no, not normally. It will cure more slowly and how much slower depends on how much dirt is piled on it.
Concrete never fully cures, but a non-quicksetting concrete should be firm on the surface in about 4-8 hours, and usable for foot traffic or post setting in 36 hours.
It Has Been Said Over 100 Years, Most Times In 24 Hours. If In Doubt Give It Another 12 Good Luck
what is the purpose of reinforcing bars in a spread footing
all things that need to dry are based on 72 degrees concrete needs 30 days to fully cure.
Yes it can. It actually cures harder under water then above it. True.
Concrete never fully cures, but a non-quicksetting concrete should be firm on the surface in about 4-8 hours, and usable for foot traffic or post setting in 36 hours.
28 days is the usual cure time for structural concrete. For street pavements and driveways made with 6-Sack concrete, 3 days of cure will support a car, but 7 to 10 days is required for it to support trucks. All concrete continues to cure forever, as long as moisture is present.
It Has Been Said Over 100 Years, Most Times In 24 Hours. If In Doubt Give It Another 12 Good Luck
what is the purpose of reinforcing bars in a spread footing
Yes and many so ask the supplier of your concrete.
Yes.
all things that need to dry are based on 72 degrees concrete needs 30 days to fully cure.
Sadly there is no cure it is 100% fatal in the first 48 hours if any known cure notify us
Yes it can. It actually cures harder under water then above it. True.
At least 3 days
Not much you can do if the concrete is already hard, but if you are talking about plastic concrete (still in its wet state), there's lots you can do to hurt/weaken it:If you had the wrong chemical admixturesAny addition of water at the job site will weaken the concreteFailture to properly cure the concrete
The duration of Pretty Cure All Stars is 1.23 hours.