CurlyDave
Elite Member
I've probably worked on building 50 homes. zero kept the slab or driveway wet. If we were ready to frame many times we started framing the next day after the pour. I've seen a few building kept covered but it gets real expensive to stop construction to keep a slab wet.
How many of those homes have you come back to 4 or 5 years later and inspected for concrete cracks? I bet that number is very low, approaching zero.
My point is that even though "everybody does it this way" and you have done it 50 times this way, that doesn't mean it isn't important to keep the concrete wet.
On my new house, the "professional" concrete guys did 90% of the flat work. Less than a year later there are way too many cracks for my liking. I did one slab, and I did three things differently.
1. more rebar.
2. I used a concrete vibrator (stinger).
3. I put a piece of sheet plastic over the slab after the pour and flooded the slab under the plastic twice a day for two weeks.
My slab has no cracks at all.
The average contractor would be out of business in a hurry if he took the care I did, but the result speaks for itself. Any owner-builder can do a better job on concrete by taking the extra time.
I did hire a professional finisher, which is well worth the cost.
How many of those homes have you come back to 4 or 5 years later and inspected for concrete cracks? I bet that number is very low, approaching zero.
My point is that even though "everybody does it this way" and you have done it 50 times this way, that doesn't mean it isn't important to keep the concrete wet.
On my new house, the "professional" concrete guys did 90% of the flat work. Less than a year later there are way too many cracks for my liking. I did one slab, and I did three things differently.
1. more rebar.
2. I used a concrete vibrator (stinger).
3. I put a piece of sheet plastic over the slab after the pour and flooded the slab under the plastic twice a day for two weeks.
My slab has no cracks at all.
The average contractor would be out of business in a hurry if he took the care I did, but the result speaks for itself. Any owner-builder can do a better job on concrete by taking the extra time.
I did hire a professional finisher, which is well worth the cost.