors protrude busted out the concrete. After grinding out the rust and patching and painting, they hold for several years without further bursting of the concrete. Enough anchors intact that nothing is loose. Several years ago, it was a pretty big issue for condominium management companies - can probably google up more info if you are interested. Perhaps it isn't an issue at all if not near salt water. |
#24
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In article , RicodJour wrote:
On May 18, 7:57=A0am, (Doug Miller) wrote: RicodJour wrote: On May 17, 8:00=3DA0pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete? It really surprises me that you have such problems understanding this. =A0Your personal observation of those funky brown stains on concrete structures everywhere should indicate that something is rusting. =A0If you can't see what's rusting, and are keen enough to realize that rust doesn't just magically appear on concrete, you'll probably latch on that the rust is coming from inside the concrete. In a nutshell. =A0Concrete is not waterproof. =A0It wicks up moisture. The steel doesn't care that it is encased in concrete and will rust in the presence of the H2O. =A0Concrete sucks in tension - something on the order of 1/10 its strength in compression. =A0Constant tension on concrete leads to cracking. =A0Cracking allows in more moisture, and the cycle continues until the structure falls apart. I guess all those engineers who've been building things with steel-reinfo= rced concrete for all these years must be completely ignorant, huh? From the results, some of them obviously were. Your stance is that you can throw steel into a concrete pour and it doesn't do anything because, hell, rebar is steel. That's like saying that you can pour gas anywhere into a car since a car runs on gas. You know, nonsense. Like I said, if you want to learn, Google the subject. I'll give you a head start. This is from Wiki on reinforced concrete: "Common failure modes of steel reinforced concrete Reinforced concrete can fail due to inadequate strength, leading to mechanical failure, or due to a reduction in its durability. Corrosion and freeze/thaw cycles may damage poorly designed or constructed reinforced concrete. When rebar corrodes, the oxidation products (rust) expand and tends to flake, cracking the concrete and unbonding the rebar from the concrete." And this is from the Canadian Research Council: "PREVENTING REBAR CORROSION IN CONCRETE STRUCTURES by Shiyuan Qian This article reviews the issue of rebar corrosion, discusses some of the preventive technologies available, and presents information on recent studies conducted by NRC=92s Institute for Research in Construction. The corrosion of reinforcing steel bars is one of the main causes of deterioration of reinforced concrete structures in North America. It has become a serious, widespread problem, with repair costs now in the billions of dollars annually. Whether the corroding rebars are seen exposed on delaminated bridge decks or piers, or observed in damaged parking garages, engineers and contractors are all too familiar with the problem, as are anxious property owners who call on them to provide solutions." It's either odd that; 1). these guys are in collusion and making this stuff up or 2). you've never noticed it. My bet is on the second. I never said that corroding rebar in concrete couldn't cause a problem -- I'm simply taking issue with your stand that putting steel into concrete *automatically* poses a corrosion problem that will necessarily destroy the concrete. |
#25
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On May 18, 3:00*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote:
I never said that corroding rebar in concrete couldn't cause a problem -- I'm simply taking issue with your stand that putting steel into concrete *automatically* poses a corrosion problem that will necessarily destroy the concrete. This is what I wrote in my first response to the OP: "Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. When it rusts it expands. This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Use rocks, brick, or other busted up concrete if you need some filler. " I used the words tendency, would, tend to - there is nothing there that says in all occasions all steel rusts. I also put the rusting issue in second place in my short list of reasons. You made a massive assumption that I was somehow referring to all situations and you got snarky about it. Your two comments; "How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete?" and "Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar?" imply that you equated an engine block dumped in a hole in the ground, with engineered and correctly installed reinforced concrete. I took exception to that. I appreciate that you think the OP - a guy who wants to toss a considerable quantity of scrap iron into a set of steps as filler - as being so clued in to the correct amount of concrete coverage, and would know how to suspend an engine block to insure that amount of coverage. I have no such illusions. R |
#26
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On May 18, 4:31�pm, RicodJour wrote:
