LD50
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2020
- Messages
- 4,567
thaqts enoughI watched 3 minutes.
thaqts enoughI watched 3 minutes.
I'm glad you get ityeah but ok man, this is Jimmy Page man ffs
but Page is guitar (all that it can be - better than Moore), but Moore is package. Get it?I'm glad you get it
I guess my DIY project just expanded a little. The interior was completely gutted.@scudsucker I read the mill got it too?
That’s what happens when you stop drinking for a week and then have a decent drinking session.Lucky you
And fokit, don't forgetStephen Stills
Joe Bonamassa...
I’m trying to get some context and see what and where this is. It looks like a cosmetic groove in plaster or cement or whatever material it is, with no actual proper expansion joint behind it. I simply just can’t figure out why that crack would be there if it was a functional expansion joint.
Can you explain where it is and what materials I’m looking at both in the surface and behind the render, and send some more pics?
We painted it green to go with the planter boxes.Actually looks like paint but I’m not sure if this is a wall or a path or what?
Unused foundation on the south side outside. Seems they threw one gigantic slab.
Ah, good to know.Okay. So if they made a big slab, to control the cracks you need to grind into the slab in straight lines roughly in 25m2 chunks, depending of course on the shape of the slab. But yeah if the slab is 100mm thick say, you’d need to grind a line at least 25-35mm into the slab with a cutting disk and that would control the crack as the concrete would tear there at the weakest (thinest) part as the concrete contracts.
It looks like in this case they have cast a slab and just made a cosmetic line just a few mm deep to make it look nice, but not actually functional as an expansion joint as it is not deep enough to attract the crack.