T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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625.1 | don't do it | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:25 | 16 |
| I used rock salt on cast concrete steps at my previous house. It totally
destroyed them in just a few years, and the destruction was continuing
long after I stopped using salt.
The concrete pad outside the back door of my present house (build 1976)
did well until a family member used rock salt two years ago. The concrete
now has nearly inch-deep pits and gouges, and it's obvious that the
erosion is continuing. It's probably irreversible.
I would not use salt on concrete under any circumstances.
I don't know if there is a sealer.
Hope this helps,
Art
|
625.2 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:34 | 7 |
| There are several types of "safety salt" available that are friendly
to grass as well as concrete. They cost a little more but then what's
the price of a new driveway.
Brian V
|
625.3 | may be useful | SMURF::WALTERS | | Thu Sep 15 1994 15:25 | 16 |
|
I think it's worth using a concrete finish like Thompsons Water Seal
to help prevent salt damage. I use it in the Garage as you can't
prevent road salt from the car getting on to the garage floor.
I've also used the concrete crack sealer to fill a few minor cracks in
the concrete ramp. What seems to happen here is that the water runs
down in the crack and causes frost heave to lift the cracked sections,
gradually breaking up the concrete further. The grey mastic sealer is
intended to prevent water ingress, but still allow thermal expansion at
the joints.
Colin
|
625.4 | Thompsons Water Seal on tar? | TLE::PERIQUET | Dennis Periquet | Thu Sep 15 1994 15:54 | 9 |
|
Can you use the Thompsons Water Seal on tar driveways (which is what I
have)? I like the idea of sealing the garage since the salt will get
in there.
Thanks,
Dennis
|
625.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Sep 15 1994 18:14 | 7 |
| Re: .4
No - and there's no benefit to sealing an asphalt driveway other
than it makes it look good for a short time thereafter.
Steve
|
625.6 | Consider sand instead of salt | HYDRA::BECK | Paul Beck | Thu Sep 15 1994 22:48 | 11 |
| Another approach is to eschew the use of salt altogether. We've got
a 300' driveway that goes uphill and around a curve; we do have it
plowed, but when it turns into a luge run (which it inevitably does)
we use sand to make it navigable. Ash from the wood stove also comes
in handy.
Salt's pretty nasty stuff; it'll mess up your shoes and your floors
(when you track it in) as well as your driveway and your bushes.
(It doesn't hurt that we both have 4wd.)
|
625.7 | | TOOK::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Sep 15 1994 23:55 | 11 |
| The problem with salt and concrete is one of "material fatigue". Once you
put salt on a concrete run in the winter time, some portion of it stays there
for a _long_ time. It's usually the late spring rains that might wash the
last of it away. In the mean time, for the rest of the winter, even if
there's no snow or ice on the walk, the remaining salt is affecting the
freeze/thaw cycles as the temperature fluctuates. It's this "invisible"
process that causes miniscule cracks to open in the remaining concrete,
allowing moisture (laden with salt) to enter, which then freezes/thaws
some more, causing more damage, etc. Salt and concrete aren't a good combo.
-Jack
|
625.8 | why is it done then? | SMURF::WALTERS | | Fri Sep 16 1994 09:44 | 17 |
|
> No - and there's no benefit to sealing an asphalt driveway other
> than it makes it look good for a short time thereafter.
An ongoing matter of opinion, but I've seen a number of commercial
places doing this recently.
I can't believe that commercial institutions like airports and
mall car parks (even Digital, until recently) would lay out huge
amounts of cash to seal asphalt if there were not any long-term
financial benefits. Who cares if a car park or runway looks pretty?
Colin
|
625.9 | I've seen this sold along side rock salt | SMAUG::FLOWERS | IBM Interconnect Eng. | Fri Sep 16 1994 10:42 | 6 |
| > Salt's pretty nasty stuff; it'll mess up your shoes and your floors
> (when you track it in) as well as your driveway and your bushes.
What about calcium chloride, then? Just as bad?
Dan
|
625.10 | Calcium chloride cheaper? | TLE::PERIQUET | Dennis Periquet | Fri Sep 16 1994 11:56 | 8 |
|
re: .-1 and calcium chloride
Isn't this stuff supposed to do the same thing as salt except be
cheaper?
