Bernied
Structural
- Jan 18, 2007
- 8
I have a warehouse with a 6" concrete slab on 12" compacted gravel. Control joints were made within 12 hours at approximately 15'-0" x 20'-0" panels. (No vapor barrier was necessary.)
The slab is reinforced with Fiber mesh and it was poured with the building fully enclosed using chutes (no pumping). Construction joints divided the slab into about 10,000 sq. ft. pours. The slab was wet cured for seven days.
Considerable curling has occurred (upward at the edges). Enough to snap an electric feed line driving rack off-loaders and resulting in consideration of making expensive repairs (drilling holes around the panel edges and pressure grouting).
Does anyone have: a) suggestions why this may have occurred, b) any other ideas on "fixes" and c) is there any ACI or other specification with allowable/acceptable tolerances for slab curling?
The slab is reinforced with Fiber mesh and it was poured with the building fully enclosed using chutes (no pumping). Construction joints divided the slab into about 10,000 sq. ft. pours. The slab was wet cured for seven days.
Considerable curling has occurred (upward at the edges). Enough to snap an electric feed line driving rack off-loaders and resulting in consideration of making expensive repairs (drilling holes around the panel edges and pressure grouting).
Does anyone have: a) suggestions why this may have occurred, b) any other ideas on "fixes" and c) is there any ACI or other specification with allowable/acceptable tolerances for slab curling?