Hollow sounding slabs - Hollow sounding slabs
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Hi,
I've got a newly laid patio. The slabs are Indian sand stone. When you walk over them they sound distinctly hollow. I believe they were laid on a full bed, with compacted scalpings as a sub bed. I've lifted a couple and they do seem to have a full bed. Under the scalpings there's rubble from what looks like old pebbledash - largest pieces about 3" x 1".
Question is - is this going to cause me trouble in the future...?
Thanks
I've got a newly laid patio. The slabs are Indian sand stone. When you walk over them they sound distinctly hollow. I believe they were laid on a full bed, with compacted scalpings as a sub bed. I've lifted a couple and they do seem to have a full bed. Under the scalpings there's rubble from what looks like old pebbledash - largest pieces about 3" x 1".
Question is - is this going to cause me trouble in the future...?
Thanks
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Hi,
There is the 40mm to dust stuff on top, it's just underneath that where the bigger pieces are. Here are some pics:
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/cf7uur5onqnos0l/KZM4w-CjFo
Thanks
There is the 40mm to dust stuff on top, it's just underneath that where the bigger pieces are. Here are some pics:
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/cf7uur5onqnos0l/KZM4w-CjFo
Thanks
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I've also just had a 90m2 of tumbled sandstone laid on a full mortar bed on a sub-base of 100mm concrete and a lot of the slabs sound hollow when tapped.The contractor says this is probably due to ridges in the mortar underneath as he assures me they are fully bedded and bonded. Should I be concerned about de-lamination (they came from Ajeers)?
C Wilson
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I wonder if this is a matter of perception? I went to look at a patio yesterday, just before the heavens opened, and the homeowner was adamant the flagstones sounded hollow, but to my hear, when clonked with my walking stick, they sounded fine.
Thinking about this last night, the only reason I could fathom for why the flags gave a higher-pitched sound when tapped than was the case with the reclaimed yorkstone laid elsewhere to his property was the thickness of the stone itself. The yorks will be at least 2" (50mm) thick, and give a dull 'thud' when tapped, whereas the imported sandstone has a more resonant 'tonk'.
I brutally forced a hollow-sounding 300x30mm square from its bed and, lo and behold, it was a full bed. Building sand mortar, which is very naughty, but a full bed nonetheless.
Thinking about this last night, the only reason I could fathom for why the flags gave a higher-pitched sound when tapped than was the case with the reclaimed yorkstone laid elsewhere to his property was the thickness of the stone itself. The yorks will be at least 2" (50mm) thick, and give a dull 'thud' when tapped, whereas the imported sandstone has a more resonant 'tonk'.
I brutally forced a hollow-sounding 300x30mm square from its bed and, lo and behold, it was a full bed. Building sand mortar, which is very naughty, but a full bed nonetheless.
Site Agent - Pavingexpert
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lutonlagerlout wrote:seadub why was the concrete being overlaid?
we come across this time and time again and its bad practise
100mm type 1 ,40-60mm bedding then the flag is sufficient
LLL
It was a sloped site so the contractor had to scrape off a layer of soil & turf from one half, build up the other half with tons of hardcore then MOT. He said a mass fill of readymix concrete, 120mm thick would be the best long term solid solution. The paving was laid approx. 10 days after the concrete was poured.
C Wilson