This used to be a very bad situation here in my town back before the 70s, henceforth I built my home 18 inches minimum off of ground, now since our horrendous earthquakes recently, all our new home's must have 8 inches reinforced concrete floors, as a legal requirement, water is terrible under floors without protection. I am so happy that this particular pour is shown, thank you Tom and crew for another wonderful episode. 😊😊😊.
@welderman12216 ай бұрын
WOW !! Getting creative with slab/ epoxy. Way to go Tom,there is NO limit to this kind of craftsmanship. Perhaps you can make a waterfall table for Donna!!??
@tomfarley39246 ай бұрын
This was a fun show. I've never seen or heard of heaving under concrete like this unless it froze. I learned something new. I remember the warehouse video, now I understand. A company I worked for years ago built a new manufacturing plant and the architects plan called for 56" footing. He explained it was to keep the water from coming in under the floor (amongst other reasons). Now I understand. The epoxy pour was very interesting. Please give us updates.
@barryhoneycutt38946 ай бұрын
Nice video Tom, never seen a sub grade material that would heave, when wet, 4" like that, and it did not crack. You have been involved in a few unique type pours, but you have a reputation, if it can be fixed: Concrete with the Hauses is your Contractor.. Word of mouth, when your price is good, your quality is good, and respect for the owners property is good, you will stay busy forever... MANY Contractors do not take the pride in their work, and expense to do the very best JOB. IF i was anywhere near you you would be my Contractor, and i might come out work for free just to watch you guys work. :) A fan for life Tom thanks You restore my faith in mankind that their still is HOPE: For honesty and integrity! ❤💯🙏
@LmTeamWaxOffroad6 ай бұрын
Really enjoy your videos Tom. Talented group of guys!
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Glad you like them!
@generogg6 ай бұрын
SCL-1000 is a really good machine... 36 inch wide with almost 10 inch tracks... I love mine... Just finished paying it off yesterday for the 36 month payments... It has already paid for itself... I would highly recommend it... Mike M does need to get one for sure, to match his orange work force. LOL thumb nail is why I clicked on your video... Good luck
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Perfect thanks
@bobme27876 ай бұрын
That sucks the home owner has to go through all that expense because the proper materials were not used under concrete. Thankfully there are good trades like you out there.
@AlexeiTetenov6 ай бұрын
The home owner would benefit from a perimeter drain around his house to prevent the water running down the hill from damaging his property again.
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
It’s great to be a homeowner,sometimes
@LouKodge6 ай бұрын
In Australia around certain areas where old volcanic soils are super absorbant, we get winter and summer huge variation in moisture content and subsequent slab heaveal.
@ourlifeinwyoming46546 ай бұрын
Wow - not the typical video. Learned a ton! So great that you didn't have to wheel barrow all of that out of there.
@stephenpaul3946 ай бұрын
The strength of that is amazing. Nice job.
@OutdoorsWithTheMorgans6 ай бұрын
Tom has and Orange Machine on the Job and I have a Yellow one coming soon lol
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Can never have too many toys
@wadefortune78746 ай бұрын
Very interesting! Thanks for letting us watch and learn.
@terrylandis68316 ай бұрын
Good golly! After seeing this, I believe you will tackle any job. That had to be long hard work! Great job.
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Oh yeah, this was a fun one
@lyleharkness-rv5vf6 ай бұрын
Interesting video 👍 Amazing how a bad choice of material can cause so much trouble. Good job with the repair. PS the door is looking great so far, can't wait to see the completed project
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@flowerstone6 ай бұрын
Owners would be wise to dig a ditch around the house and drain pipe in with clean drain rock and pull the water away from their house. I had to do it at my house and solved a water problem under my house. 😊 Nice job on a difficult project. Your usual. 😁
@johnsandell45016 ай бұрын
Unique episode!!! How often do you find flooring that rises? Must have been cheap fill back then . Liked your solution 👍👍👍
@MichaelTrofa6 ай бұрын
Philadelphia Mike -- Watching your video -- is Thursday the 13th. -- You’re doing the job inside the house ripping out the floor that raised up in the middle -- I was thinking you should’ve put maybe a drain pipe along the wall that was seeping water -- And rain French strain that went outside the house -- if the dimensions allowed you to drain that way -- Just an idea Or even run a French drain system all through the floor before you poured --Point
@joshuaweiler45666 ай бұрын
When you retire I hope you still video your crew!
@johnnylindsey58086 ай бұрын
Good job guys
@averageal25156 ай бұрын
In similar scenarios where you need to allow for possible future movement I have used fully compacted hardcore topped with 2-3 inches of medium density polystyrene below the concrete
@jamesjensen50006 ай бұрын
Why didn’t you add foam board of spray high density foam insulation on top of soil before add in stone base? It would have made the house better insulated … in fact in some states i5 would have been mandatory… may soon be code mandatory in most states… almost always done in new construction. Adding insulation also to perimeter footer would also insulate.. could also help with water infiltration.
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
We typically just do that at ground level. Everything in the basement is 36 inches below grade.
@jamesjensen50006 ай бұрын
@@Concretewiththehauses I will say yes the videos I have been seeing, of adding insulation beneath the slabs, have been on-grade types…it may not be typical to add insulation to slabs in basements, but then again why not? After all, there is heated space in basements and perimeter footings and walls are exposed to ground temperature… maybe insulating below basement slabs would have advantages…I didn’t understand from the video shown that you were doing a basement…you entered from a garage that must have been walkout hillside exposure… I assumed it was a slab on grade having not seen an exterior photographic shot… still, wondering if insulating under any slab or foundation wall or footing for a building should not be considered…even below 36 inches.
