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Posted (edited)

Have you ever applied a 25mm screed on top of beam and block? I'm talking directly to the slab. I notice that some systems allow it with bonder applied to substrate.  Were the results satisfactory?  Did you add fiber?

Edited by Boyblue
  • Boyblue changed the title to Have you ever applied a 25mm screed on top of beam and block?
Posted

When you have cambers in the beams the screed would be very thin at the high points. What is your reason for wanting to do this ? 

Posted
6 hours ago, nod said:

You would be ok with a self leveling compound Expensive Buy why?

The option is listed so I thought I'd ask, although the part about direct to slab is not indicated.  I admit it is a bad idea because grouting all of those members is what makes the floor a monolith.

5 hours ago, JohnMo said:

Where is the insulation going?

Nowhere in particular, but I was thinking ground floor on a new build.

3 hours ago, Canski said:

When you have cambers in the beams the screed would be very thin at the high points. What is your reason for wanting to do this ? 

I don't know, I have to admit it was a wast of gray matter or is it grey 🙂

Posted
1 hour ago, Boyblue said:

Nowhere in particular, but I was thinking ground floor on a new build.

You would need insulation, or not comply with building regs.

Posted
21 hours ago, JohnMo said:

You would need insulation, or not comply with building regs.

This is for the Bahamas, we have no insullation requirements.  

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Boyblue said:

This is for the Bahamas, we have no insullation requirements.  

Wouldn't you want insulation to keep the cool inside, instead of the warm in?

Posted
28 minutes ago, JohnMo said:

Wouldn't you want insulation to keep the cool inside, instead of the warm in?

When it's 85°F outside, the crawl space might be 65-70°F. Winter temperatures in crawl spaces are generally warmer than the outside air due to ground insulation. For us this  I guess it's a fringe benefit.

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