Tractor Seabee
Elite Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2011
- Messages
- 3,896
- Tractor
- Kubota BX25
Yeah, I know we can.....
Here is the deal, I am about to go out to bid for concrete for my new shop. Of all the subjects I know the least amount about in terms of construction it is concrete and Youtube, while OK, is not great...
So the particulars. Right now I am aiming to just concrete the floor of the shop, no pad (unless my wallet thickens in the interum). So 45X72 is the floor size. We are in Mild Temperature, so probably not going to do any radiant (still undecided on this) and not sure if I am putting insulation under. It was suggested by the County Permit office, but not required.
I have no plans of heavy machinery but I would like to maybe buy an auto lift one day. So my plan was a 4" floor, and an area 6 inches thick around the spot I would put a future lift.
As for the floor itself, I am mulling over a central drain. I am also mulling over an in floor vacuum system for the wood shop. I will have a bathroom with a shower, as well as a clothes washer and sink so there will need to be drains for that. I do plan on putting in floor electric in the wood shop so I can hook up a saw in the center of the room...
So what do I need to ask guys, I kinda understand PSI, I kinda understand re-bar, I kinda understand fibre.
I know there are a lot of opinions, so I guess I can't wait to hear them.
This is a subject near and dear to my heart. I have written specifications, inspected, and supervised concrete work over my past career. Asking such a question in this type forum will provide a lot of chaff and you probably are not sure how to separate out the kernels of wheat. I am sitting here looking at 4 professional manuals on concrete work I have used throughout my career. All are available on Amazon I believe. For you I recommend "The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction" by the American Society of Concrete Contractors. Another good manual is "Concrete Floors on Ground" by the Portland Cement Association. The American Concrete Institute is the source for all the building code requirements and they certify Inspectors. They do the bulk of testing on new procedures and materials and provide the guide specifications used by design engineers.
There are so many variables I would not try to specify your project on a forum such as this. Many old timers will disagree with the newer methodologies. Times and materials have changed a lot over the last 30 years. I used to attend the annual "World of Concrete" every year when engaged in the business. Every year they were dding and deleting methodology. Okie below says fiber does not replace rebar. No longer true for non-structural load bearing slabs on grade except heavy duty hard stands for dynamic loads. Construction Joints and Control joints (they are not the same) are the key along with a properly prepared sub-grade. Wire mesh is the stuff that is no longer in vogue. Nothing will solve a poor sub-grade, destined to fail, even with rebar. As an example going to 6" around a hoist does not buy anything. 4" is OK unless you are running tracked equipment on the floor. Then I recommend you get an engineered design. If you have a lot of heavy equipment compromise on going to 5". High strength (over 5000 PSI) is also a waste of $. Again the sub-grade is your basic support element.
Ron