How to make concrete last 100 years

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  • čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
  • Concrete is a critical part of our society and the projects that you build around your house. When we take the time to build something out of concrete we need to make sure it is long lasting and meets the needs of the owner. This video talks about four items to focus on to build long high quality and lasting concrete. They are the water to cement ratio, consolidation, curing, and air entrainment in freeze thaw environments. More indepth information on several of these topics can be found in other videos listed below. Also, there are links to several of the products discussed for DIY concrete folk.
    Reference videos:
    Intro to curing concrete
    • Intro to curing concrete
    Why do we need air bubbles in concrete?
    • Why do we NEED air bub...
    Intro to concrete scaling
    • Intro to concrete scaling
    Referenced products:
    These companies did not pay me to advertise their products. However, I am an Amazon affiliate and I do make money when you purchase from these links. These are products aimed at DIY concrete folks but also useful for anyone wanting to product high quality concrete.
    Superplasticizer
    amzn.to/2VtEgxu
    Air entraining agent
    amzn.to/2GYGZw2
    www.fritzpak.com/products/pro...
    My website is:
    www.tylerley.com
    If you would like to donate to my channel please visit
    www.tylerley.com/giving
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Komentáře • 299

  • @joonaknuutinen5540
    @joonaknuutinen5540 Před 5 lety +45

    if i ever buy a house and need concrete in the yard, i know what to do. i mean i dont, but i know where the knowledge is, and then i do. this dude really loves his concrete. holy shit..

    • @ColtaineCrows
      @ColtaineCrows Před 5 lety +1

      TBH if I need more concrete than I can fit in a single wheelbarrow I'm just gonna phone up one of the local concrete plants and have them bring a truck over.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +2

      Thanks Joona!

  • @punman5392
    @punman5392 Před 4 lety +11

    The base of Sir Smeaton’s Tower is still standing to this day off the coast of Plymouth, England despite being constantly bashed by waves from the sea. Truly a testament to his hydraulic lime formula for concrete. Extremely strong stuff. You should actually do a video talking about Smeaton’s concrete

    • @ariace5725
      @ariace5725 Před 3 lety

      i know Im asking randomly but does anybody know of a way to get back into an instagram account..?
      I somehow lost the login password. I love any tips you can offer me

    • @damiankarsyn9653
      @damiankarsyn9653 Před 3 lety

      @Ari Ace instablaster :)

    • @ariace5725
      @ariace5725 Před 3 lety

      @Damian Karsyn I really appreciate your reply. I found the site through google and im in the hacking process now.
      Takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.

  • @SwirlingDragonMist
    @SwirlingDragonMist Před 3 lety +3

    Using a porous aggregate that has a high amount of water retention, holding water like a sponge releasing it slowly into the concrete right in the critical curing stages that are water starved. I believe the technique is called “internal curing” having the water available at the late stages is a game changer. Look into “light weight aggregates” and “internal curing”

  • @senthamilselvan6288
    @senthamilselvan6288 Před 4 lety +3

    Believe me You are a great teacher. Iam going to finish watching all your concrete videos in this lockdown

  • @garynapolitano1270
    @garynapolitano1270 Před 3 lety +4

    Dude, I love your passion for concrete!

  • @ronaldbarrett1506
    @ronaldbarrett1506 Před 3 lety +7

    I have worked with concrete (including compressed) for over two decades. Concrete is a fantastic, useful compound. The use of silanes and siloxanes really do work. You mention it however there are some really important side issues. One is the high VOC silanes. They do work, are up to three part mixes, and are FLAMMABLE. You need to be careful of this. In addition you need protective clothing/gloves/breathing/eye gear. Do not ignore this. There also is an additional matter with a silane/siloxane coating. I have had coated concrete Walk ways mostly) that when coated well:Mitigate mild growth in areas as wet as south Florida. If a silane producer sells you a product:DO get trained on it first. Be safe and all will do well.

    • @SmeeUncleJoe
      @SmeeUncleJoe Před 11 měsíci +1

      Did you mean 'mitigate mold growth" ???

  • @SashaXXY
    @SashaXXY Před 5 lety +1

    Very informative and helpful! Thank you very much!!!

  • @junginpark1042
    @junginpark1042 Před 5 lety +4

    Short and sweet video like always Tyler

  • @bigpapisaunds
    @bigpapisaunds Před 3 lety +2

    Great energy and advice!!! You are a fantastic teacher!! Good positive attitude and in depth material, you sir have a virtuous and valuable character. Good work :)

  • @fukuokainternationaldemocr1974

    Another absolutely fantastic video! Tyler Ley popped up a day before I had to search for anything (something in the Google water!) and BANG ON answers all the questions that I was formulating. Very well done.

  • @hamzamMR
    @hamzamMR Před 5 lety

    Thanks dr tyler. Best summary ever !!!

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety

      Thank you, Hamza for your continues support!

