I have followed OG and his repeated quest that 'bone-dry substrate is best' for some time. As a guy who get lots of cement paste under my fingernails, along with direct hands-on experience with pre-bagged cementitious concrete and field-batched concrete, alike (mainly for concrete repairs and deck overlays), and somewhat uniquely, with bond testing of said products and procedures, my n=1 experience is: substrate to be ALWAYS SSD.
ACI's Concrete International magazine in 2018 had a recent article on this and related factors:
Effect of Common Surface Pretreatments on Shear Strength of Bonded Concrete Overlays by Andrew S. Pultorak and Frederick R. Rutz Article available here: ==>
Link
They looked at various substrate pretreatments:
With some informative results, that I highlighted:
OG's position is (was?) a common one, based upon research at the time by Felt from 1956:
CI said:
Felt investigated substrate moisture content and the use of bonding agents. He concluded that a “dry” substrate was preferable to a “damp” one and that a cement or cement-sand slurry bonding agent produced a superior bond.
However, the Bureau of Reclamation research disputed Felt's findings:
CI said:
However, some studies contradict Felt’s 1956 conclusions regarding moisture content of the substrate. Wall and Shrive found that some moisture in the substrate was beneficial to bond strength. In a report for the Bureau of Reclamation, Bissonnette et al. found that optimum moisture content in the
substrate surface lies somewhere between 55 and 90% of saturation, though they state that “…fundamental issues remain unsolved with regard to moisture conditioning of the concrete substrate…”.
Anyway, the article is a good read. Form you own opinion. I shall continue to do what I have been doing for decades - substrate is SSD.
And finally, as a contractor I hate epoxy-based bonding agents, so therefore as an engineer, I similarly hate them! Office-based engineers need to listen to their experienced field contractors when it comes to bonding agents, and don't always listen to the manufacturer's rep on the 'magic' they sell.