Hey all,
Hoping for some advice on some issues we are having with self leveling concrete that was poured by our basement contractors last week. SLC was poured on floor surface after the old 9x9 asbestos tile had been removed by an abatement company. The old tile adhesive was still on the floor, and the abatement company applied a sealer to that several months ago now.
Our contractor applied primer prior to pouring the SLC, however they only sent 1 guys to pour the whole basement by himself (about 950 sq feet in multiple rooms).
I media felt after pouring the surface had lots of white streaking and inconsistent coloration. Now after a week there are multiple areas with surface cracking developing, as well as hollow sounding areas where the SLC bonding has failed (checked by dropping a golf ball around the floor)
From what I read they guy likely over watered the mix since there was so much white swirl on top right at pouring.
Is it acceptable to just chisel out the hollow spots and repour in those areas (what contractor will probably want to do)? Or is the proper fix to take all of the SLC out and repour from scratch?
They also fully tiled the bathroom already over the SLC, and I’m now worried there could be issues with the Tile in there is the SLC is debonded (likely based on the rest of it) as well.
Any advice is appreciated
Thank you
Hoping for some advice on some issues we are having with self leveling concrete that was poured by our basement contractors last week. SLC was poured on floor surface after the old 9x9 asbestos tile had been removed by an abatement company. The old tile adhesive was still on the floor, and the abatement company applied a sealer to that several months ago now.
Our contractor applied primer prior to pouring the SLC, however they only sent 1 guys to pour the whole basement by himself (about 950 sq feet in multiple rooms).
I media felt after pouring the surface had lots of white streaking and inconsistent coloration. Now after a week there are multiple areas with surface cracking developing, as well as hollow sounding areas where the SLC bonding has failed (checked by dropping a golf ball around the floor)
From what I read they guy likely over watered the mix since there was so much white swirl on top right at pouring.
Is it acceptable to just chisel out the hollow spots and repour in those areas (what contractor will probably want to do)? Or is the proper fix to take all of the SLC out and repour from scratch?
They also fully tiled the bathroom already over the SLC, and I’m now worried there could be issues with the Tile in there is the SLC is debonded (likely based on the rest of it) as well.
Any advice is appreciated
Thank you