Concrete Mix Design for Floors, Footings and such
Cement 188 lb. Two sacks of standard Type I or II or I-II Portland cement. This is what the lumber yard will carry. It is not mortar mix. Water about 80 lb. (10 gallons.) Water must be clean (potable). This will vary from job to job and must be adjusted. The water in the aggregate will cause a difference in the amount of water needed. Adjust to a proper slump. 2" to 6" as needed. Concrete Sand 690 lb. (Ten, 5 gallon buckets is a good approximate measure). Pea rock 140 lb. (Two, 5 gallon buckets.) The amount of pea rock is adjusted per gradation of the sand. If the sand is high in larger aggregate the pea rock may be left out. If it is low, then more may be needed. This is a place to start for maximum strength. The total of the sand and pea rock should equal the 830 pounds (twelve, 5 gallon buckets). Larger 3/4” rock may be used in place of the pea rock. Kel-Crete use 2 oz. minimum per batch. Try up to four ounces per batch. Adjust between for best results. We normally use 2.5 ounces. Add the Kel-Crete additive in with the water for easier dispersion. If the Kel-Crete is not added, another type may be substituted. The Kel-Crete adds lots of features including “air entrainment”. Air entrainment is very important where the finished concrete is subject to severe freeze and thaw cycles. Kel-Crete is a highly concentrated liquid magic:
Nylon Fibers use 1/3 lb. per batch. These fibers are made of single strand (monofilament) fibers that easily mix into the matrix with minimum clumping. A single pound contains millions of fiber —13 times more than fiberglass or polypropylene. Shrinkage and crack control tests show fibers to be a superior product. Fibers are optional; some swear by them others swear at them. You try, you choose. When to use WhatObviously, if the job uses thousands of yards of concrete, a ready mix plant is the only way to go. But for the small jobs, we suggest you consider mixing on site. Mixing on site with small mixers must be well organized. The mixers can be a skid-loader mixing unit, or a plaster mixer, or small line concrete mixer. The biggest advantage of on site mixing is the ability to control speed and delivery. There is nothing worse than waiting hours for the ready mix truck for a yard or two of concrete. Related Links:
|
|||
|
|
|||