Is a roofing delivery truck likely to crack my driveway slab?












9















I am having shingles delivered. The truck weighs 62,000 lbs, will this crack my concrete slab driveway? Also, they plan on a dump truck in the driveway to throw shingles from the roof. I am not sure what weight the dump truck is.










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  • 12





    Where do you live? What's the thickness of the driveway? What's the makeup of the concrete? Is there steel mesh or rebar located within the slab? Are there any existing issues with cracking, settling etc of the driveway? What type of base is under the concrete? As you can see, we'll need far more information before anyone can even imagine trying to come up with an answer.

    – stevieb
    15 hours ago













  • Non technical answer: The roofing company does this all the time, and they don't want to break your driveway. It will probably be fine, but as mentioned you need a lot more data to be sure. Ask them what happens if their big heavy trucks damage your driveway and see what they think.

    – JPhi1618
    15 hours ago











  • @JPhi1618 - that is a big truck. Not going on any of my driveways for sure. What does contract say? Roofing company going to pay to repour if there is an issue. FYI I have seen roofing companies break at least 20 driveways in my life - the absolute best thing I have seen them do is put a crappy looking topcoat repair on cracks and most of the time do nothing. Home owners should not let one trade mess up another trade. Even if that truck has a 2% chance of damaging... no.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago











  • @DMoore, I'll agree with that. Even if they said they would fix the driveway, they would probably want to do it the easy way and then fight against anything else.

    – JPhi1618
    14 hours ago






  • 4





    @JPhi1618 - if driveway broke, homeowner should expect two bags of quickcrete patch repair and a guy missing half his teeth making $10 an hour reading the instructions, mixing it and spreading it on with a trowel. Not even exagerating on this one.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago
















9















I am having shingles delivered. The truck weighs 62,000 lbs, will this crack my concrete slab driveway? Also, they plan on a dump truck in the driveway to throw shingles from the roof. I am not sure what weight the dump truck is.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ruth Blanch is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 12





    Where do you live? What's the thickness of the driveway? What's the makeup of the concrete? Is there steel mesh or rebar located within the slab? Are there any existing issues with cracking, settling etc of the driveway? What type of base is under the concrete? As you can see, we'll need far more information before anyone can even imagine trying to come up with an answer.

    – stevieb
    15 hours ago













  • Non technical answer: The roofing company does this all the time, and they don't want to break your driveway. It will probably be fine, but as mentioned you need a lot more data to be sure. Ask them what happens if their big heavy trucks damage your driveway and see what they think.

    – JPhi1618
    15 hours ago











  • @JPhi1618 - that is a big truck. Not going on any of my driveways for sure. What does contract say? Roofing company going to pay to repour if there is an issue. FYI I have seen roofing companies break at least 20 driveways in my life - the absolute best thing I have seen them do is put a crappy looking topcoat repair on cracks and most of the time do nothing. Home owners should not let one trade mess up another trade. Even if that truck has a 2% chance of damaging... no.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago











  • @DMoore, I'll agree with that. Even if they said they would fix the driveway, they would probably want to do it the easy way and then fight against anything else.

    – JPhi1618
    14 hours ago






  • 4





    @JPhi1618 - if driveway broke, homeowner should expect two bags of quickcrete patch repair and a guy missing half his teeth making $10 an hour reading the instructions, mixing it and spreading it on with a trowel. Not even exagerating on this one.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago














9












9








9








I am having shingles delivered. The truck weighs 62,000 lbs, will this crack my concrete slab driveway? Also, they plan on a dump truck in the driveway to throw shingles from the roof. I am not sure what weight the dump truck is.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ruth Blanch is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am having shingles delivered. The truck weighs 62,000 lbs, will this crack my concrete slab driveway? Also, they plan on a dump truck in the driveway to throw shingles from the roof. I am not sure what weight the dump truck is.







concrete load






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Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









Glorfindel

2691411




2691411






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asked 15 hours ago









Ruth BlanchRuth Blanch

462




462




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New contributor





Ruth Blanch is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Ruth Blanch is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 12





    Where do you live? What's the thickness of the driveway? What's the makeup of the concrete? Is there steel mesh or rebar located within the slab? Are there any existing issues with cracking, settling etc of the driveway? What type of base is under the concrete? As you can see, we'll need far more information before anyone can even imagine trying to come up with an answer.