Dennis
|
625.11 | | WRKSYS::MORONEY | rearranger of rotating rust | Fri Sep 16 1994 13:53 | 12 |
| re .10:
It's more expensive by the pound than salt, but it's quite a bit more
effective (less needed and works at a colder temperature) I do not know
if it harms cured concrete (other than some is actually added to cement when
poured for certain reasons)
Potassium chloride is also available that doesn't harm the grass like salt
(it's actually a fertilizer) Again I do not know its effect on concrete
but I think it's less harmful than salt.
-Mike
|
625.12 | Looking for a hand | WMOIS::FLECK_S | Love me, Love my dogs, cats, etc. | Sat Aug 24 1996 13:25 | 7 |
|
I live in Gardner and have a small blacktop type patio. I would
like to seal it before winter but don't want to tackle this job myself.
Does anyone know someone who would give me an estimate and possibly
do the job? I could buy the sealing stuff or it can be included in th
cost. I would also want references on the person. Thanks in advance!
Sue
|
625.13 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Aug 25 1996 21:14 | 3 |
| Why do you want to seal it? Is it in poor shape?
Steve
|
625.14 | seal-coat company, or d.i.y. | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Aug 26 1996 11:22 | 44 |
| You could probably get a driveway seal-coating company to do it, if you
don't want to bother with it yourself - I don't know what they charge,
though. It really isn't such a bad job to do yourself. You need a few
minutes one week and an hour or less a week later. The first week,
fill the cracks with crack filler. This stuff comes in enormous
pour-spout bottles, so you can probably find a neighbor who has a 90%
full bottle of it, rather than buying one (you'll never use up the whole
thing). This stuff is approximately the consistency of Elmer's glue,
and you simply pour it into any cracks (remove debris, weeds, and loose
blacktop first). It needs to dry before you can put on the sealing
compound. The sealant comes in in a big bucket. You need a solid
board, like a scrap piece of strapping, to stir it with, and the tool
to apply it, which looks like a big squeegee with bristles. Putting it
down is real simple, once you have stirred it up (that may take a while
- it tends to settle out, and is very gloppy/gooey). You just pour
some on the surface and scrub it in with the squeegee tool after
wetting the surface with a hose. Pick a day when it isn't going to
rain for 24 hours. After you get done, don't let anyone walk on it for
a day or two. The sealant smells pretty bad (it smells like tar, of
course) so you want to pick a windy day and probably shut the windows
on that side of the house until it is mostly dry. The smell goes away
after a few hours. It really isn't a bad job at all - it may take you an
hour, if you are real meticulous about mixing up the goop. I did my
whole driveway in an hour with someone else mixing up the goop.
I'm not convinced that sealing blacktop helps all that much, either,
but I figured I had better do mine this summer. Very late last fall,
the town repaved my street, which included cutting off the ends of
everyone's driveways and replacing them when they repaved the
sidewalks. By the time they got done, it was winter (that happened fast
last year!). So my driveway had a crack across the entire wdith of it
where the new blacktop butted up against the old. Since I had the
driveway rebuilt only a few years ago (and paid quite a bit for it,
too), I figured I had better fill that crack and seal the whole thing
so that no ice would form in the crack this year and break the surface
up. It does have the useful side effect of making the driveway very
black. Mine is very steep and faces west, so the darker it is the
better in the winter, since if I clear most of the ice and snow off it,
the rest will melt off if it is a dark color. It is very hard to get
into my house when it is icy otherwise, since the driveway goes up a
steep slope from the street.
/Charlotte
|
625.15 | It's too STINKY! | WMOIS::FLECK_S | Love me, Love my dogs, cats, etc. | Mon Aug 26 1996 12:52 | 12 |
|
I wanted to seal it because I heard it will last longer and I
don't like stuff on it and it would be easier to sweep if it was
smooth instead of bumpy(just tar).
The only reason I don't want to do it is the smell makes me
sick, I know that sounds wimpy but I rather pay a small amount and
stay away for a while than do it myself.
