Duncan62 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Suggest a solution to our predicament! We have a 200mm slab that was poured with self levelling concrete, the result was ok, not great, pictures attached. I would like a solution to give the appearance of a concrete slab. What would you suggest? Approx 90sqm to cover. My idea is Aturo Mistral https://uk.arturoflooring.com/design/resin-flooring-design-options/arturo-mistral Rep says that with our current slab it'll be a lot of work to prep it. I don't doubt it. Anyone have similar issues, and find any other solutions please?
Nickfromwales Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Microcement, or maybe ask a good grinding / polishing company to sample one small room and see what results that yields. Prep for adding layers to this will need to be robust, and would probably need some amount of grinding. The hope would be, to grind and area and see if it looks ok, then if so repeat throughout.
Duncan62 Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago That's a good suggestion, I'd like to bring in a team to do the work, but the cost is prohibitive. Is it crazy to suggest that a self levelling compound, over the whole slab could be a finished floor? Would have to look at the spec of a product to find a minimum viable thickness.
Nickfromwales Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 12 minutes ago, Duncan62 said: That's a good suggestion, I'd like to bring in a team to do the work, but the cost is prohibitive. Is it crazy to suggest that a self levelling compound, over the whole slab could be a finished floor? Would have to look at the spec of a product to find a minimum viable thickness. SLC is friable, so won’t last 5 mins.
Nickfromwales Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 14 minutes ago, Duncan62 said: but the cost is prohibitive Not if it turns out cheaper and faster than prepping and re-covering with xyz. Especially if you’re still on shaky ground as to whether that’s then still robust.
Iceverge Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Most of them will grind out if say, there'll be little big aggregate in the humps anyway so it might be straightforward enough.
saveasteading Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Duncan62 said: our predicament! I am pretty sure they have added water to the mix, causing these very visible shrinkage cracks. If you have the delivery ticket, they will have had to sign an instruction to add water as it absolves the supplier. It is a common mistake but utterly misguided and you could ask for some recompense. These cracks will be right through the depth so taking the surface off will not remove them, although the crack widths may reduce. It's possible that only the top few mm was hideously wet and overworked. Are there contraction joints elsewhere, and what has happened there? It's ok for any overlay as it won't move again.... unless overworked. I'd try chiselling a bit off the surface to see if it is well bonded to the mass. Re the tamping ridges, that may not matter for tiling but has to be ground off for anything else. It's a diy job with a grinder made for the very purpose.... but hard work. A new poured surface is possible but would be very expensive. It would involve taking all the pasty surface off then laying a granolithic or resin material. It might not crack if very skilfully done. Best to decide that you really like tiles or vinyl. If you must have a concrete finish then you could regard the existing as a base layer and pour a new floor, 100 thick, with reinforcement and careful attention to detail BUT all concrete crazes and my opinion is that it is for commercial buildings. You could also consider grinding down about 20mm into the stone, so you will se the matrix of stone and sand/cement. then you'd have to seal it as it will show stains. Again, this will cost an awful lot. Edited 1 hour ago by saveasteading
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