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hi all i'm really new to this. i dont know what is a good ratio to mix
to get a good cement texture. i will be getting my supplies from home depot. i'm trying to make a waterwall and pond for my back yard. i have been reading around this newsgroup and some guy said you have to seal the concrete with some kinda seal . this is what he said. "If I remember my old cement pond making days correctly, when the cement has apparently 'cured' you can brush a solution of water and sodium silicate over all surfaces, when that soaks in and dries it seals all surfaces considerably" what is sodium silicate?? i tried asking the guy at home depot and he looks at me funny . go figure. any help will be great..... newbie ponder |
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"urmomass" wrote in message
... hi all i'm really new to this. i dont know what is a good ratio to mix to get a good cement texture. i will be getting my supplies from home depot. i'm trying to make a waterwall and pond for my back yard. i have been reading around this newsgroup and some guy said you have to seal the concrete with some kinda seal . this is what he said. "If I remember my old cement pond making days correctly, when the cement has apparently 'cured' you can brush a solution of water and sodium silicate over all surfaces, when that soaks in and dries it seals all surfaces considerably" what is sodium silicate?? i tried asking the guy at home depot and he looks at me funny . go figure. any help will be great..... newbie ponder I used 3:1 sand to cement and added liquid frostguard (sort of a red liquid stuff - febeze in england). Allow to cure for at least a week before sealing, longer if you can. I used a pot of sealant, then undercoat then top coat all from the same manufacturer of pond paints. Given that it should last 30 years, the cost was negligible at about 30 ukp. Sodium silicate is Na4O4Si and is excellent for preserving pickled eggs, are you sure thats what you used? |
#3
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Sodium silicate is a curing material, and Symons at
http://www.symons.com/products/broch...mical/06ch.htm lists it as cure and hard. They really are just surface hardeners, and may help to close some of the pores so that the lime water from the cement does not migrate into the pond. Proper curing by keeping the concrete moist and allowing time, minimum a week, better a month or longer, the concrete will close most of its pores itself. Once the curing period is complete allow the surface to dry for several days to make a break in the capillaries between the concrete water, and the pond water. The lime cannot cross the barrier. Because concrete is very brittle, and the areas around our ponds are not completely stable, it is very likely to crack, and then it leaks. Some dry stack the rocks, use Great Stuff foam sealant, or grout the rocks but put liner behind the waterfall to be sure the leaks lead to the pond. As for a mix, it all depends on what you are trying to do. Full depth concrete would be the old 1:2:3 mix, using 1 bucket cement, 2 buckets sand, and 3 buckets of 1 inch size stone. I would recommend a minimum of 4 inches in thickness, and 6 inches would be better. If it is for grouting the rocks together, then a 1:2-1/2 or 1:3 mix should be good. Use Portland cement, not brick mortar mix. Brick mortar mix has added lime to make it more smooth and buttery, but allows for too much of the lime to leach into the pond and raise the pH. You would never get it sealed. HD sells some premixed "concrete" mix that should be ok. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "urmomass" wrote in message ... hi all i'm really new to this. i dont know what is a good ratio to mix to get a good cement texture. i will be getting my supplies from home depot. i'm trying to make a waterwall and pond for my back yard. i have been reading around this newsgroup and some guy said you have to seal the concrete with some kinda seal . this is what he said. "If I remember my old cement pond making days correctly, when the cement has apparently 'cured' you can brush a solution of water and sodium silicate over all surfaces, when that soaks in and dries it seals all surfaces considerably" what is sodium silicate?? i tried asking the guy at home depot and he looks at me funny . go figure. any help will be great..... newbie ponder |
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