jmc
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2003
- Messages
- 3,105
- Location
- SW Indiana
- Tractor
- Ford 1920 4x4 (traded in on Kubota). Case 480F TLB w/4 in 1 bucket, 4x4. Gehl CTL60 tracked loader, Kubota L4330 GST
Having rebar 1/3 up in the slab maximizes its ability to provide tension strength (bending strength) to the concrete to keep it from fracturing. Since it is cast into the concrete, stress riser effects are minimal, if and only if, there is enough concrete below it. That's why "lifting rebar" is so detrimental to the strength of the slab. From a practical perspective, nobody is going to get the rebar at the right height consistently by lifting it, resulting in a weaker slab. My motto is use enough chairs that walking around on the rebar doesn't bend the rebar, or shift it.
I get it that rebar, below the neutral plane, adds more tensile strength- my point was that the chairs themselves leave defects (stress risers) in the tension side of the neutral plane.