How do you pick a day that you know its not going to rain for
24 hours, especially living in New England?ha ha
It does sound real easy to do, maybe I can persuade
Dad(who retired just-in-time for all my projects!)
Thanks Sue
|
625.16 | gonna get warm | MROA::MACKEY | | Mon Aug 26 1996 13:43 | 2 |
| with the darker black from the sealer it is going to be that much
hotter to sit out on in the sun
|
625.17 | good job for your dad | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Aug 26 1996 13:44 | 22 |
| Well, you can use the crack filler yourself, anyhow - that doesn't
smell bad. I don't think it had much of a smell at all, actually.
If you were doing a driveway, where there might be spills of engine oil
and stuff, you'd have another step to do to wash off the oil spots with
a special detergent so that the sealant will stick better - that's not
a tough or smelly job either. We used a push-broom to scrub off under
where my old car used to sit - it dripped a variety of fluids its last
few years.
Try to talk your dad into putting the sealant on - it really isn't a
very tough job. If you can't cope with the tar smell, go away for the
day. Most of the smell is gone after a few hours, when the surface is
just tacky. Don't walk on it for at least a day; two is better. You
don't want to track it inside; it's a real pain to clean up.
Long term weather forecasts are better than they used to be, thank
goodness. It used to be real tough to figure out when to do jobs that
can't get wet for a while, but you have a pretty good chance of the
forecast being right, these days.
/Charlotte
|
625.18 | | 19573::ALLISON | | Mon Aug 26 1996 13:50 | 8 |
| Something else to consider... If you have any slope at all on your
driveway, consider getting the sealer with sand already in it.. This
gives it a much grittier texture. I've seen how slick they can
be in the winter (and even rain) without the extra texture.
$10 for 6 gallons at HD.
_Gary
|
625.19 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Aug 26 1996 14:21 | 9 |
| If you seal it, you'll have to do it again and again and again - every
couple of years or so - or it will look awful. The "bumpy" surface, if
properly constructed, will need no regular maintenance (other than filling
cracks and removing oil spills) for many years.
There are new acrylic sealers on the market, but I have not read anything
about how well they work.
Steve
|
625.20 | | DUNKLE::MCDERMOTT | Chris McDermott - Software Janitorial Services | Mon Aug 26 1996 14:31 | 14 |
| Steve,
I'd be interested in you elaberating on your statement in .5.
I have a alsphalt driveway about 1.5 years old. Its top-coat is very rough and
I would like to smooth it out to make clearing it of debris (grass clippings,
pine needles, etc) a bit easier. I've also heard that sealing protects the
asphalt from gas and oil spills. And, according to what I found on the TOHJ
homepage, without sealing an asphalt driveway will become brittle and
deteriorate
(http://pathfinder.com/@@ZfX9ogcA*Aw82fGX/TOH/96_01/driveway/drive4.html).
Thanks,
Chris
|
625.21 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Aug 26 1996 16:01 | 10 |
| Yes, sealing will provide some protection against oil and gas drips, if that's
a problem. No, a properly constructed driveway will last 20 years or more
without sealing. Sealing is 95% cosmetic, but once you have sealed once,
you have to keep doing it over and over as the sealant breaks up after a year
or so.
If you want a very smooth surface, then sure, seal it. I happen to like the
rough surface and don't find it a problem to clean.
Steve
|
625.22 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Tue Aug 27 1996 13:36 | 13 |
|
We have a 9 year old driveway, never been sealed. The only "cracks"
are at the junction of the driveway and the road. I suppose a sealed
driveway looks better, but there are other places I'd rather spend
the time and money on. I don't sweep my driveway enough to notice
the bumps - if I really want it clean, I'd hose it down.
At our previous house, we had the driveway sealed since the snow
plow did a job on it, cracked it at several places. It is certainly
easy to run a plow over a sealed driveway.
eva
|
625.23 | | WMOIS::FLECK_S | Love me, Love my dogs, cats, etc. | Mon Sep 02 1996 12:00 | 6 |
|
Thanks for all your info, I ended up sealing my patio this weekend,
my neighbor was doing his driveway and had an extra bucket so......
It really wasn't too hard and didn't smell as bad as I thought it
would. Now if the rain would hold off! Sue
|