ATSE
Structural
- May 14, 2009
- 594
During the concrete pour for a wastewater lift station and emergency basin, the concrete pump had a mechanical failure
about the time 1 cubic yard of concrete was placed.
3 hours passed by. All the ready mix trucks were sent away.
Then a new concrete pump showed up, and a new ready mix truck, and they started work again. Pouring over and vibrating thru the semi-plastic concrete from 3-hours earlier.
Before the "new" work began, I advised the contractor to abort the pour, and remove the concrete before proceeding by removing a lower form panel. He said he was taking the risk (not sure what that means in this circumstance).
The structure is a big underground box, with 28 inch thick x 30 ft tall walls. With waterstops at CJs.
Mix design is standard for wastewater: 5,000 psi, 20% fly ash, with air entrainment and plasticizing admixtures (but no retarder). w/cm = 0.40.
Structure will be water-tested.
From the structural engineer's perspective, anything meaningful to do now, after-the fact? Besides visually inspecting the walls after the forms come off, not sure how to confirm the structural integrity (especially shear strength and bond strength for rebar development).
about the time 1 cubic yard of concrete was placed.
3 hours passed by. All the ready mix trucks were sent away.
Then a new concrete pump showed up, and a new ready mix truck, and they started work again. Pouring over and vibrating thru the semi-plastic concrete from 3-hours earlier.
Before the "new" work began, I advised the contractor to abort the pour, and remove the concrete before proceeding by removing a lower form panel. He said he was taking the risk (not sure what that means in this circumstance).
The structure is a big underground box, with 28 inch thick x 30 ft tall walls. With waterstops at CJs.
Mix design is standard for wastewater: 5,000 psi, 20% fly ash, with air entrainment and plasticizing admixtures (but no retarder). w/cm = 0.40.
Structure will be water-tested.
From the structural engineer's perspective, anything meaningful to do now, after-the fact? Besides visually inspecting the walls after the forms come off, not sure how to confirm the structural integrity (especially shear strength and bond strength for rebar development).