Romex/rompox
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thanks for the reply. this was what I'd thought but then I read this in the romex leaflet, so i was a bit confused...lutonlagerlout wrote:i wouldn't say its water permeable to the extent that water gets through it easily
I think that in general water runs off it rather than through it
the cold has had no noticeable effect on my romex
LLL
http://www.pavingexpert.com/pdf/romex_easy_07.pdf
"Rompox - Easy is a highly water permeable pavement fixing mortar that allows almost all quantities of rainwater to seep into the ground. Due to the open porous structure of ROMPOX - EASY, all the requirements for a water permeable and thus environmentally friendly fixing mortar are fulfilled. Ideal for natural paving."
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edit* oops-- that'll teach me to make a cup of tea mid post!
thanks for the reply. [and all the great info here-- very much appreciated!]
if it "holds" water, then is it susceptible to freeze/thaw action?
or I suppose what I'm asking is which product would you use to point indian sandstone-- just for residential patio type use?
thanks again
thanks for the reply. [and all the great info here-- very much appreciated!]
if it "holds" water, then is it susceptible to freeze/thaw action?
or I suppose what I'm asking is which product would you use to point indian sandstone-- just for residential patio type use?
thanks again
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The adhesive strength of Romex is so high that the sort of frosts we get in Britain and Ireland will have no impact. The stuff is manufactured and tested in Germany, where they have man-size frosts, for months at a time some years, and the jointing survives, apparently.
Any expansion of water within the joint that occurs during a freeze episode displaces water upwards and out of the joints without compromising the pavement.
And to answer LLL's point about the permeability of bedding, it *is* possible to create permeable laying courses. I've designed a selection for various clients looking to create permeable pavements for all sorts of reasons. It's simpler than you think!
Any expansion of water within the joint that occurs during a freeze episode displaces water upwards and out of the joints without compromising the pavement.
And to answer LLL's point about the permeability of bedding, it *is* possible to create permeable laying courses. I've designed a selection for various clients looking to create permeable pavements for all sorts of reasons. It's simpler than you think!
Site Agent - Pavingexpert
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anyway dr.benway, mine has been down 3 years and is still fine
you have the grey matter working overtime now boss, how can a bedding layer be permeable??? hmmmm
no fines mix perhaps?
some expensive gftksbrromexronamillion product??
one thing i have noticed dr.benway is the romex discolours with general dirt etc
but the old jetwasher soon gets it looking pristine again
courtesy of RA pressure washing
LLL
you have the grey matter working overtime now boss, how can a bedding layer be permeable??? hmmmm
no fines mix perhaps?
some expensive gftksbrromexronamillion product??
one thing i have noticed dr.benway is the romex discolours with general dirt etc
but the old jetwasher soon gets it looking pristine again
courtesy of RA pressure washing
LLL
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thanks for the repliesTony McC wrote:Any expansion of water within the joint that occurs during a freeze episode displaces water upwards and out of the joints without compromising the pavement.
I can see how the romex itself will resist frost/freeze, but what happens to the water that goes through the romex, surely it will find even the smallest voids underneath?
how permeable is "ordinary" mortar pointing?
I also read the spec sheets for vdw, and the heavy duty, 2 part is 5 times more permeable than the pre-mixed.
thanks