    – stevieb
    15 hours ago













  • Non technical answer: The roofing company does this all the time, and they don't want to break your driveway. It will probably be fine, but as mentioned you need a lot more data to be sure. Ask them what happens if their big heavy trucks damage your driveway and see what they think.

    – JPhi1618
    15 hours ago











  • @JPhi1618 - that is a big truck. Not going on any of my driveways for sure. What does contract say? Roofing company going to pay to repour if there is an issue. FYI I have seen roofing companies break at least 20 driveways in my life - the absolute best thing I have seen them do is put a crappy looking topcoat repair on cracks and most of the time do nothing. Home owners should not let one trade mess up another trade. Even if that truck has a 2% chance of damaging... no.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago











  • @DMoore, I'll agree with that. Even if they said they would fix the driveway, they would probably want to do it the easy way and then fight against anything else.

    – JPhi1618
    14 hours ago






  • 4





    @JPhi1618 - if driveway broke, homeowner should expect two bags of quickcrete patch repair and a guy missing half his teeth making $10 an hour reading the instructions, mixing it and spreading it on with a trowel. Not even exagerating on this one.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago














  • 12





    Where do you live? What's the thickness of the driveway? What's the makeup of the concrete? Is there steel mesh or rebar located within the slab? Are there any existing issues with cracking, settling etc of the driveway? What type of base is under the concrete? As you can see, we'll need far more information before anyone can even imagine trying to come up with an answer.

    – stevieb
    15 hours ago













  • Non technical answer: The roofing company does this all the time, and they don't want to break your driveway. It will probably be fine, but as mentioned you need a lot more data to be sure. Ask them what happens if their big heavy trucks damage your driveway and see what they think.

    – JPhi1618
    15 hours ago











  • @JPhi1618 - that is a big truck. Not going on any of my driveways for sure. What does contract say? Roofing company going to pay to repour if there is an issue. FYI I have seen roofing companies break at least 20 driveways in my life - the absolute best thing I have seen them do is put a crappy looking topcoat repair on cracks and most of the time do nothing. Home owners should not let one trade mess up another trade. Even if that truck has a 2% chance of damaging... no.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago











  • @DMoore, I'll agree with that. Even if they said they would fix the driveway, they would probably want to do it the easy way and then fight against anything else.

    – JPhi1618
    14 hours ago






  • 4





    @JPhi1618 - if driveway broke, homeowner should expect two bags of quickcrete patch repair and a guy missing half his teeth making $10 an hour reading the instructions, mixing it and spreading it on with a trowel. Not even exagerating on this one.

    – DMoore
    14 hours ago








12




12





Where do you live? What's the thickness of the driveway? What's the makeup of the concrete? Is there steel mesh or rebar located within the slab? Are there any existing issues with cracking, settling etc of the driveway? What type of base is under the concrete? As you can see, we'll need far more information before anyone can even imagine trying to come up with an answer.

– stevieb
15 hours ago







Where do you live? What's the thickness of the driveway? What's the makeup of the concrete? Is there steel mesh or rebar located within the slab? Are there any existing issues with cracking, settling etc of the driveway? What type of base is under the concrete? As you can see, we'll need far more information before anyone can even imagine trying to come up with an answer.

– stevieb
15 hours ago















Non technical answer: The roofing company does this all the time, and they don't want to break your driveway. It will probably be fine, but as mentioned you need a lot more data to be sure. Ask them what happens if their big heavy trucks damage your driveway and see what they think.

– JPhi1618
15 hours ago





Non technical answer: The roofing company does this all the time, and they don't want to break your driveway. It will probably be fine, but as mentioned you need a lot more data to be sure. Ask them what happens if their big heavy trucks damage your driveway and see what they think.

– JPhi1618
15 hours ago













@JPhi1618 - that is a big truck. Not going on any of my driveways for sure. What does contract say? Roofing company going to pay to repour if there is an issue. FYI I have seen roofing companies break at least 20 driveways in my life - the absolute best thing I have seen them do is put a crappy looking topcoat repair on cracks and most of the time do nothing. Home owners should not let one trade mess up another trade. Even if that truck has a 2% chance of damaging... no.

– DMoore
14 hours ago





@JPhi1618 - that is a big truck. Not going on any of my driveways for sure. What does contract say? Roofing company going to pay to repour if there is an issue. FYI I have seen roofing companies break at least 20 driveways in my life - the absolute best thing I have seen them do is put a crappy looking topcoat repair on cracks and most of the time do nothing. Home owners should not let one trade mess up another trade. Even if that truck has a 2% chance of damaging... no.

