Fishman --
When I used the Superscreed product, it was four years ago. A couple of years later when I did my friend's basement, they didn't have the same product, but a very similar product by a different manufacturer.
I couldn't find Superscreed, either. But after some serious detective work /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif I found a link to a similar product. (The successful combination was "masonry supply galvanized metal expansion joint"!!) Try this link to the
Masonry Supply . They have an image available there, but it was scanned from the catalog was fairly large to post.
I'm sure you could print this info and take it to a local masonry supply or maybe even home center and get the stuff. It is a specialty product, and not many people seem to be familiar with it -- my friend in Idaho tried to find it, and they had never heard of it.
As for my slab, yes I feel it is very stable, and there has been absolutely no movement at the control joints. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif Normally in a slab this size there would be either saw-cut expansion joints or fiber joints, but the metal key joint seems to really lock the sections together. I think the fact that the rebar runs through the joint has a lot to do with the strength.
So far as thickness goes, I was initially leaning toward a 6-inch slab, but a local logger has an unreinforced 4-inch slab which he parks trucks and equipment on. No steel in the slab, just fibermesh and zero cracks or movement. That convinced me that 4-inch was sufficiently thick.
It has been mentioned previously in this thread -- it is very important to allow concrete to hydrate completely as it cures. I covered my slab with plastic and kept it sprinkled for the first week. I used a vapor barrier underneath to help maintain moisture during the cure. I also think the substrate is critical. I have six inches of 5/8 minus that was watered down and compacted with a plate compactor.
This is my own experience, hope it helps.
Tugwell