spats..
Read the OP's original post. He simply asked whether the bond breaker could be used. I took his scenario about raining as a hypothetical situation against which he was guarding by prohibiting the use of this bond breaker. It never occurred to me that anyone on this thread could seriously consider that a subcontractor would respray without removing the steel. Again, if the subcontractor knows what he is doing he absolutely knows that this is simply not OK.
But as to you being dumbfounded at my suggestion that at some point you have to trust that your subs know what they are doing.. why is this such an outlandish suggestion? Do you seriously micromanage every decision made by subs? That is precisely why you specify what inspections are required and you require an independent inspector. The subs are free to use means and methods they see fit and which, in theory at least, have worked successfully in the past. Provided they pass the inspections and your requirements, why would you micromanage. I'm assuming, of course, that part of your requirement is that all rebar be free of materials deleterious to bond.. or other such verbiage. If you have this in your inspection requirements, as most engineers do, then how do you think they will be able to justify spraying with the cage in place?
We work with a lot of tilt wall. I've never once had a contractor request spraying after the cage is in place. That's not to suggest it can't happen, but in the many tilt wall jobs I've worked on, it hasn't happened once.
I'd appreciate it if you were be a bit more judicious when throwing around words like "shortcuts". I explicitly stated that an inspector should be vigilant about compliance and spotting shortcuts. How do you take what I wrote and then literally suggest I'm advocating the contrary?