– DMoore
14 hours ago













@DMoore, I'll agree with that. Even if they said they would fix the driveway, they would probably want to do it the easy way and then fight against anything else.

– JPhi1618
14 hours ago





@DMoore, I'll agree with that. Even if they said they would fix the driveway, they would probably want to do it the easy way and then fight against anything else.

– JPhi1618
14 hours ago




4




4





@JPhi1618 - if driveway broke, homeowner should expect two bags of quickcrete patch repair and a guy missing half his teeth making $10 an hour reading the instructions, mixing it and spreading it on with a trowel. Not even exagerating on this one.

– DMoore
14 hours ago





@JPhi1618 - if driveway broke, homeowner should expect two bags of quickcrete patch repair and a guy missing half his teeth making $10 an hour reading the instructions, mixing it and spreading it on with a trowel. Not even exagerating on this one.

– DMoore
14 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















18














Unless your home is a 20 bedroom mansion I would simply tell them to keep that off your driveway period. You can't tell what load it will take because it depends how packed it still is, what condition it is in and how thick it was poured (and if this was uniformly done). Often these large trucks will crack driveways in the corners of their pours since the depth in the parts are tapered even by the most reputable companies and can get to 3-4" inches with poor contractors.



So just don't let them on driveway or make that a risk their insurance will pay for. I have roofers at sites all the time. I hardly ever let them on the driveway. With a crew of 4-5 they can carry the stuff/wheelbarrow/whatever and it is done in 20 mins. Stay off my driveways, don't break them, don't drop crap from your trucks, don't spit mud everywhere - not my problem.



If my front lawn is not in great condition and it is dry I tell them to use that. That is all I offer. If they have a regular truck then fine. Even a bobcat I will not let them go up and down the driveway unless they are paying for repairs.



Bottom line is you paid for a new roof. Their deal to get shingles to your house. Not saying to be unreasonable - I try to make things easy for trades to get future discounts but you must use common sense. There is a good chance that crew suggests pulling truck next to house and then if the owner came out he would yell at them (worried about being liable for damage). Yes of course a truck that big could damage a good percentage of driveways.



Addition for dump truck: This depends on size. I have never had a roofing company use a dump truck at my site. These are less risk because of wheel sizes but still not letting a full size one on my driveway. Most roofing companies for a residential house use dump trailers that are a lot less invasive and they are lower to the ground so you can get these really close to house so there isn't a ton of stuff in the gap.



(FYI this size truck is about the same size the big boxes use to deliver bulk drywall. The operators of these trucks will not come on your driveway if you request that they do. Simply they know the chance for damage is high and they would probably be liable and get fired. That is why they use a forklift. If there was no risk then these huge companies would be instructing their operators to save time by driving as close as possible - big companies micromanage these processes to make money.)






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    Tell them to use a forklift

    – Sunnyskyguy EE75
    14 hours ago






  • 5





    edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

    – dandavis
    13 hours ago








  • 2





    @dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    @dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

    – DMoore
    12 hours ago











  • @DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago













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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









18














Unless your home is a 20 bedroom mansion I would simply tell them to keep that off your driveway period. You can't tell what load it will take because it depends how packed it still is, what condition it is in and how thick it was poured (and if this was uniformly done). Often these large trucks will crack driveways in the corners of their pours since the depth in the parts are tapered even by the most reputable companies and can get to 3-4" inches with poor contractors.



So just don't let them on driveway or make that a risk their insurance will pay for. I have roofers at sites all the time. I hardly ever let them on the driveway. With a crew of 4-5 they can carry the stuff/wheelbarrow/whatever and it is done in 20 mins. Stay off my driveways, don't break them, don't drop crap from your trucks, don't spit mud everywhere - not my problem.



If my front lawn is not in great condition and it is dry I tell them to use that. That is all I offer. If they have a regular truck then fine. Even a bobcat I will not let them go up and down the driveway unless they are paying for repairs.



Bottom line is you paid for a new roof. Their deal to get shingles to your house. Not saying to be unreasonable - I try to make things easy for trades to get future discounts but you must use common sense. There is a good chance that crew suggests pulling truck next to house and then if the owner came out he would yell at them (worried about being liable for damage). Yes of course a truck that big could damage a good percentage of driveways.



Addition for dump truck: This depends on size. I have never had a roofing company use a dump truck at my site. These are less risk because of wheel sizes but still not letting a full size one on my driveway. Most roofing companies for a residential house use dump trailers that are a lot less invasive and they are lower to the ground so you can get these really close to house so there isn't a ton of stuff in the gap.