  • @machinelearning171
    @machinelearning171 Před 3 lety

    Loving the channel, you are the man

  • @windaddiction
    @windaddiction Před 5 lety +1

    Just designing my first mix for my construction materials class. Thanks for the tips!

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety

      Have fun with it!!!! What a rush!

  • @ehsnils
    @ehsnils Před 5 lety +4

    You would probably want to visit old fortresses that have been built over 100 years ago. I'm involved in the museum fortress Oscar II Fort ( o2fort.se ) here in Sweden and the cement used when it was built in 1908 is in better condition than the fast modifications added for WWII.
    So good concrete construction knowledge has been around quite a while, but it has of course been refined over time.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety

      I agree! Thanks for sharing.

  • @rakeshchavan7844
    @rakeshchavan7844 Před 3 lety +2

    Dear Sir,
    I always love to watch and learn from your videos.

  • @user-ps5hm8jz3j
    @user-ps5hm8jz3j Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you Tayler Lay for sharing vlogs related to Concrete (fresh state or consolidated)

  • @abhinavsirohi
    @abhinavsirohi Před 2 lety

    Excellent video on cement

  • @zubutv.
    @zubutv. Před rokem

    Great video!!! Thanks

  • @josephburkhalter5105
    @josephburkhalter5105 Před 4 lety

    Woops. !!!!! Just encountered your video on “fiber reinforced concrete”but have not had a chance to view it yet. With our home internment I will no doubt get to warp the all of your video work.
    JoeB

  • @galibmuktadir
    @galibmuktadir Před rokem +1

    Hi Dr. Ley, Galib from NC State University. Your videos helped me tremendously in understanding the concrete durability concepts. Big thanks.

  • @blainekunkel7891
    @blainekunkel7891 Před 5 lety +8

    Great Video...Your videos have been instrumental in helping me understand the fundamentals of concrete. We are in the business of developing cellulose nanocrystals (CNC) as a strength enhancing concrete additive and many of your videos have become "required reading" for our team. Keep up the great work!!

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +2

      Thanks Blaine!
      I have heard about CNC but not ever played with it. I am excited that you are inventing a new technology for concrete.

  • @ayeshat3875
    @ayeshat3875 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for the information it helps me.

  • @RicardoCruz-tn8by
    @RicardoCruz-tn8by Před 4 lety

    great video. low a/c as possible, good consolidation and curing

  • @VenturiLife
    @VenturiLife Před 5 lety +4

    You're probably going to mention reinforcing soon too, but basalt rebar will be amazing. Silica fume, super plasticizer, basalt, proper ratios and curing and you have something incredibly tough.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +3

      I agree! I am a little concerned about the ductility of basalt rebar. I have played with some of the fibers and they are very brittle.

    • @BiPolarBear722
      @BiPolarBear722 Před rokem

      @@TylerLeyis ductility a concern for all applications? Perhaps it could work in applications in which ductility is not needed.

    • @tryscience
      @tryscience Před 3 měsíci

      @@TylerLey Any experience with pretensioning Basalt rebar? I imagine this would mitigate some of the weaknesses of basalt.

  • @hemantdhote9125
    @hemantdhote9125 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the information

  • @goodfriend6428
    @goodfriend6428 Před 2 lety

    WONDERFUL CHANNEL! Thank you!

  • @cfcreative1
    @cfcreative1 Před 4 lety

    Great video.

  • @JETFOURLITRE
    @JETFOURLITRE Před 2 lety

    Cover, compaction, high MPa cementitious design and alkali reactivity mitigation. Job done.

  • @toddr.4630
    @toddr.4630 Před 2 lety

    Great job 👌 much appreciated ✌️👍

  • @HBM-ck5bo
    @HBM-ck5bo Před 3 lety +2

    I wish I could see your videos during my PhD. It would have helped me a lot!! Anyway I'm glad to discover your channel 😊

  • @user-nx4ti8xs1o
    @user-nx4ti8xs1o Před 2 lety +1

    Since you asked me my idea Tyler, I would like to have the inner sections to be more strong - like even the iron H beam for load bearing pillars, surrounded by rebars, and internally along with rebars I would like to use the harder polymer fibers, and external layer with softer fibers for cracks.

  • @r_guru_tn57
    @r_guru_tn57 Před 4 lety

    best explanation

  • @prasadmhsk
    @prasadmhsk Před 3 lety

    Very nice sir

  • @ahdid6105
    @ahdid6105 Před 3 lety

    I love your videos.. 🤩

  • @ibrahimwehbe1153
    @ibrahimwehbe1153 Před 3 lety

    Great stuff

  • @grantschmitt6098
    @grantschmitt6098 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for the videos Tyler. You didn’t mention adding loose fiber glass into the mix, perhaps this is covered in reinforcing. I’ll keep watching.

  • @muhannadmuhammed4700
    @muhannadmuhammed4700 Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much

  • @turbotrana
    @turbotrana Před 3 lety

    Great video. Long life plasterer and bricklayer cement mix would be good.