On May 18, 3:00�pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: I never said that corroding rebar in concrete couldn't cause a problem -- I'm simply taking issue with your stand that putting steel into concrete *automatically* poses a corrosion problem that will necessarily destroy the concrete. This is what I wrote in my first response to the OP: "Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. �When it rusts it expands. �This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. �In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Use rocks, brick, or other busted up concrete if you need some filler. " I used the words tendency, would, tend to - there is nothing there that says in all occasions all steel rusts. �I also put the rusting issue in second place in my short list of reasons. �You made a massive assumption that I was somehow referring to all situations and you got snarky about it. Your two comments; "How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete?" and "Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar?" imply that you equated an engine block dumped in a hole in the ground, with engineered and correctly installed reinforced concrete. �I took exception to that. I appreciate that you think the OP - a guy who wants to toss a considerable quantity of scrap iron into a set of steps as filler - as being so clued in to the correct amount of concrete coverage, and would know how to suspend an engine block to insure that amount of coverage. �I have no such illusions. R ideally all rebar should be non magnetic stainless, which never rusts......... |
#27
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On Mon, 18 May 2009 13:57:23 -0700 (PDT), bob haller
wrote: ideally all rebar should be non magnetic stainless, which never rusts......... Ideally all people should understand the various properties of 'stainless steel'... g Stainless rusts just fine when *not* exposed to air! |
#28
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On May 18, 4:31*pm, RicodJour wrote:
On May 18, 3:00*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: I never said that corroding rebar in concrete couldn't cause a problem -- I'm simply taking issue with your stand that putting steel into concrete *automatically* poses a corrosion problem that will necessarily destroy the concrete. This is what I wrote in my first response to the OP: "Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. *When it rusts it expands. *This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. *In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Use rocks, brick, or other busted up concrete if you need some filler. " I used the words tendency, would, tend to - there is nothing there that says in all occasions all steel rusts. *I also put the rusting issue in second place in my short list of reasons. *You made a massive assumption that I was somehow referring to all situations and you got snarky about it. Your two comments; "How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete?" and "Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar?" imply that you equated an engine block dumped in a hole in the ground, with engineered and correctly installed reinforced concrete. *I took exception to that. I appreciate that you think the OP - a guy who wants to toss a considerable quantity of scrap iron into a set of steps as filler - as being so clued in to the correct amount of concrete coverage, and would know how to suspend an engine block to insure that amount of coverage. *I have no such illusions. R So, Mister Smartypants, if all concrete deteriorates if there are voids in it where water can get, then where is Jimmy Hoffa and why hasn't the concrete around him deteriorated yet? See !! There's a major flaw in your theory. |
#29
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On May 18, 7:18�pm, PeterD wrote:
On Mon, 18 May 2009 13:57:23 -0700 (PDT), bob haller wrote: ideally all rebar should be non magnetic stainless, which never rusts......... Ideally all people should understand the various properties of 'stainless steel'... g Stainless rusts just fine when *not* exposed to air! I would like a link to that! I was told non magnetic stainless doesnt rust. What makes this problem worse in florida was the use of beach sand containg salt. this info courtesy of this old house episode ![]() |
#30
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On Tue, 19 May 2009 04:40:05 -0700 (PDT), bob haller
wrote: On May 18, 7:18?pm, PeterD wrote: On Mon, 18 May 2009 13:57:23 -0700 (PDT), bob haller wrote: ideally all rebar should be non magnetic stainless, which never rusts......... Ideally all people should understand the various properties of 'stainless steel'... g Stainless rusts just fine when *not* exposed to air! I would like a link to that! I was told non magnetic stainless doesnt rust. I'll see what I can dig up. This is 'common knowledge' among boat builders, but not others. Problem being that the stainless looks really good on the exposed surfaces, then when you try to remove it, you find a 'ton' of rust on the burried parts. You could also try searching various marine sites too, I'm sure you will find it. FWIW, I didn't believe it when I was told first about the problem, then managed to see it as I did work on boats. What makes this problem worse in florida was the use of beach sand containg salt. I think the entire state of Florida contains salt! g WHere in Florida are you, I'm frequnently in Tampa, and when to high school in NPR. this info courtesy of this old house episode ![]() |
#31
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On Mon, 18 May 2009 19:26:12 -0700 (PDT), Pat
