Obed
Elite Member
Chairs for the Wire
Using or not using chairs under the wire evoked quite a lot of comments in this post. I read the comments Friday regarding the chairs and I can see the advantages. So I called a general contractor friend that I trust who is an hour away and asked his opinion. He said he only uses wire chairs if an inspector requires them. He said that the chairs fall over and that they get in the way of the workers who will have trouble walking on the wire. He said you have to have trustworthy workers who are conscientious about pulling up the wire, chairs or no chairs.
Well, Friday evening I went to Lowes and Home Depot. Neither place sold chairs for wire. All the chairs were for supporting rebar and were too tall (3 1/2 to 4 inches). I later talked to our CM who said that putting chairs under the wire would just make the concrete crew mad when they showed up onsite. He was very much against using them even if I installed them myself. To be able to install the available rebar chairs under the wire, I'd have to jury rig the metal chairs used for pairs of rebair in footers and bend them over to be 2 inches high. Using wire chairs was quite an uphill battle so I ended up not using chairs. It appears that using chairs under wire in this area is rarely done.
Monday when the pouring started, the CM made a point to tell the concrete workers to pull up the wire. I observed that the workers were very conscientious about pulling up the wire. If you look closely at the pictures, you can see the workers pulling up the wire, either with their rakes or bending over and pulling with their hands. Was the work perfect? Probably not. Was the work good enough? I'm going to believe it was. Anyway, there's no use worrying about it further.
Using or not using chairs under the wire evoked quite a lot of comments in this post. I read the comments Friday regarding the chairs and I can see the advantages. So I called a general contractor friend that I trust who is an hour away and asked his opinion. He said he only uses wire chairs if an inspector requires them. He said that the chairs fall over and that they get in the way of the workers who will have trouble walking on the wire. He said you have to have trustworthy workers who are conscientious about pulling up the wire, chairs or no chairs.
Well, Friday evening I went to Lowes and Home Depot. Neither place sold chairs for wire. All the chairs were for supporting rebar and were too tall (3 1/2 to 4 inches). I later talked to our CM who said that putting chairs under the wire would just make the concrete crew mad when they showed up onsite. He was very much against using them even if I installed them myself. To be able to install the available rebar chairs under the wire, I'd have to jury rig the metal chairs used for pairs of rebair in footers and bend them over to be 2 inches high. Using wire chairs was quite an uphill battle so I ended up not using chairs. It appears that using chairs under wire in this area is rarely done.
Monday when the pouring started, the CM made a point to tell the concrete workers to pull up the wire. I observed that the workers were very conscientious about pulling up the wire. If you look closely at the pictures, you can see the workers pulling up the wire, either with their rakes or bending over and pulling with their hands. Was the work perfect? Probably not. Was the work good enough? I'm going to believe it was. Anyway, there's no use worrying about it further.