Better grip on concrete advice wanted
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On the track to my house there is a steep corner which is ridged concrete. This has worn so that when it is wet it is very slippy and hard to get up without wheel spinning. This is 1 in 4 steep. The area in question is about 30m square.
What I would like to do is make this bit of the track more grippy for winter. I'm looking for a short term solution and one I can do myself for about £150. It only has to last the winter. I was thinking of just laying about an inch of concrete on top? Would this work and is this the cheapest option?
Any advice would be welcomed.
Cheers,
Nick
What I would like to do is make this bit of the track more grippy for winter. I'm looking for a short term solution and one I can do myself for about £150. It only has to last the winter. I was thinking of just laying about an inch of concrete on top? Would this work and is this the cheapest option?
Any advice would be welcomed.
Cheers,
Nick
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Depends if it is rear wheel drive!lutonlagerlout wrote:put a few bags of dust(cement or something real heavy) in the boot of your motor the weight will give you extra traction
not a lot surfacing wise on a 1:4 slope will help for a ton-fifty
inch of crete will fall to bits
tony
Not a lot you can do weight-wise if it is a front wheel drive car.
1 in 4 track to house? That's about as steep as it gets!
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HSS do a surface scaler which is a bit cheaper to hire than the floor scabbler and does not require compressed air. Would that do a similar job?seanandruby wrote:maybe you could scabble it. that is roughing it up to make a key. see your local hire shop i am sure you can get an electric one.
good luck
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Ronadeck Fast Grip will do it, but it's going to cost more than your budget. And you'll need to mechanically prep. it first.
The suggestion of grinding/keying,scabbling the surface seems a good one to me. Without proper preparation you can't expect any surface applied anti-slip treatment to last very long.
Good luck.
The suggestion of grinding/keying,scabbling the surface seems a good one to me. Without proper preparation you can't expect any surface applied anti-slip treatment to last very long.
Good luck.
Simeon Osen
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