(FYI this size truck is about the same size the big boxes use to deliver bulk drywall. The operators of these trucks will not come on your driveway if you request that they do. Simply they know the chance for damage is high and they would probably be liable and get fired. That is why they use a forklift. If there was no risk then these huge companies would be instructing their operators to save time by driving as close as possible - big companies micromanage these processes to make money.)






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    Tell them to use a forklift

    – Sunnyskyguy EE75
    14 hours ago






  • 5





    edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

    – dandavis
    13 hours ago








  • 2





    @dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    @dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

    – DMoore
    12 hours ago











  • @DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago


















18














Unless your home is a 20 bedroom mansion I would simply tell them to keep that off your driveway period. You can't tell what load it will take because it depends how packed it still is, what condition it is in and how thick it was poured (and if this was uniformly done). Often these large trucks will crack driveways in the corners of their pours since the depth in the parts are tapered even by the most reputable companies and can get to 3-4" inches with poor contractors.



So just don't let them on driveway or make that a risk their insurance will pay for. I have roofers at sites all the time. I hardly ever let them on the driveway. With a crew of 4-5 they can carry the stuff/wheelbarrow/whatever and it is done in 20 mins. Stay off my driveways, don't break them, don't drop crap from your trucks, don't spit mud everywhere - not my problem.



If my front lawn is not in great condition and it is dry I tell them to use that. That is all I offer. If they have a regular truck then fine. Even a bobcat I will not let them go up and down the driveway unless they are paying for repairs.



Bottom line is you paid for a new roof. Their deal to get shingles to your house. Not saying to be unreasonable - I try to make things easy for trades to get future discounts but you must use common sense. There is a good chance that crew suggests pulling truck next to house and then if the owner came out he would yell at them (worried about being liable for damage). Yes of course a truck that big could damage a good percentage of driveways.



Addition for dump truck: This depends on size. I have never had a roofing company use a dump truck at my site. These are less risk because of wheel sizes but still not letting a full size one on my driveway. Most roofing companies for a residential house use dump trailers that are a lot less invasive and they are lower to the ground so you can get these really close to house so there isn't a ton of stuff in the gap.



(FYI this size truck is about the same size the big boxes use to deliver bulk drywall. The operators of these trucks will not come on your driveway if you request that they do. Simply they know the chance for damage is high and they would probably be liable and get fired. That is why they use a forklift. If there was no risk then these huge companies would be instructing their operators to save time by driving as close as possible - big companies micromanage these processes to make money.)






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    Tell them to use a forklift

    – Sunnyskyguy EE75
    14 hours ago






  • 5





    edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

    – dandavis
    13 hours ago








  • 2





    @dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    @dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

    – DMoore
    12 hours ago











  • @DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago
















18












18








18







Unless your home is a 20 bedroom mansion I would simply tell them to keep that off your driveway period. You can't tell what load it will take because it depends how packed it still is, what condition it is in and how thick it was poured (and if this was uniformly done). Often these large trucks will crack driveways in the corners of their pours since the depth in the parts are tapered even by the most reputable companies and can get to 3-4" inches with poor contractors.



So just don't let them on driveway or make that a risk their insurance will pay for. I have roofers at sites all the time. I hardly ever let them on the driveway. With a crew of 4-5 they can carry the stuff/wheelbarrow/whatever and it is done in 20 mins. Stay off my driveways, don't break them, don't drop crap from your trucks, don't spit mud everywhere - not my problem.



If my front lawn is not in great condition and it is dry I tell them to use that. That is all I offer. If they have a regular truck then fine. Even a bobcat I will not let them go up and down the driveway unless they are paying for repairs.



Bottom line is you paid for a new roof. Their deal to get shingles to your house. Not saying to be unreasonable - I try to make things easy for trades to get future discounts but you must use common sense. There is a good chance that crew suggests pulling truck next to house and then if the owner came out he would yell at them (worried about being liable for damage). Yes of course a truck that big could damage a good percentage of driveways.



Addition for dump truck: This depends on size. I have never had a roofing company use a dump truck at my site. These are less risk because of wheel sizes but still not letting a full size one on my driveway. Most roofing companies for a residential house use dump trailers that are a lot less invasive and they are lower to the ground so you can get these really close to house so there isn't a ton of stuff in the gap.