@jakeschisler75256 ай бұрын
I'd be questioning the wall with the paneling. Maybe the builder should have had drainage around the perimeter but we all know they cut corners. I just had our house resided with a material i didn't know anything about and the company also has a factory to produce it. It is polymer like what goes inside of air planes. They have a different kind of pieces that go around the outer edges and under the siding they put thick styrofoam which conforms to the different styles of siding, we stayed with the Dutch lap. The siding and all other pieces have a woodgrain texture, they make a j channel but it's bigger and after they put the siding on slip the styrofoam underneath, then they put a thick metal strip on with screws, no nails. Underneath all that they put house wrap on. My house has no seams like typical siding. It cost us around 35,000 dollars to have it done. On the corners behind that piece is also styrofoam to keep insects from getting in
@fredcory26866 ай бұрын
So - after doing a number of poured epoxy tables, I am not a fan of parchment paper or plastic. I strongly prefer to use an epoxy mold release agent. It can be as simple as paste wax, but the spray epoxy releases are best and easiest. No matter how well you affix the plastic or parchment, it always tends to wrinkle and means more sanding.
@themister38656 ай бұрын
This video is a bit different than your usual concrete pour. Very interesting,
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Thanks
@pilhoney106 ай бұрын
you need to give the water a place to go, from the outside put drain tile and then daylight it so water will have a place to exit, water is forcing it upward get rid of the water.
@jefftrag19566 ай бұрын
If the bucket was tapered your quantities of resin were off. You had too much activator no? The bucket would have to cylindrical to use a 4" and 2" measurement.
@donshirey41566 ай бұрын
Granulated slag In the 80's it was cheap fill. It had to be "Dead" to be under concrete, if not it has gas in it and expands.
@philmaciejewski55935 ай бұрын
I would of put a rebar grid in this job 100% forsure. Rebar grid
@sbkhider6 ай бұрын
That door is going to be beautiful 😍
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Coming along nicely
@ChrisWohlbrueck6 ай бұрын
Hi mate, random question, are you happy with DeWalt? Do you like the 60V? What power tools are your favourite? Cheers
@northernliving23876 ай бұрын
Nice Compact mini loader. I thought that Compact loader would work in your company..
@mikegraziano15626 ай бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't use the new pumper, or is this too small of a project for all the cleanup?
@joecapo82926 ай бұрын
Hi Tom, are you going to address the water inflation. From the out side? That water on the out side should be taken care of. Just a thought.
@Concretewiththehauses6 ай бұрын
Homeowner is taking care of that
@davecrable13566 ай бұрын
Looks like a hydrostatic pressure issue. Seen it a few times in my career.
@ronallen65786 ай бұрын
Could it be the beginning of a volcano??? 😂😂
@jasonpopielarczyk75116 ай бұрын
Suggestion for epoxy - could have sealed the live edge with just a thin coat of epoxy and let cure. This prevents any trapped air from coming through the pour from that edge.
@stanley-rn7xo6 ай бұрын
If the house was built 25 years ago and has mill slag underneath it, I guarantee it was not D-GAS if you took all the slag out they will never have another problem I seen floors back in the 70s and 80s that had armco slag underneath it. It would heave and crack so bad you could lay your arm in the crack that’s before. They started to de gas contractors back, then thought they were getting a deal because the stuff was so cheap, but it caused all kinds of problems
@efrentroncoso64716 ай бұрын
No steel rebar reinforcement???
@Z-Bart6 ай бұрын
You are the expert. But...I always thought the reason people backfilled with stone is it's basically 100% compaction from the get go.
@arresthillary95026 ай бұрын
13:04 THAT GUY TAKING A LEAK IN THE CORNER? INSIDE THE CUSTOMER'S HOUSE?
@mikebarushok53616 ай бұрын
He is taping plastic.
@stephenpaul3946 ай бұрын
Nice epoxy pour.
@chrisbarr13596 ай бұрын
Morgan's partnership with Kubota just expired. He owns 2 orange machines but the rest go back. Says he doesn't want another partnership with anyone.
@stewartmcardle81496 ай бұрын
I'm sure the team resolved a similar job a couple of years ago in a factory setting......? Tom confirmed this later in the video around 14 minutes.
@David-zs7bi6 ай бұрын
Wasn't much wiggle room for that machine and power buggys to work with in that little hallway.
@DFord-rv3nz6 ай бұрын
One spritz for you two for me? Type of alcohol spritz?
@CharlesJohnson-mq2tr6 ай бұрын
Would have been a good time to use the blower for concrete.
@jeffhennings65796 ай бұрын
What a tricky job damn
@walterernst79316 ай бұрын
It seems to me the water extrusion problem is a serious problem that should be addressed.
@markkmiecik53936 ай бұрын
Bingo. Proper exterior foundation drainage (e.g. french perimeter drain) and waterproofing are necessary to minimize future heave issues. An interior french drain tile could have been installed, but that would have required installation of a sump pit. But that would take away from the usable space and be noisy.
@jakezgab85766 ай бұрын
Watch out, toxic fumes from the buggy.
@davidhyman95846 ай бұрын
Does Mike know you moved to Kubota😂
@arthurhouston36 ай бұрын
Mike no more Kabota they ended the promotion. He looking for new equipment.