  • @akoponen
    @akoponen Před 4 lety +4

    Instead of having one just type of concrete, use a couple inches of silica fume concrete as the outer layer to reduce migration to and from the rest of the concrete in the middle.

  • @neilguilbeault9950
    @neilguilbeault9950 Před 5 lety +2

    Enjoy your content, I'm a contractor and one of my older friends says he adds a cup of wood ash to every 3L ratio of portland. He says this will make it more waterproof.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks Neil!
      I like that tip. Do you have anymore details about the wood ash?

    • @neilguilbeault9950
      @neilguilbeault9950 Před 5 lety +2

      @@TylerLey Just that he took it out of his woodstove, around here that makes it hardwood ash. He sifted it and kept it in lidded pails .

    • @soniadelapaz8351
      @soniadelapaz8351 Před rokem

      Blended Banana peels and Bean water in place of what ever water youd normaly use strengthens the bind of atoms by 75 percent

  • @BobLobsiger
    @BobLobsiger Před 3 lety +1

    when I built my shop...and living with very poor flatwork done in my home and attached garage...I spec'd 6 inches of 4500 psi, as dry of slump as the finisher was willing to work with, poured over radiant tubes with wire re-enforcement. Once poured and finished, about four hours later I ran water through the radiant tubes to remove heat to slow the cure. Water went in around 50 degrees and came out in the 90's. The water then was sent to a sprinkler that was set on the slab. I ran the water for three days. This was summer with daytime temps in the 90's. Turned out great. only one crack in 8 years.

    • @metalrooves3651
      @metalrooves3651 Před 3 lety

      Wouldnt running water..I ncrease the speed it cured?

    • @BobLobsiger
      @BobLobsiger Před 3 lety +1

      @@metalrooves3651 At Hoover Dan they ran refrigerant pipes to help cool the concrete. Too much heat can cause cracking. It was July and for three + days it was in the high 90's. If I would have poured it in cooler months I would have done something different. Keep in mind the water was sprinkled on the slab so some of the heat was put back. It was all about slowly curing and keeping the slab hydrated. They run sprinklers on bridge pours all the time around here...

  • @someguy89
    @someguy89 Před 5 lety +5

    Regular curing methods ensure that the concrete surface is well cured, but deeper inside the concrete the cement can still be starved of water, particularly in low w/c ratio mixes. To solve this problem we can introduce internal curing. This can be accomplished by replacing a portion of the aggregate with a porous material (such as expanded shale). The porous material is pre-soaked it water to fill all the voids in the aggregate with water. When the concrete is mixed, the extra water within the voids of the aggregate is trapped and does not dilute the cement paste (thus reducing its strength, as shown in the video), but once the free water in the concrete is consumed during curing, the water within the voids defuses out of the aggregate, helping to further cure the cement paste (or make those white circles in the video even larger). Internal curing can thus make concrete both stronger and more impermeable.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks Dave!
      I agree that internal curing is a big help in low w/cm concrete. Thanks so much for jumping in.

    • @rodolfollanera5936
      @rodolfollanera5936 Před 5 lety

      How about the effects of porous aggregates on strength of concrete sir.

    • @someguy89
      @someguy89 Před 5 lety

      @@rodolfollanera5936 If all your aggregate was porous you might have a problem getting a high strength concrete, but typically only a fraction of it needs to be, maybe 10-25% of the sand.

    • @someguy89
      @someguy89 Před 5 lety

      ​@@TylerLey Thanks for your great videos. I'm learning a lot. To be honest, I don't think I fully understood the internal curing concept (which I was introduced to at the Canadian NRC while breaking cylinders a number of years ago) until watching this video and composing my comment above. Your diagram showing how the particles hydrate and link together helped me to visualize what is really going on. Might be worth doing a video on internal curing some day.

    • @bubba9482
      @bubba9482 Před 4 lety

      This may be beneficial for large members like beams and walls. What about slabs? Wouldn't the porous materials give their water up during the finishing process? This may lead to excessive bleed water and hinder the finishing process.

  • @ravnalkumar1406
    @ravnalkumar1406 Před 3 lety

    Very well explaned sir...i made a mistake by adding more water to create the flow but the outcome was bad..i was wondering why cracks since i added more cement ..now i knw that water was more..

  • @Ardyen317
    @Ardyen317 Před 5 lety +4

    Another great informative video. I have been watching the reconstruction of the Oroville Dam spillways. At some point could you explain the different mixes and methods that they used in this huge process?

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks Rick,
      I will be talking with some of the engineers from that project next month. I will ask them about it.

  • @zidnyknight3611
    @zidnyknight3611 Před rokem

    thanks

  • @chrisalford3364
    @chrisalford3364 Před 5 lety

    For pumping slurry with a low variability aggregate will fly ash silica and slag also increase strength. I am speaking of use in c&c printing of concrete.

