Re: Advice taken, and another Q
Boondox,
From a faceless granite state native
Any of the materials mentioned will work.
However, DO NOT PLACE SAND OR CRUSHED PROCESSED GRAVEL (sand, stone mixtures) on top of a gravel (crushed stone) as the sand will run into the stone and you either have voids, expensive processed crushed gravel, or both. Don't use a stone dust product.
the finer the material, means more compaction effort needed --->more water, thinner lifts, and more passes with the compactor. For Sand I would use 4" lifts if a plate compactor is used, for crushed stone 8" lifts
On the last 4" immediatly below the slab, place a layer of 3/4 inch crushed to act as a wicking barrier. A poly vapor barrier above is optional, I have seen poly help and hurt slab installations. For this one item, I suggest you talk to your local building inspector, vapor barrier usage tends to vary by area.
Boondox,
From a faceless granite state native
Any of the materials mentioned will work.
However, DO NOT PLACE SAND OR CRUSHED PROCESSED GRAVEL (sand, stone mixtures) on top of a gravel (crushed stone) as the sand will run into the stone and you either have voids, expensive processed crushed gravel, or both. Don't use a stone dust product.
the finer the material, means more compaction effort needed --->more water, thinner lifts, and more passes with the compactor. For Sand I would use 4" lifts if a plate compactor is used, for crushed stone 8" lifts
On the last 4" immediatly below the slab, place a layer of 3/4 inch crushed to act as a wicking barrier. A poly vapor barrier above is optional, I have seen poly help and hurt slab installations. For this one item, I suggest you talk to your local building inspector, vapor barrier usage tends to vary by area.