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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
Driveway replacement question
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 3590062" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>Zactly. If anybody told me 3.5 inches was perfect, I'd almost double it. If I was told rebar was good on 24" centers was perfect, I'd knock it down to 16". (My patio, deck, hot tub is on 12" centers with rebar and fiber cement, no cuts)</p><p>If anyone told me the fiber cement didn't need rebar, I'd kindly inform them that is not true and show them a cracked issue in more than one place on a sidewalk. </p><p>That's why engineering is necessary. What works in one place isn't good in another. I'm a gorilla builder that contractors working on a budget and a contract builders for concrete can't put into their budget to get a job. They have to minimize expenditures and sometimes quality to get the contract from state agencies.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 3590062, member: 5412"] Zactly. If anybody told me 3.5 inches was perfect, I'd almost double it. If I was told rebar was good on 24" centers was perfect, I'd knock it down to 16". (My patio, deck, hot tub is on 12" centers with rebar and fiber cement, no cuts) If anyone told me the fiber cement didn't need rebar, I'd kindly inform them that is not true and show them a cracked issue in more than one place on a sidewalk. That's why engineering is necessary. What works in one place isn't good in another. I'm a gorilla builder that contractors working on a budget and a contract builders for concrete can't put into their budget to get a job. They have to minimize expenditures and sometimes quality to get the contract from state agencies. [/QUOTE]
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