  • @HyperDrakeHyperSpeed
    @HyperDrakeHyperSpeed Před rokem +1

    Please make a video about why so many buildings in Turkey failed during the recent earth quake. Thanks for all your videos.

  • @BiPolarBear722
    @BiPolarBear722 Před rokem

    Adding proper drainage is helpful around footings. Helps with erosion so there is less stress on the concrete.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před rokem

      Drainage is always a good idea!

  • @srdjansimanic2404
    @srdjansimanic2404 Před rokem

    Comment for the algo, great stuff, keep going!!

  • @hasanshirazi9535
    @hasanshirazi9535 Před 5 lety +5

    It is important to implement a performance based specifications to achieve 100+ year durable concrete. Specifying a particular w/cm ratio may not be enough. It is more important to achieve required strength, permeability, shrinkage, creep, resistance to freezing and thawing, high modulus, and resistance to chemical, chloride and sulfate attack etc. We need to come up with better performance based specs to ensure that concrete lasts for a very long time.

  • @billhopen
    @billhopen Před 3 lety +1

    when you are finishing semi hardened "green "concrete with a steel trowel, add a spray of water and dust it with dry pure portland cement powder.....swirl it round and round, work that pure portland paste into the pores. the poured cement going off will catalyze the fresh cement slime you are working in and make it go off pretty quick......keep it all wet as long as possible, even after its hard as hell. if you want a rough surface, use foam or wood trowel for the swirling

  • @kiranrampp19
    @kiranrampp19 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video sir...! I think particle packing also have a role in concrete durability. If we are using particle packing ( aggregates) while design the concrete, it will reduces the porosity. Therefore, it increases the life span of concrete.

    • @technosaurus3805
      @technosaurus3805 Před 5 lety

      Whoa there, you're getting into the realm of high level math. The sphere packing problem is already very complex. Adding in the variability of aggregates puts it in PhD thesis territory or some kind of X prize.

  • @fcalin21
    @fcalin21 Před 2 lety

    Never , ever, beat on the forms !

  • @nhutnguyen9010
    @nhutnguyen9010 Před 3 lety +1

    Design phase: W/C =

    • @nhutnguyen9010
      @nhutnguyen9010 Před 2 lety

      Hi Mr. Tyler, I have a question “How do we assess reinforced concrete durability over 100 years? Please kindly support!

  • @suemarks1632
    @suemarks1632 Před 3 lety +2

    Hey Tyler Excellent presentation. Let me offer a "boots on the ground " observation about concrete design specification based not only on your empirical data but also based on observations of reality. Engineering specification/tolerances are to extreme and often concrete is rejected simply because air is half a percent over or under. Also, even with water reducing agents, sump requirements do not allow workability, (keep in mind the adversity that engineers and inspectors have towards "over vibrating") There seems to an engrained fear about the fragility of concrete. It will get hard and usually only fail if there is an extreme variation from excepted practices not de mini mas deviations.

  • @ShankarMurugesan
    @ShankarMurugesan Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you for all the wonderful video about concrete

  • @mortonmorton6083
    @mortonmorton6083 Před 2 lety

    I'm wanting to make a dome bunker this guy has great info wonder what he would use

  • @mikekelly5869
    @mikekelly5869 Před 2 lety

    Minimum service life for Category 5 Eurocode O is 100 years. Good video on how to hit that standard. No Rice Krispie syndrome here.

  • @chrisalford3364
    @chrisalford3364 Před 5 lety +5

    I have experience with FRC and FRG. Fiberglass reinforced concrete and fiberglass reinforced grout. We have used monomers and polymers. Fiberglass used in gfrc have a coating on it I am unfamiliar with its exact composition. Unlike fiberglass used for fiberglass matrix with styrene. I also have experience in that area as well. I read an article decades ago scientific American I love you baby styrofoam microspheres to reduce weight.

    • @garret1930
      @garret1930 Před 4 lety +1

      I remember my materials prof saying that the fibers often start aligning with the each other during pouring and that directionality is worse that if the fibers were truly randomly oriented, how do you get around this issue?

  • @jakedee4117
    @jakedee4117 Před 5 lety +7

    Could you take us on a trip so show us some concrete failures and tell us what went wrong ?

  • @tobiasb154
    @tobiasb154 Před rokem +1

    Any thoughts on specific formulas and fiber reinforcement for making barbell weight lifting plates out of concrete?

  • @lindajonesartist
    @lindajonesartist Před 5 lety +1

    0kay, you dangled the rest of the lists of things to make concrete last 100 years, so I'm looking forward to the videos you're going to make concerning having a plan of attack and maintaining concrete. If you've already done those videos, could you put links to them in the description box? Thanks! I so appreciate these videos that you're making. I'm learning a lot.

