dqdave1
Veteran Member
In my opinion, You need some type of insulation on bottom of slab. I would think the "ground" will absorb all the heat and cause you a high energy bill.
Mundy said:Toolnut,
I am new to this forum but have been building roads and bridges for one of the largest County Road Commissions in Michigan for the last 12 years.
I would strongly recommend against the chloride.
When I started out we used to put chloride in everything but bridge decks if it was colder than 40. Just in the 12 years I have been doing it I have watched many (not all) of the repairs and new builds that we have done with chloride spall and age much quicker than they should. Re-steel even epoxy coated rusts much faster when we add chloride. I would be worried about your water tubing.
For about ten years we have been using a D.O.T. approved NON-Chloride Accelerator. We also cover the pour with insulating blankets or straw with tarps. Your residential concrete contractor may or may not know what Non-Chloride is or may even tell you it is the same thing but the concrete supplier will know what it is and should have it.
Just remember your contractor is down the road when you have a poured floor and are still happy the following spring. 10 years or 30years are the same to him. The concrete will get hard and last many years with the chloride.
What I have seen over the years is that many of the concrete pours my department has done with chloride 10 to 15 years ago are falling apart and the steel is rusted away. In contrast the cold weather pours that have been done in the last ten years with the Non-chloride Accelerator are ageing as they would be expected.
It is more expensive than chloride but I feel a large pour with heat tubing and hope of installing a lift is a long term investment and I would want to do everything to make it last as long as possible....
Just my 2cents.
Either way the concrete needs to be protected from cold for at least 24 hours. Be carefull blowing heat in without plastic or tarp ontop of the concrete. This could dry the surface rather than cure it.
I just feel it will last longer with a Non-Chloride Accelerator or go no additive but HE grade cement.
Regards,
Mundy