ajcannon
Structural
- Sep 20, 2009
- 4
Recently designed some replacement exterior concrete stairs for a client. We did not use "nose-bars" as they were a reason for the failure of the existing stairs (corrosion/spalling due to inadequate cover and salt applications for snow-melting). I used plenty of temp-shrinkage reinf in a mat of bars that was down in the slab...but now we are getting cracks in the treads themselves (out by where the nose bars would have been). The cracks seem to narrow down at the bottom of each riser (where the concrete gets close to the reinforcement). We had spec'd a low w/c ratio (.42 max)...and the concrete break ended up coming back as 6000psi on most of the stairs...but one stair only made it to 3800 at the 28-day break (specified 5000psi min). In that one there is a large noticable shrinkage crack. The other ones that hit the 6000psi...some of them have very small visible cracks but not nearly as noticeable as in the 3800psi stair.
Two questions: (1)Should we have the 3800psi stair be re-done since it is out of spec? (2) If we did not have them re-done is there anything else we could do to prevent freeze-thaw damage in the small cracks? (3) Is there an inexpensive coating that we shoudl be putting over the stairs that would conceal and protect the small shrinkage cracks that on;y occur at the treads?
Other supporting info...we used corrosion inhibitor add mixture and epoxy coated rebar in the stairs. Thanks in advance.
Two questions: (1)Should we have the 3800psi stair be re-done since it is out of spec? (2) If we did not have them re-done is there anything else we could do to prevent freeze-thaw damage in the small cracks? (3) Is there an inexpensive coating that we shoudl be putting over the stairs that would conceal and protect the small shrinkage cracks that on;y occur at the treads?
Other supporting info...we used corrosion inhibitor add mixture and epoxy coated rebar in the stairs. Thanks in advance.