  • @hybridamerica
    @hybridamerica Před 5 lety +28

    I'm really interested in perfecting the concrete methods. There are some things that need to be cleared up, however.
    When you vibrate concrete, you have to be careful that your aggregate/rocks do not settle to the bottom and that you end up with cream rising to the top that has far less aggregate and when the concrete is floated out, way too much water floats to the surface creating a really weak surface that will spall and flake immediately after curing. A slump test will demonstrate the proper mixture for each job.
    Some applications like dry-pack are far preferable BECAUSE of the loose packing of the concrete and the air gaps are necessary for permeability, as the water drains through the concrete purposefully. This is suitable for shower pans (resting on pan-liner of course) and swimming pools.
    The addition of fiber and admix strengthens the Hell out of concrete, but remember, both additives affect the finishing. Troweling plasticized cement is really difficult and staining the cement with an acid stain is out of the question. To finish a slab (for example) while maintaining a workable surface, you can add fiber to the bottom 3/4 and have a fiber free mix for the top 1/4 spread.
    Floating/finishing has to be relatively perfectly timed, if you do it too soon, you bring too much water to the surface - literally ruining the job. If you wait too long, it becomes unworkable and you ruin the job.
    The proper use of rebar supports is critical for large area strength- the problem with rebar is that it rusts. They even manufactured a green-rebar to resolve this issue, but the same problem arose with the green coating getting scratched during shipping. We coat our rebar after it has been placed and pour around the freshly coated rebar.
    The rule of thumb for concrete work is "40 and rising". You don't want to do anything "concrete" if the temperature is below 40 degrees F.

    • @metalrooves3651
      @metalrooves3651 Před 3 lety +2

      When we vibrated an 800 yard pour in the mountains of colorado in the oil shale retort,we only dropped thevibrator in every 2 feet..fast in and slow out..I was told by an engineer there that we poured at a 4 inch slump to save money.he told me we could put 1/2a sack more per yard and pour at a 6 slump for the same strength ...

    • @cchemmes-seeseeart3948
      @cchemmes-seeseeart3948 Před 2 lety

      Can you give any help as to what you would recommend as an ideal mix / process for lightweight concrete used for hand built (not mold cast) sculpture... both indoor sculptures & outdoors?

    • @hybridamerica
      @hybridamerica Před 2 lety +1

      @@cchemmes-seeseeart3948 ALL CRETE or NEW CRETE by Rapid set. If you are wanting to pack the concrete by hand, I would recommend a retarding solution to slow drying time. If you are pouring into some kind of form, just follow manufacturers instructions.
      Use cold water and make sure all containers are perfectly clean. Even a little contamination can upset a mix.

    • @hybridamerica
      @hybridamerica Před 2 lety +1

      @@cchemmes-seeseeart3948 If you are doing terrazzo (grinding polish) then just add decorative stones (or any grindable material) to the mix.

    • @metalrooves3651
      @metalrooves3651 Před rokem

      this comment about 3/4 had fiber?WHAT do you mean?and 1/4 had no fiber to finish it?Surely you cant mean to pour 4 inches thick then come back and pour 2 inches without fiber!....you will NEVER FIND THIS DONE ANYWHERE!nor will you find a contractor to do it!,,in all this vid,while he talks about molecular structure ,HE FAILS to say order 4000-5000 psi concrete,pour it at a dry 5 inch slump,dont over vibrate,get the rebar chaired up 1.5 inches from the bottom of the slab!......this one sentence is what this is all about!

  • @joeblow6037
    @joeblow6037 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm a glassblower and former owner of a business that designed and produced custom colored borosilicate glass.
    I don't want to get into it too much, but silica fume is complete magic.
    Also, there's a few of us who've been trying to develop a technique to create stronger concrete by using our waste glass as a medium. Currently, there is no way to recycle borosilicate glass, and there are countless tons of waste produced yearly. We've had pretty good success so far. If we can create a small batch concrete that's strong and durable enough, we know there are a plethora of uses for it.

  • @syednaqeebshah6694
    @syednaqeebshah6694 Před 3 lety

    Making mesh of beats foam in different directions in block forming like bone meshwork the space can be filled by cement sand fast

