Hay Dude
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2012
- Messages
- 19,113
- Location
- A Hay Field along the PA/DE border
- Tractor
- Challenger MT655E, Massey Ferguson 7495, Challenger MT535B, Krone 4x4 XC baler, (2) Kubota ZD331’s, 2020 Ram 5500 Cummins 4x4, IH 7500 4x4 dump truck, Kaufman 35’ tandem 19 ton trailer, Deere CX-15, Pottinger Hay mowers
I would have to disagree.
We have a lot of concrete at work that gets forklifts driven over it which weight 10-12k empty and 14-16k loaded (sometimes up to 16k when overloaded).
We just had a large (<26k sf) warehouse put up with floors designed for those loads.
The ONLY metal in the floor is the dowels between the sections of the pour and between the walls and the floor.
None of it has mesh or rebar in it. Fiber and plasticizer, yes but rebar or mesh, no.
Now the walls and the footer do have rebar in them, but not the floor.
Aaron Z
So your concrete has fiber in it, right? And you dont have breaking or cracking issues.
Some people use rebar. Some use wire mesh, some use fiber. Some use combinations. I think the point he was making is that he wont pour a slab without rebar or some type of reinforcement. Neither would I.
In the video pour, we dont know what the underlying ground conditions were. For all we know, several trees could have been taken down to make room for the garage. IF that is the case, then rebar would be an absolute requirement for me over ground compacted in lifts.
We dont know the history and the background of the ground preparation.
I watched a garage project where a smaller older garage was razed and a larger one was built over the footprint. Rebar was not used and the floor cracked later.
As I and many others have said, its not a panacea, but an insurance policy to prevent cracks from becoming sinking areas of uneven concrete.
If given the choice, I bet most customers would opt for properly installed rebar than nothing. I have lived by that technique and managed to live a peaceful, prosperous life with few call backs and continuous construction work load.