Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Although often used interchangeably – even by some construction professionals – cement is not concrete nor is concrete cement.
CEMENT is one of the basic ingredients used to make CONCRETE … just as FLOUR is one of the basic ingredients used to make CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES. When cement is mixed with other basic ingredients — sand, gravel or crushed stone, and water– the cement and water react to form a paste that glues the remaining ingredients into a rock-like mass which is known as concrete.
Slump is used as a measure of consistency of concrete, and is most often associated with the amount of water added to the concrete mix to increase ease of placement (the higher the slump, the wetter the mix).
The addition of water to increase slump beyond the design specification will result in reduced-strength potential for the concrete and possible surface deterioration. Quality Utah contractors place concrete for exterior pavement applications at a moderate slump — not more than 4 to 5-inches — unless a water-reducing admixture is used.
Ordering ready-mix concrete from American Eagle Ready Mix must be done by calling our Central Dispatch office, who will fill your order from the closest plant location. Before you call, measure your project and create a scale drawing, including the actual dimensions. Also, when filling out your project form, please indicate concrete by volume, expressed in cubic yards.
Be prepared to share the following information with our Central Dispatch:
- Name
- Project address
- Directions to project site
- County the project is located in
- Job site phone number and contact (land-line or cell)
- Date and time concrete is required
- Volume of concrete needed, in cubic yards
- Concrete mix desired
- Intended use (driveway, patio, basement floor, etc.)
- Desired slump
- Description of available truck access
- Interval between loads (if more than nine yards of concrete are required)
- Concrete placement method (chute, wheelbarrow, concrete pump, or the like)
- Payment method.
Holidays hours are determined on a case-by-case basis. Know our employees work long, hard hours throughout the year and, like you, want and deserve time off to spend with family and friends.
If organization, planning, and project management skills are not your strong suit, you would best be served by hiring a construction professional for your concrete project. Site excavation, subgrade preparation, and building and setting concrete forms are not easy tasks for most do-it-yourselfers.
Placing and finishing concrete is hard work. Concrete is heavy – about 150 pounds per cubic foot – and difficult to place, consolidate, strike off, level, and finish. Timing of many finishing operations is crucial and best learned through experience. Mistakes in timing may prove critical. As the National
Ready Mixed Concrete Association’s Finishing Concrete Flatwork publication points out, “Any finishing operations undertaken while the concrete slab is still “bleeding” will result in problems for the finished slab, such as scaling, cracking, delamination, dusting, or concrete blisters.” Bleeding characteristics for concrete can vary, based on mix design, subgrade preparation, and weather conditions, and can often challenge experienced contractors.
Yet for some do-it-yourselfers, the hard work and high-degree of skill, management, and adventure required to complete a successful concrete project provides a unique sense of satisfaction. If this describes you, and you can muster enough friends to safely and efficiently transfer concrete from the ready-mix truck into preset, well-braced forms, go for it.
Only if the driver determines the situation is safe, with the additional requirement of a signed waiver of release by the homeowner for all movement past the curb line.
Your American Eagle Ready Mix driver will take the following factors into consideration:
- can the slope leading to your project be safely navigated?
- can the ground to and surrounding the project support the weight of the loaded truck?
- can the truck maneuver safely under power lines, tree limbs, roof eaves, and other overhead obstructions
- can the truck maneuver safely through the opening available to reach the project?
American Eagle Ready Mix works with the best concrete pumping/conveyor service contractors in Salt Lake and Utah counties and is happy to provide recommendations and contact information for you.
For these, and reasons stated above, the use of a qualified concrete contractor is highly recommended, unless you and members of your placing and finishing team have prior experience in placing and finishing concrete.
Most broom finishes for concrete sidewalks and driveways are straight-line textures broomed at right angles to the anticipated traffic direction. Broom finishes are not incorporated into most decorative concrete finishes.
Consult with your concrete contractor regarding when you can place your new driveway in service.
Remember deicers can also reach concrete surfaces other than by direct application — for example, drippings from the undercarriage of vehicles. During and after the concrete’s second winter, deicing chemicals containing sodium chloride (common salt) or calcium chloride may be used judiciously.
NEVER use deicers containing ammonium sulfate or ammonium nitrate, as they will chemically attack and rapidly disintegrate concrete.
ALSO NOTE: common garden fertilizers often contain ammonium sulfate and/or ammonium nitrate and can cause disintegration of your concrete. Avoid loading or cleaning your fertilizer spreader on your concrete slab and follow best-spreading practices by applying fertilizer around the periphery of your lawn first, without crossing pavement, then run the spreader back and forth within the area bounded by your perimeter fertilizer run. This practice both ensures consistent fertilizer application around the edge of your lawn and, because the spreader never crosses pavement, minimizes the potential for fertilizer damage to your concrete.
Mechanic’s liens exist to provide collection rights to contractors and material suppliers who supply construction services or materials for improvements to real property. Waiver-of-lien forms provide protection for homeowners who pay their home improvement bills. With a mechanic’s lien, the concrete supplier or concrete contractor has the right to serve the homeowner with notice of lien and to record it as part of the county land-title records, should payment not be made for materials or services provided. A lien is a claim of partial ownership of your home.
If the mechanic’s lien is not paid, the material supplier or contractor can commence court proceedings to foreclose the lien and sell the property in payment of the obligation. A waiver-of-lien form provides a homeowner proof that subcontractors and material suppliers have been paid and relinquish their right to serve the homeowner with a notice to place a lien the home.
The case history that follows explains why lien waivers are important to homeowners: Mr. Jones signed a contract with ABC Contractors for the construction of an addition to his home. When the work was done, Jones paid the contracted price and started enjoying his new addition. A month later, he received a “Notice of Intent to File Claim for Lien” in the mail from the lumberyard where ABC Contractors obtained building materials.
What happened?
Although Jones had paid his bill, ABC Contractors did not pay the lumberyard. The law allows a subcontractor or supplier of materials to place a lien on the property where the work was done if the contractor doesn’t pay his bills. This can happen even if the homeowner has paid the contract in full.
To protect against similar circumstances, we recommend calling to ensure that materials have been paid for in full before paying your contractor out for the project.
Consumers’ Report cautions homeowners to get written proof of these policies.
Once you start thinking in earnest about your concrete project, contact your insurance agent regarding necessary safeguards.
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