4,526 views ·
16 replies
5k views
16 replies
Cast again in the basement after sewer replacement.
Or fine concrete if the slab is less than 5 cm.
Concrete is troublesome to transport home and mix, and gravel is easy to get home and shovel into the hole. So fill up with gravel so you don't need to cast such a thick slab. Easier to break up later too, the day the drain needs to be replaced again.
Concrete is troublesome to transport home and mix, and gravel is easy to get home and shovel into the hole. So fill up with gravel so you don't need to cast such a thick slab. Easier to break up later too, the day the drain needs to be replaced again.
Can you fill with leca balls and then EPS- concrete??Claes Sörmland said:
Small bags of concrete delivered home on a pallet by truck are incredibly convenient.Claes Sörmland said:
Or fine concrete if the layer is less than 5 cm.
Concrete is difficult to transport home and mix, and macadam is easy to get home and shovel into the hole. So, fill up with macadam so you don't have to cast such a thick layer. Easier to break up later too when the day comes to replace the drain again.
Certainly. And order home concrete in small bags that are easy to handle and mix.C cpalm said:
And mix in the basement near where you will use the concrete. Not outside.. That way you won't have to carry water.
I filled with Leca. It's convenient to buy a few bags compared to getting a load of crushed stone delivered home. Then I poured coarse concrete about 10cm thick, laid a thin layer of foam insulation in between so the concrete wouldn't seep down into the Leca. Mixed outside and wheeled it in with a wheelbarrow. Convenient if you set up a mixing station.


