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You'll need a special saw with a diamond blade.
A solid slab is a reinforced concrete slab which is supported by beams or walls..
Just cut a 2' by 2' cut near the problem, the use a high priced grinder with a diamond grade blade and start cutting. This will get you about 2" deep, enough to pull the 90' Jack Hammer of you choice, and get after it! Atfer hammering and sawing you'll get there. Then you can start digging! Have Fun!
you should consider the dist between walls .to answer this question what does it look like show sample
Supended slab are slab not sit on the ground directlySuspended slab is a slab supported by beams.
You'll need a special saw with a diamond blade.
A solid slab is a reinforced concrete slab which is supported by beams or walls..
A one way slab reinforcement supports 2 walls while a two way slab reinforcement supports 4 walls. The one way slab reinforcement only supports walls in one direction.
Water.
That's sort of a strange question. A concrete slab is a horizontal surface -- it's meant to be a surface you stand on or build things on. Concrete blocks are usually used for vertical surfaces -- walls. I believe that poured concrete walls are more expensive than concrete block walls. You wouldn't use concrete blocks as a substitute for a concrete slab.
A mudsill is the board that you see bolted down to the foundation walls or to the slab.
A solid slab is either solid concrete foundation or a flat solid wood door as opposed to a hollow core or a panel door.
With a diamond saw. Such saws are available with circular blades with diamond chips coating the rim
assuming that it is a waterline leak, i would suggest the alternate route for simplicity sake.
Just cut a 2' by 2' cut near the problem, the use a high priced grinder with a diamond grade blade and start cutting. This will get you about 2" deep, enough to pull the 90' Jack Hammer of you choice, and get after it! Atfer hammering and sawing you'll get there. Then you can start digging! Have Fun!
A Pad foundation is just a concrete slab with no foundation walls. They are typically used in the South where this is no or minimal frost lines.
In laymen's terms, yes. Many people use the terms Slab-on-grade & Floating Slab interchangeably. However, architects, engineers, and construction workers may have a more refined interpretation. Most commonly, a Slab-on-grade construction refers to a foundation in which the a concrete slab (also most commonly thickened at the perimeter) rest directly on grade (aka ground). Where as a Floating Slab foundation refers to a concrete slab resting directly on the grade independently placed within a stem wall (aka foundation wall), which extends down to the depth of the local frost line, running around the entire perimeter. The walls of the building/structure are then built upon this "stem wall". This latter type of construction creates a 'heat bubble' so that the floor is not as subject to the expansion due to frost and secures the structures walls by being supported below the frost line.