| Foundation and soil problems
- Foundation settlement
- Lateral loading stress
- Soil retention concern
- New construction
- Free evaluation
Slab on grade problems
- Curling/slab deflection
- Concrete deterioration
- Settled Slabs
- Free evaluation
Clientele
- Check our references
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Curling / slab deflection
Download our article from Concrete Repair Digest!
Curling is one of the most common defects found in
floors, especially those in warehouses. Slabs curl upward
at joints, saw-cuts and edges. This loss of sub grade
support causes slab movement as forklifts pass over
the joint. Joint edges deteriorate, cracks in the slab
develop and wires embedded in concrete for automatic
guidance systems may break. The amount of differential
movement from one side of the joint to the other is
directly related to the speed of warehouse floor deterioration.
Eliminating the Curling
Movement is precisely measured at joints to assess
severity of curling. Straight edges are also used to
determine amount of curl. Movement greater than .015
inches is severe enough to cause deterioration three
to four times as fast as normal.
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Restoring sub grade support is
the key to the repair.
Holes are drilled on each side of the joint where
curling has occurred.
A cementitious, non-shrink grout is pumped in
under low pressure to fill voids beneath curled
edges. |
Surface restoration consists of
removing the distressed concrete, reconstructing
slab edges with polymer concrete and reestablishing
the joint. These repairs often include grinding
the surface to improve rideability and replacing
damaged joint sealant material. |
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Work is most commonly done at night and on weekends to
avoid disruption to normal warehouse operations.
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Benefits of our techniques:
| • |
Improve rideability |
| • |
Eliminate rocking |
| • |
Lower forklift maintenance cost |
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Substantially reduce long term floor
care |
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Minimize deterioration of slab edges |
| • |
Restore life expectancy of concrete |
| • |
Reduce risk of injury |
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