BigH
Geotechnical
- Dec 1, 2002
- 6,012
Cheers to all:
Having a bit of an "argument" on site with respect to curing shotcrete. The specifications say to cure unless the ambient weather conditions are such that the Engineer may allow natural curing (e.g., relative humidity >85%).
Notwithstanding the above, does one need to cure shotcrete. We have experienced engineering geologists who say no - they have never done it (even outside of tunnel applications) - it is not "standard" practice.
I am on the side that shotcrete should be cured - it is a thin layer of cementitious material that should the water evaporate quicker than hydration you may not get the strengths that the material had the potential to achieve. I think it may be more important than the curing of a thick section of concrete.
Counter-arugment is that if the cores come out okay, then they don't need to cure. How do they know until the cores are tested? Seems like a "who cares so long as . . ." argument.
From a contractual point of view, the contractor has a cost associated in his tender price for curing and if he doesn't cure, he is "making money" -
NCRs could/can be written but in the end, the closing will depend on the counter-argument noted above.
What is your opinion?
Thanks and![[cheers] [cheers] [cheers]](/data/assets/smilies/cheers.gif)
Having a bit of an "argument" on site with respect to curing shotcrete. The specifications say to cure unless the ambient weather conditions are such that the Engineer may allow natural curing (e.g., relative humidity >85%).
Notwithstanding the above, does one need to cure shotcrete. We have experienced engineering geologists who say no - they have never done it (even outside of tunnel applications) - it is not "standard" practice.
I am on the side that shotcrete should be cured - it is a thin layer of cementitious material that should the water evaporate quicker than hydration you may not get the strengths that the material had the potential to achieve. I think it may be more important than the curing of a thick section of concrete.
Counter-arugment is that if the cores come out okay, then they don't need to cure. How do they know until the cores are tested? Seems like a "who cares so long as . . ." argument.
From a contractual point of view, the contractor has a cost associated in his tender price for curing and if he doesn't cure, he is "making money" -
NCRs could/can be written but in the end, the closing will depend on the counter-argument noted above.
What is your opinion?
Thanks and
![[cheers] [cheers] [cheers]](/data/assets/smilies/cheers.gif)