Garage floor question- thickness of screed
Garage floor question- thickness of screed
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Emsman

Original Poster:

7,202 posts

213 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
Dead simple-a friend is about to build a garage.

What thickness of screed should he be looking at?

Would 300mm of crushed rubble, covered with a 200mm screed be sufficient for normal cars etc??

Anyone who has built one that can offer a solution??

Greatly appreciated

Busamav

2,954 posts

231 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
He doesnt want screed , he wants concrete wink

Spudler

3,985 posts

219 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
As above.

Tell him to compact the hardcore in layers, not all at once. 200mm is more than enough, just thicken it up at the door opening.

Emsman

Original Poster:

7,202 posts

213 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
Sorry chaps- concrete slab, powerfloat finish.


Spudler

3,985 posts

219 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
Emsman said:
Sorry chaps- concrete slab, powerfloat finish.
Must pour it first thing in the morning or he'll still be floating up at 2 o'clock the the following morning. Pour wet and use a poker. Hire this: http://www.brandontoolhire.co.uk/directory/prodvie...

Busamav

2,954 posts

231 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
I would also throw in a damp proof membrane under the slab for what it costs .

Is he digging a pit ?

Emsman

Original Poster:

7,202 posts

213 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
Already got 1000 Gauge for the Dpm thanks.
He aims to dig down 800 mm to work levels off an existing floor

Eta no pit though, just a solid floor

Edited by Emsman on Saturday 11th September 12:33

Emsman

Original Poster:

7,202 posts

213 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
Already got 1000 Gauge for the Dpm thanks.
He aims to dig down 800 mm to work levels off an existing floor

Edited by Emsman on Saturday 11th September 13:07

Zip106

15,879 posts

212 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
If he's power floating it and wants to paint it afterwards he'll have problems unless he acid etches it or scabbles it when it's dry.

To me, power floating is THE worst thing on concrete when people want it painting!

Just worth noting.

Edited by Zip106 on Saturday 11th September 15:21

normalbloke

8,500 posts

242 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
I thought garage floor paint was sooooo yesterday and tiles were the way forward!

dave_s13

13,982 posts

292 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
Zip106 said:
If he's power floating it and wants to paint it afterwards he'll have problems unless he acid etches it or scabbles it when it's dry.

To me, power floating is THE worst thing on concrete when people want it painting!

Just worth noting.

Edited by Zip106 on Saturday 11th September 15:21
Can you expand on this as my neighbour has recently poured and powerfloated his garage floor only to be told he can't paint it for circa 5 months. Needs to allow 1 month of drying out per inch of concrete or something? The paint will fail/peel if put on now apparently.

caziques

2,809 posts

191 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
dave_s13 said:
Zip106 said:
If he's power floating it and wants to paint it afterwards he'll have problems unless he acid etches it or scabbles it when it's dry.

To me, power floating is THE worst thing on concrete when people want it painting!

Just worth noting.

Edited by Zip106 on Saturday 11th September 15:21
Can you expand on this as my neighbour has recently poured and powerfloated his garage floor only to be told he can't paint it for circa 5 months. Needs to allow 1 month of drying out per inch of concrete or something? The paint will fail/peel if put on now apparently.
An inch a month is about right, in metric countries it's 1mm a day, to let all the water dry out. Only paint after this.


Zip106

15,879 posts

212 months

Saturday 11th September 2010
quotequote all
The drying times noted above are correct, but this isn't so much the problem.

The problem with power floated floors is that when they're floated all the laitence (weak, dusty cement particles) rise to the top.

If paint is applied to this, even a very thin 1st 'mist' coat, then it won't adhere.
The laitence eventually wears off along with the paint and you're left with a very ste looking floor that needs the paint removing before making good to re-paint.

Okay, you can get a very nice finish with power floating but once dry you must either acid etch it or mechanically scabble it - that is, to remove the top surface prior to painting.

This is a very informative site - http://www.icipaints.co.uk/support/specifications/...

Acid etch - http://www.decoratingdirect.co.uk/viewprod/t/TORAE...

I've had problem floors where I've had them scabbled AND etched and still the painted finish, to me, wasn't really acceptable.


Have you thought about DynoTiles? smile

Spudler

3,985 posts

219 months

Sunday 12th September 2010
quotequote all
Maybe im missing something here, if the powerfloating is done correct why would you want to paint the floor?
BTW, 1mm/day drying time is based on screed which is semi dry. If your powerfloating it needs to be wet, which should be taken into account.

MATTP77

697 posts

218 months

Monday 1st November 2010
quotequote all
Spudler said:
Maybe im missing something here, if the powerfloating is done correct why would you want to paint the floor?
BTW, 1mm/day drying time is based on screed which is semi dry. If your powerfloating it needs to be wet, which should be taken into account.
agreed.