Canuck67
Structural
- Jan 3, 2014
- 95
I am looking at the design of a concrete slab-on-grade that is approximately 40'x40' in plan dimension. The final finish is specified by the architect to be polished concrete, therefore final appearance, cracking, etc... must be controlled as much as possible. In order for the control joints to be successful, the mesh must either be cut at time of sawcutting, or placed in such a manner that it is not continuous across the control joint locations.
The difficulty comes from the embedded plastic hydronic piping for the infloor heating. In my opinion, the hydronic piping must also be laid in a pattern to avoid crossing the control joint locations. Can anyone confirm whether this makes sense? I am of the opinion that even the tensile capacity of hydronic piping crossing a sawcut location may negate any 'weakness' induced at the sawcuts allowing cracks to possibly form elsewhere. (Not to mention the risk of cutting into the hydronic piping if depth is not controlled precisely!).
The difficulty comes from the embedded plastic hydronic piping for the infloor heating. In my opinion, the hydronic piping must also be laid in a pattern to avoid crossing the control joint locations. Can anyone confirm whether this makes sense? I am of the opinion that even the tensile capacity of hydronic piping crossing a sawcut location may negate any 'weakness' induced at the sawcuts allowing cracks to possibly form elsewhere. (Not to mention the risk of cutting into the hydronic piping if depth is not controlled precisely!).