wrote: On May 18, 4:31*pm, RicodJour wrote: On May 18, 3:00*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: I never said that corroding rebar in concrete couldn't cause a problem -- I'm simply taking issue with your stand that putting steel into concrete *automatically* poses a corrosion problem that will necessarily destroy the concrete. This is what I wrote in my first response to the OP: "Another reason is that iron has a tendency to rust. *When it rusts it expands. *This would put the concrete in tension and concrete really doesn't like to be put in tension. *In other words it would tend to break up the steps. Use rocks, brick, or other busted up concrete if you need some filler. " I used the words tendency, would, tend to - there is nothing there that says in all occasions all steel rusts. *I also put the rusting issue in second place in my short list of reasons. *You made a massive assumption that I was somehow referring to all situations and you got snarky about it. Your two comments; "How are they going to get bigger while they're encased in concrete?" and "Oh, for heaven's sake. Haven't you ever heard of rebar?" imply that you equated an engine block dumped in a hole in the ground, with engineered and correctly installed reinforced concrete. *I took exception to that. I appreciate that you think the OP - a guy who wants to toss a considerable quantity of scrap iron into a set of steps as filler - as being so clued in to the correct amount of concrete coverage, and would know how to suspend an engine block to insure that amount of coverage. *I have no such illusions. R So, Mister Smartypants, if all concrete deteriorates if there are voids in it where water can get, then where is Jimmy Hoffa and why hasn't the concrete around him deteriorated yet? See !! There's a major flaw in your theory. No friggin' way. That simply means that virtually any cement highway in NY, NJ, or MI is suspect! They are all full of holes! (I remember reading a few months ago about the city of NY digging up a location and finding a bunch of bodies: a mafia graveyard, apparently, with little hope of ever identifying those burried in the hole!) Regardless we all know Jimmy Hoffa is alive and well, living with Elvis in North Dakota. |
#32
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On May 19, 9:19*am, PeterD wrote:
On Tue, 19 May 2009 04:40:05 -0700 (PDT), bob haller wrote: I would like a link to that! I was told non magnetic stainless doesnt rust. I'll see what I can dig up. This is 'common knowledge' among boat builders, but not others. Problem being that the stainless looks really good on the exposed surfaces, then when you try to remove it, you find a 'ton' of rust on the burried parts. You could also try searching various marine sites too, I'm sure you will find it. FWIW, I didn't believe it when I was told first about the problem, then managed to see it as I did work on boats. Oxygen is inseparable from oxidation (rusting). I think it's more likely that moisture was getting into those hidden areas and staying there longer. R |
#33
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In article
, JIMMIE wrote: My friend is building some new concrete steps to his back porch. He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron he wants to get rid of . If these items are clean of fluids is there any reason we couldnt use them as fill in the steps. Jimmie After reading 26 other replies, concerning the alleged value* of scrap metal and the problems of rusting rebar, I'd say the best thing to do would be to fashion the auto parts into steps by welding them together. Skip the concrete altogether. *(last i checked, scrap steel isn't worth the gas to drive it to the recycling center.) |
#34
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On May 19, 11:58*am, Smitty Two wrote:
After reading 26 other replies, concerning the alleged value* of scrap metal and the problems of rusting rebar, I'd say the best thing to do would be to fashion the auto parts into steps by welding them together. Skip the concrete altogether. I like it! *(last i checked, scrap steel isn't worth the gas to drive it to the recycling center.) Presently about 4 cents a pound around here. The OP wrote "He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron". How many is some? Not one, probably not two unless the guy chooses words at random, so three of more blocks, figure a couple hundred pounds per, brake drums don't float away... I'd hazard a wild-assed guess of between a quarter and half a ton. So maybe twenty or forty bucks. Around here they'll come get it - they pay less, but it's free rubbish removal. R |
#35
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On May 19, 9:35*am, RicodJour wrote:
On May 19, 9:19*am, PeterD wrote: On Tue, 19 May 2009 04:40:05 -0700 (PDT), bob haller wrote: I would like a link to that! I was told non magnetic stainless doesnt rust. I'll see what I can dig up. This is 'common knowledge' among boat builders, but not others. Problem being that the stainless looks really good on the exposed surfaces, then when you try to remove it, you find a 'ton' of rust on the burried parts. You could also try searching various marine sites too, I'm sure you will find it. FWIW, I didn't believe it when I was told first about the problem, then managed to see it as I did work on boats. Oxygen is inseparable from oxidation (rusting). *I think it's more likely that moisture was getting into those hidden areas and staying there longer. R I don't know the science of it (or very much else for that matter), but I know that if you use a stainless steel bolt, you are NOT supposed to use a stainless steel nut or else the threaded area where they touch will corrode all to heck and you won't be able to get them apart. There is something, but I don't know what, about stainless to stainless and a lack of O2. |
#36
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On May 19, 2:06*pm, Pat wrote:
I don't know the science of it (or very much else for that matter), but I know that if you use a stainless steel bolt, you are NOT supposed to use a stainless steel nut or else the threaded area where they touch will corrode all to heck and you won't be able to get them apart. * There is something, but I don't know what, about stainless to stainless and a lack of O2. You can use stainless bolts and nuts, but there are good practices when doing so, just as everything else in life. http://www.estainlesssteel.com/gallingofstainless.html PeterD was saying the stainless rusts when there's no oxygen, and that's what I was addressing, that you addressed, that I just addressed. Okay, I'm going to go up on a ladder now, I'm getting dizzy down here. ![]() R |
#37
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On May 19, 12:47*pm, RicodJour wrote:
On May 19, 11:58*am, Smitty Two wrote: After reading 26 other replies, concerning the alleged value* of scrap metal and the problems of rusting rebar, I'd say the best thing to do would be to fashion the auto parts into steps by welding them together. Skip the concrete altogether. I like it! *(last i checked, scrap steel isn't worth the gas to drive it to the recycling center.) Presently about 4 cents a pound around here. *The OP wrote "He has some old chevy blocks , brake drums and general automotive iron". How many is some? *Not one, probably not two unless the guy chooses words at random, so three of more blocks, figure a couple hundred pounds per, brake drums don't float away... *I'd hazard a wild-assed guess of between a quarter and half a ton. *So maybe twenty or forty bucks. *Around here they'll come get it - they pay less, but it's free rubbish removal. R No one will come get it and its about a 20 mile drive one way to haul it off. It would probably take two trips, If we cant put it in the steps we are going to bury it. The junk came with the house. There is a welder, we may weld some of the stuff together so it will actually become part of the structure of the steps instead of just randomly placing them inside. Half ton sounds about right. Jimmie |
#38
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On May 19, 2:06*pm, Pat wrote:
On May 19, 9:35*am, RicodJour wrote: On May 19, 9:19*am, PeterD wrote: On Tue, 19 May 2009 04:40:05 -0700 (PDT), bob haller wrote: I would like a link to that! I was told non magnetic stainless doesnt rust. I'll see what I can dig up. This is 'common knowledge' among boat builders, but not others. Problem being that the stainless looks really good on the exposed surfaces, then when you try to remove it, you find a 'ton' of rust on the burried parts. You could also try searching various marine sites too, I'm sure you will find it. FWIW, I didn't believe it when I was told first about the problem, then managed to see it as I did work on boats. Oxygen is inseparable from oxidation (rusting). *I think it's more likely that moisture was getting into those hidden areas and staying there longer. R I don't know the science of it (or very much else for that matter), but I know that if you use a stainless steel bolt, you are NOT supposed to use a stainless steel nut or else the threaded area where they touch will corrode all to heck and you won't be able to get them apart. * There is something, but I don't know what, about stainless to stainless and a lack of O2.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Anti sieze compund |
#39
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On May 19, 3:09*pm, JIMMIE wrote:
On May 19, 12:47*pm, RicodJour wrote: On May 19, 11:58*am, Smitty Two wrote: After reading 26 other replies, concerning the alleged value* of scrap metal and the problems of rusting rebar, I'd say the best thing to do would be to fashion the auto parts into steps by welding them together. |
#40
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JIMMIE wrote:
No one will come get it and its about a 20 mile drive one way to haul it off. It would probably take two trips, If we cant put it in the steps we are going to bury it. The junk came with the house. There is a welder, we may weld some of the stuff together so it will actually become part of the structure of the steps instead of just randomly placing them inside. Half ton sounds about right. I have a few properties in various locations and whenever I want to get rid of scrap metal I just put it out by the curb. Someone always sees it, stops, and loads it into a pickup truck they are drivng that is full of other scrap metal. I never call anyone to ask them to come and pick it up. If it's a property on a reasonably busy street, it's usually gone within an hour or two. For the properties that are on side residential streets, it often takes longer, but never more than about 1/2-day to a day for someone to stop and take it. I put everything out there -- cast iron, sewer pipes, iron, steel, cast iron tubs, lead, and of course aluminim, copper, copper wire, etc. It doesn't matter what I put out there -- they always take it. I'd bet that if you tried putting it out there, it will get taken. You could try it with some of the smaller pieces first to see what happens. The good part is that it does get recycled and reused -- which I like. And, the poeple who pick it up get a few bucks for it -- that's why they stop -- and it's easy for them because they are not making a special trip. They just see it along the road, stop and throw it in their truck, and when the truck is full, they take it all to a recycle place. |
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