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Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
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"M.Paul" wrote:
-snip- For what it's worth, the patio will not be near the house and the area is excavated 8 inches under which the soil is hard as rock. Is it clay or something with good drainage? If it is clay, I would definitely use it. It wont prevent weeds, as they will seed from the top--- but it will keep the subsoil from mixing with your base rock. [i used #2 crushed stone- ymmv] I used it-- it was cheap in comparison to the whole job & easy to install & I couldn't think of any way it could harm the job. There will be 5" of compacted base rock, 1" of concrete sand, I used 5-6 inches of #2 stone as a base-- *power* tamped it-- then a couple inches of 'fines'. Next time I'll use mason's sand instead of the fines. The fines don't drain as well as sand -- and they discolored the stones for a couple months until all the really fine stuff soaked in. I'm also real happy I broke down and rented a power tamper at the last minute. I never would have done a decent job with a hand tamper. the pavers and joints will be sealed. Also, the ground does not freeze here. -snip- Without the ground freezing yours might be more forgiving of less tamping. -- But anyone in frost country should spend the money on a tamper. [$75 a day in this part of the world] Jim |
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