  • @TonyAnytime
    @TonyAnytime Před 4 lety +1

    The Aggregate is important, must be clean and strong, mix sizes is good. Vibrate, timely pour, slump, temperature control, lots of clean water afterward. We used to buy ours by the truck. Sometimes a pour would be 5 trucks, sometimes 10, sometimes 30. And if a truck was bad it could jeopardize the whole pour, and possibly the project. So we check each truck for slump, and time from plant. Not all provider had good quality control in plant, we used only the ones we thought were consistent, specially for critical pours.
    So by the time the concrete got to us after 30 minutes of traffic, it was well mix, there was a final adjustment in water based on slump,, we mixed five minutes and then poured via pump. We then vibrated, in hole. As the hose moved around, we took temperature readings and also listened for noises in the concrete. My job was to watch and listen. And have them move the pumps to the next spot and let that spot set a bit before continuing. With large amounts of concrete it can get very hot and this can dry out concrete and prematurely cure it falsely. If this was underwater it was not a big deal, mother nature would let moisture in. But if pour was above ground managing temperature/moisture was important. On cold days, of 40F-50F we cold still do pours with additives but we watched temperature in other direction, we did not want it to get too cold.
    At the end the most important part depending on situation, if cold we would put blankets over concrete to hold temperature and moisture and them plastic. Or if hot just the plastic. We would then have a guy come by at least twice a day and water the concrete to make sure it stay wet for at least 4 days.This is the most important part for making sure it sets right.
    Btw, the best time to pour concrete is early morning so that it gets mid-day sun for faster initial setting, then you finish off by afternoon and then it sits through the night well curing and moist. By morning water it again. Concrete drinks alot of water. The more water you give initially the stronger it will get. The first 30 days it is gaining strength, so if you can keep wet for a month the stronger it will be.
    Tyler makes great videos, my comments are meant to give some real world concrete experience that I gain from the millions of tons of concrete that I poured over the years. Some of the info may be obsolete, or wrong, but that is the way we were taught. I am not a concrete scientist, just a guys that used to swim in it for many. Yes, swim with it, when we did an underwater pour I directed the hose by swimming a few feet above the wet concrete. Crazy times.

  • @lindakoep1281
    @lindakoep1281 Před 5 lety +2

    I wish you would have listed metakaolin as a SCM along with silica fume, slag, and fly ash. Your videos are very informative.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks Linda,
      Metakaolin is a great SCM if you have it available locally. Thanks for the comment.

    • @cchemmes2096
      @cchemmes2096 Před 9 měsíci

      I cannot find any of these products locally to add to my concrete/ mortar sculpture. The more I searched, I found the possibility of Diatomaceous earth as a pozzolan? This is available locally at a reasonable price. Would this work? @@TylerLey

  • @user-nw2gf5mq7g
    @user-nw2gf5mq7g Před 6 měsíci

    Flagler's concrete bridges in the Florida Keys are 100 years old and still strong. High cement ratio and mixed with mineral rich seawater.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 6 měsíci

      The Sunshine Skyway bridge has some seawater used during mixing and it has been a constant maintenance headache.

  • @mytech6779
    @mytech6779 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm curious about how this paste formulation and aggregate sizing plays with pervious/purposfully-porous concrete strength. I would assume that you still want the paste to be low water and even add some pozzolans as the paste bond strength may be even more critical than it is with a sand filled void spaces, and so there is very little microporosity even though the goal is a large amount of macro-pores.

  • @ftbs
    @ftbs Před 3 lety +1

    I want to build my own concrete fence panels for a residential application. Keeping the horizontal slats 1 to 2" thick I was planning to reinforce with remesh or rebar. Then I thought about which type of concrete and which additives I'd need. I watched several of your videos and felt very inadequate. What to do?

  • @CS-gw5cq
    @CS-gw5cq Před 3 lety +2

    What do you think about mixing fibre or microrebars with concrete?

  • @ma_khalid655
    @ma_khalid655 Před 5 lety +4

    Awesome vedio.
    Could you please do a vedio on Roman concrete

    • @Kpopzoom
      @Kpopzoom Před 5 lety +1

      Please cover mined pozzalines like BASF Metamax which is super fine milled and is better than fly ash.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety

      Here is an older video on Roman concrete: czcams.com/video/PMed3YtN-Fo/video.html

  • @Kevin-fj5oe
    @Kevin-fj5oe Před 2 lety

    Tyler : make concrete last 100 yeats
    Roman : YOU GOTTA PUMP THOSE NUMBERS UP, THAT'S A ROOKIE NUMBERS

  • @nz1229
    @nz1229 Před 3 lety +1

    I love the audience reaction between 5:10 and 5:25. Must be your grad students? LOL

  • @robnowe5464
    @robnowe5464 Před rokem +1

    Can you talk about Type K cement? How about PRAHs like Techcrete 2500 and Masterlife 300D and Xypex and Hycrete Endure WP AND Hycrete Endure CP for steel corrosion protection? Can you talk about E5's Internal Curing admixture? What about particle packing? What about paste to fine aggregate bond strength? So many questions? Why are PCE Superplasticizer HRWRs better than others or are they?

  • @salamamer702
    @salamamer702 Před 5 lety

    I want to give you one million thumbs up and i want to ask you about what we can do in the hot country to increase the life of concrete is there thing specifically

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks!
      I would do everything that I mentioned in the video. Curing is very important in hot environments.

  • @000gjb
    @000gjb Před 5 lety +42

    Please explain how the Romans made concrete to last more than a thousand years. There are examples of Roman Ports still in existence.

    • @ssmith2019
      @ssmith2019 Před 5 lety +3

      They had slaves to do the work and crucifixion for the slaves that produced concrete that was less than perfect ! So the impetus to make concrete that lasts two thousand years was there and it was a big part of why the Roman Empire did such good works !

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +18

      Check this video out:
      czcams.com/video/PMed3YtN-Fo/video.html
      The ones that survived are in very mild environments. I need to do a video on survivor bias.

