I would not fill any isolation or relief joints in the floor. The “V” grove or relief joint
is designed to "attract" cracking, allowing the remainder of the slab
to be relatively crack free. The expansion or isolation joints are used to separate or isolate the slab from other parts of the structure
such as walls, footings, driveways, ect. Isolation joints permit the slab to
move and help minimize cracking caused when movement is restrained. Both techniques
are required by code unless other methods are used. The house is only 6 months
old and will continue to settle for a long time. Is the home still under the
builders warranty? What happens if the slab cracks, who is going to answer? The
expansion or isolation joints could be filled with a self leveling Polyurethane designed for flexibility
to improve appearance. For the “V” grove or relief joints, sell him
a throw rug.
From: rivera.gm@gmail.com [mailto:rivera.gm@gmail.com] On
Behalf Of Georgia Rivera
Sent: Saturday, June 13, 2009 11:36 AM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: [sccpartners] Concrete question
I have a customer who wants us to grind his garage floor and
place an epoxy coating on top of it. He also wants us to fill in the
seams of the garage floor to make it look like a single slab. The garage
was only installed January of 2009. We explained that the seams are there
to allow flexibility but he still insists on having it filled. Should we
use concrete to fill it or is there another product that will fill it nicely
and smooth to make it look like a single slab? One other person told me
thin set. Does that make sense?
Thanks all!
Georgia
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