(FYI this size truck is about the same size the big boxes use to deliver bulk drywall. The operators of these trucks will not come on your driveway if you request that they do. Simply they know the chance for damage is high and they would probably be liable and get fired. That is why they use a forklift. If there was no risk then these huge companies would be instructing their operators to save time by driving as close as possible - big companies micromanage these processes to make money.)






share|improve this answer















Unless your home is a 20 bedroom mansion I would simply tell them to keep that off your driveway period. You can't tell what load it will take because it depends how packed it still is, what condition it is in and how thick it was poured (and if this was uniformly done). Often these large trucks will crack driveways in the corners of their pours since the depth in the parts are tapered even by the most reputable companies and can get to 3-4" inches with poor contractors.



So just don't let them on driveway or make that a risk their insurance will pay for. I have roofers at sites all the time. I hardly ever let them on the driveway. With a crew of 4-5 they can carry the stuff/wheelbarrow/whatever and it is done in 20 mins. Stay off my driveways, don't break them, don't drop crap from your trucks, don't spit mud everywhere - not my problem.



If my front lawn is not in great condition and it is dry I tell them to use that. That is all I offer. If they have a regular truck then fine. Even a bobcat I will not let them go up and down the driveway unless they are paying for repairs.



Bottom line is you paid for a new roof. Their deal to get shingles to your house. Not saying to be unreasonable - I try to make things easy for trades to get future discounts but you must use common sense. There is a good chance that crew suggests pulling truck next to house and then if the owner came out he would yell at them (worried about being liable for damage). Yes of course a truck that big could damage a good percentage of driveways.



Addition for dump truck: This depends on size. I have never had a roofing company use a dump truck at my site. These are less risk because of wheel sizes but still not letting a full size one on my driveway. Most roofing companies for a residential house use dump trailers that are a lot less invasive and they are lower to the ground so you can get these really close to house so there isn't a ton of stuff in the gap.



(FYI this size truck is about the same size the big boxes use to deliver bulk drywall. The operators of these trucks will not come on your driveway if you request that they do. Simply they know the chance for damage is high and they would probably be liable and get fired. That is why they use a forklift. If there was no risk then these huge companies would be instructing their operators to save time by driving as close as possible - big companies micromanage these processes to make money.)







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edited 13 hours ago

























answered 14 hours ago









DMooreDMoore

28.8k1351121




28.8k1351121








  • 1





    Tell them to use a forklift

    – Sunnyskyguy EE75
    14 hours ago






  • 5





    edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

    – dandavis
    13 hours ago








  • 2





    @dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    @dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

    – DMoore
    12 hours ago











  • @DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago
















  • 1





    Tell them to use a forklift

    – Sunnyskyguy EE75
    14 hours ago






  • 5





    edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

    – dandavis
    13 hours ago








  • 2





    @dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    @dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

    – DMoore
    12 hours ago











  • @DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

    – TheCatWhisperer
    12 hours ago










1




1





Tell them to use a forklift

– Sunnyskyguy EE75
14 hours ago





Tell them to use a forklift

– Sunnyskyguy EE75
14 hours ago




5




5





edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

– dandavis
13 hours ago







edification: the thickness of the concrete doesn't matter much; most of the strength in a road/lot is from the base+sub-base material; thickness and quality (particularly gradation and compactness). 4" of concrete on 10" of limestone will be much stronger than 6" of concrete on 4" of base. I've seen crack-less decades-old hotmix surfaces, you can thank a non-chincy base for that. In short, don't judge a surface by the surface; look deeper.

– dandavis
13 hours ago






2




2





@dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

– TheCatWhisperer
12 hours ago





@dandavis I was about to say the same thing. The base is what matters here, a properly laid slab can handle that kind of load no problem... but concrete has poor tensile strength, so what you have to worry about is base deformation which would force the slab to act like a bridge in certain areas

– TheCatWhisperer
12 hours ago




1




1





@dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

– DMoore
12 hours ago





@dandavis - great comment. Most of the issues are on edges where the base has separated from the submaterial. Thickness matters but you are right, it isn't the main part of the equation.

– DMoore
12 hours ago













@DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

– TheCatWhisperer
12 hours ago







@DMoore I guess we all have a concrete idea of what's going on ;) I did a quick and dirty repair of the sidewalk going to my door. Everyone said the repair would crack within a few months because the pour was way too thin. But the base was solid and I properly formulated the mixture. 7 winters and not even a hairline crack :)

– TheCatWhisperer
12 hours ago












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