    • @technosaurus3805
      @technosaurus3805 Před 5 lety +14

      No steel rebar to rust + pozzolans (volcanic ash, crushed fired clay bricks, etc...). They also hand compacted it with large aggregate in manageable layers. They even used different mixtures for bonding, scratch coat and surface.
      No way that is happening on an economical scale with pump trucks, but we can get close using modern pozzolans and fiberglass (or maybe carbon fiber / graphene eventually ) instead of steel rebar.
      Robert Murray Smith's channel showed significant improvements over existing solutions by adding a bit of graphene to the mix.
      People have tried everything from agar to wood ash but it comes down to chemistry. Ideally you want a chemical reaction to achieve high strength relatively quickly but have enough chemical left to react later to fill cracks and prevent various types of erosion. It's all a balancing act of quality vs speed vs price.

    • @occuponvoix
      @occuponvoix Před 5 lety +5

      i was told that it's the salt water they pour in that make it stronger and it's NOT romain concrete they stole the recepy from a nearby enemiy.
      they say the the salt create a corrosive mix and when it dry out it give a welding effect to the rock and a natural immunity against sea water

    • @mchapa7842
      @mchapa7842 Před 5 lety

      Tyler Ley .

  • @makeit2132
    @makeit2132 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Tyler, How do SRAs play into all this? wouldn't surface tension reduction lead to more water permeability?

  • @jasonwilde197
    @jasonwilde197 Před 4 lety +2

    PhD In Engineering. Amateur in video production. You are on CZcams, but I feel like these videos were produced in the 90s with VHS tech. Still very informative and I guess that's the point, kinda. However better video quality tends to equal more views. You need more views. You sir are criminally undersubscribed.

  • @huntera123
    @huntera123 Před 5 lety

    Great video!
    What aggregates would you spec in, and how difficult is that to accomplish/ how costly?

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety

      Thanks!
      Specifying aggregates is very challenging and so focused on local practices. I would look around for a local aggregate with a great track record. The local DOTs also typically have very good methods to determine durable aggregates. The problem is that they vary from place to place. If I had to choose one test then I would use the ASTM C666 test and use 6% air in the concrete.

  • @aby0ni
    @aby0ni Před 2 lety +1

    Would concrete stratify (or segregate) if I vibrate it for too long? Or is that only an issue if the w/c is high?

  • @cvsWebDesigns
    @cvsWebDesigns Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks. we use magnesium orthosilicate for sandblast media and have a tremendous amount of dust accumulating in our filters. CAN I use that dust to make concrete? I understand the magnesium orthosilicate is a great material, but how about after it's pulverized and mixed with things like rust and paint?

  • @nikolasc4142
    @nikolasc4142 Před 2 lety

    Great videos many thanks for educating us.But there is always a but… I often wonder how is possible to pre-define a future duration of a product’s life cycle without being able to follow your self this life cycle (100 years) For instance I buy painted composite aluminum from a new coming company which is in the market only 10 years and they promise a life cycle of 25 years ! How is that possible ???

  • @kellyjensen9425
    @kellyjensen9425 Před 5 lety +2

    On Vibration: "Might want to keep doing it a little more for safety factor". Too much vibration will separate the aggregate from the cement. Obviously not completely but enough that the top of your slab will have too much paste (cement). Cement shrinks and so the top layer will shrink at a different rate and will cause failures such as delamination. Good video, just stating what I've learned. Exposed concrete in cold regions is typically air entrained. Vibration can remove these super small bubbles. I’m curious how you design an air entrained slab of concrete to last 100 years. Perhaps the engineering requires not using air entrainment. Not sure

    • @metalrooves3651
      @metalrooves3651 Před 3 lety

      Curb and gutter in street construction are poured without vibrators and a t a 2 inch slump...LOTS OF HONEYCOMB!A JUNL WAY TO DO IT!

  • @occuponvoix
    @occuponvoix Před 5 lety

    does putting baking soda in the mix could help make it better insulated?
    co2 is great in styrofoam insulate, now if we just pour it strait in the concrete could reduce the amount of styrofoam you need to use
    in theory it sacrifice strength for better insulation, so if you don't plan on building a castle and you live in siberia or the mojave desert this could be a great mix to print a house

  • @christo930
    @christo930 Před rokem +1

    The Hoover dam was started in 1930. That means there is 97 year old concrete structures with rebar still standing.

  • @SmeeUncleJoe
    @SmeeUncleJoe Před 11 měsíci

    At minute 6, 3 new products are introduced : Fly ash, Slag and Silica Fume. Which is best ? What are some of the factors in choosing one over the other ? What about Basalt fibres ? I was surprised not to find it on the list. Thanks.

  • @bappigorai
    @bappigorai Před 5 lety

    Sir what could be the harmful effects of other oxides present in cement such as MnO, MgO , SO, etc. If the limits are exceeded as specified in the Standards.

