Sunday, September 6, 2009

RE: [papercreters] Re: pumice-aggregate leave out?



So you just use clay dirt and cardboard? I wonder if I should do that in stead of cement. When I first made blocks a few years ago I did a batch with soil and paper but found they took a very long time to cure and were heavier than the ones made with cement. How much soil do you put in? I have reduced my cement to 1/2 bag per 200 gallon mix. I'm sure that if I used soil I would have to put more in. But I do like the idea of using soil because it's free and green. I am also now using cardboard since the newspaper plant locked up their bins. I cram them into a 55 gallon drum and soak them for a day or so. Is that how you do it? I am starting a new project in a couple of weeks and plan to slip form the whole thing. I would like to use the soil so I guess I'll give it a try. I'm also thinking that the color would be nice and if the walls come out nice and even I wouldn't even have to plaster them. What do you think?

Sincerely, Judith

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To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
From: donald1miller@yahoo.com
Date: Sun, 6 Sep 2009 17:08:00 +0000
Subject: [papercreters] Re: pumice-aggregate leave out?

 
I believe that Eric Patterson made his PC with just cement and pulp and it seemed to work well. Also in Solbergs Building with Paper Crete and Paper Adobe book he described Shorty Ingerhalls PC logs as being made only with pulp and cement. What I have found in my mixtures using the cardboard pulp and the very fine clay soil that I have on my property is that when I add aggregate which is road base screenings with small gravel and very little sand and some clay dirt is that the aggregate tends to settle to the bottom of the mixer and the resultant blocks from the bottom of the batch have more agg. in them and are heavier and the ones made from the top of the mixer load have less aggregate and are therefore quite a bit lighter than the ones from the bottom of the batch. The lighter blocks seem to be just as strong and are lighter and much easier to handle so when I get my mixer tweaked a little more I'm going to make a batch with only clay and pulp and no cement to see how that works. These aforementioned blocks were made with no cement. The blocks that I made with cement in the batch were softer as the cement and the fine clay that I use don't seem to do well together and I really feel that I don't need cement with them. Greener and cheaper blocks but very durable and strong.

--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, JUDITH WILLIAMS <williams_judith@...> wrote:
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> I was just wondering what would happen if I mixed the papercrete the usual way except to leave out the aggregate. I have a whole bunch of perlite now so I have plenty to put in. It was just a curiosity question really.
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> Sincerely, Judith
>
> Check out my new Squidoo Lens at http://www.squidoo.com/papercretebyjudith
>
>
>
>
> EMAILING FOR THE GREATER GOOD
> Join me
>
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> From: dirtcheapbuilderbooks@...
> Date: Sat, 5 Sep 2009 23:10:32 -0700
> Subject: [papercreters] pumice-aggregate leave out?
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> are you talking about adding just portland cement to the pumice, with
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> no fiber or sands?
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> Don J. in OR is building using pumice as underfloor insulation for
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> his SB home. and was planning to bag it up for the foudation perimeter
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> to support the bales.
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> I tried mixing limeputty- just a thin mix of limewater and putty with
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> teh pumice, after two weeks it had not joined well enoough to stick
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> together in cvlumps or in a form. so it was a waste to add lime in
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> that case. if you mean pouring into bags or as a form made with
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> cement, yes you can use no sand, and get one kind of fragile- no
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> tensile strrenth block. with fibers- straw or nylon will add greatly
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> to it staying together, and not crack as easily.
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> Inventor Tapasananda builds in a community group in MI with his
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> ParaCrete** uses EPS dust ( styrofoam dust smaller than pumice bits,
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> ) also larger EPS beads, + OPC, fibers, chopped twine etc, and since
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> pumice floats in water easily you can add a surfactant like latex
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> paint, dish soap and commercial "wetting" agents to keep the pumice
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> from clumping & not dispersing
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> **-- read more on his mix here: http://www.dirtcheapbuilder.com/pabubooncd.html
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> Ms. Charmaine Taylor/ Taylor Publishing
>
> Toll Free Order: 1-888-441-1632
>
> www.dirtcheapbuilder.com www. papercrete.com
>
> PO Box 375, Cutten CA 95534
>




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