HeavyCivil
Structural
- Aug 5, 2009
- 184
I have a few years of field experience around concrete but never wearing the engineer / inspector hat. I understand the implications of water added to concrete on-site.
I calculate the amount of water that can be added to the mix based on the ticket and target or max w/c that we have specified. The problem is that many of the trucks I've been dealing with have broken meters or inaccurate ones due to pressure in the tank. The redimix company is well respected and very professional - not a cobb job outfit.
I cannot justifiably send a truck back because I don't know how much water was added, but I cant justifiably be comfortable with the mix either when all I have is the operator's word that he "added 10 gallons".
Any solutions to this?
I calculate the amount of water that can be added to the mix based on the ticket and target or max w/c that we have specified. The problem is that many of the trucks I've been dealing with have broken meters or inaccurate ones due to pressure in the tank. The redimix company is well respected and very professional - not a cobb job outfit.
I cannot justifiably send a truck back because I don't know how much water was added, but I cant justifiably be comfortable with the mix either when all I have is the operator's word that he "added 10 gallons".
Any solutions to this?