  • @FesterPussbucket
    @FesterPussbucket Před 3 lety

    I used to work with hi performance concrete. I don't want to get into who I worked for or what I built. Let's just say it was more tightly controlled than a slab for a shed.
    The plant was in Florida. We had hell with sodium ion proliferation. Salts is in the air near the coast and thanks to saltwater intrusion, in the well water too unless you pull from deep in the aquifer. Even then you can still get sodium contamination.
    Getting to my point, if a few tricks.... Super P was always a given. The synergy that came with lignonsulfates was a huge plus as well as the delay the lignonsulfates gave us to finish the pieces a few times we had really important pieces with crazy specs from customers. We also had a nut job for a research scientist. I won't drop names. We worked great together even if he looked like Doctor Robotnik.
    We developed a procedure to cure under pressure. We only used distilled water on those projects.. We also tried to duplicate pressure treating. Cure in heated water under pressure until 7 days of curing, then 21 days open atmosohere. Then 7 days in a vacuum environment with moisture absorbant packs. The packs were quickly removed and vacuum was reapplied for 24 hours. The piece was then again submerged in curing fluid under pressure at 120°F for 14 days. The curing solution was little more than acrylic emulsion, and a little vinegar. I mean very little. Like 0.001% theoretically it would open pores for the acrylic to bond and be weak enough to netralize before eating through the float layer. The pieces were then wet polished and waxed like a car. We got break strengths if 16,000+ psi. We never failed a test.
    I also have to comment about silica fume. If durability is your goal, silica fume is your best friend. But.... nasty to work with, and I always substituted 3% flyash for workabiluty. Fiber reinforcement is also gold.
    Yes it was highly involved and expensive, but our pieces belong to puzzles that guard VERY valuable stuff. Mud like that doesn't work in a drum mixer. A pan mixer can work, but a volumetric auger mixer was most efficient. For really special stuff, only a pan mixer was feasible.

  • @gdounito
    @gdounito Před 5 lety

    Prestressed concrete please!! And some advice about when to remove the forms optimally!

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety

      I agree that prestressed is a great idea. You can find a video on form removal here: czcams.com/video/oWpTcXhOl6A/video.html

  • @234doit
    @234doit Před 5 lety

    I have seen and used PPC with higher concentration of F.A. like 35 + % and it works well in hot climate of India. The F.A keeps on reacting with water to seal the micro cracks for many days even after cement has been set.

    • @TylerLey
      @TylerLey  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks for the information!

    • @234doit
      @234doit Před 5 lety

      @@TylerLey I would like to know something here has anyone ever tried mixing both slag and Fly Ash in cement ? If yes what would be the result be like? I had this talk with some senior guy from NCCBM (the Institution in India that approves quality of cement and Building material and does research on them), they kind of liked the idea but didnt explain on what would that do.

  • @rizvabahrum3779
    @rizvabahrum3779 Před 2 lety

    Could somone here give some insight when we want to make concrete weight plate for barbells? Im asking about the reinforcement. Is just adding Chopped Strand Mat Fiberglass enough to strengthening it? Or maybe with addition of steel wire around the circle will help increase the overall strength? Since it might be accidentaly dropped to the ground many times but not hard drop. Thanks in advance.

  • @blakekemak2340
    @blakekemak2340 Před 2 lety

    How about trying to make concrete similar to roman concrete to mimic the cristallizing chemical reaction that increase hardness instead of mini fractures over time. There was recent new information about this process and I'm curious if it can be made today or if it just happened to be dumb luck.

  • @KokkiePiet
    @KokkiePiet Před 5 lety

    What is your opinion on additives like Sodium metasilicate or Alginate?

  • @Guruprasad-df3te3hx5m
    @Guruprasad-df3te3hx5m Před 4 lety

    Hi sir ,how to retrofit fire damage concerte.

  • @user-ss6zt2mo1l
    @user-ss6zt2mo1l Před rokem

    What do you think about people doing all this DIY stuff with Dry Pours of QuickCrete ? They put forms down. Then pour in dry quickcrete then mist the surface over and over and finally shower it over like an 8 hour period. How long do dry pour slabs last ?

  • @health7744
    @health7744 Před 4 lety

    Hi Sir, In India, we are getting Portland Pozzalona Cement 66% OPC + 34% Fly ash. Having said that, 1.can we use this for concrete. 2. As adding the flyash 34% in the cement, will it increase the Concrete durability to double the life which stand for more than 100 years.

  • @stratelyze2095
    @stratelyze2095 Před rokem

    Any recommendations for cleaning rust off concrete

  • @drewd7824
    @drewd7824 Před rokem

    At 6:60 fly ash is 20% replacement in mass of what? Total paste? Cement? Sand? 20% of which? Can you go over how you would order concrete? And timing for the pour?

  • @kevinjmellis
    @kevinjmellis Před 4 lety +3

    Excellent video. I personally however am using aircrete, which has with billions bubbles so absolutely zero vibration.