Wednesday, December 21, 2011

[papercreters] Did anybody use a dehumidifier to lessen the water content of p/c?

i live in the great white north eh...lol and to make this product was thinking on how to dry it out faster with out the use of the sun?i,m in no big hurry mass produce them so this would make a six month experiment.And to store the already made ones after they have dried ,whats the best storage of these bricks?

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[papercreters] wwoofers

Greetings,

I have been enjoying a pair of wwoofers for the last two weeks. Jason
and Kyle are touring the southwest states this winter on their
motorcycles, a pair of Kawasaki. They are 25, courteous, respectful,
and great workers. They would love to be exposed to papercrete and
alternative building techniques. They are listed with the wwoofer
website, but you don't have to be. If anyone would like to host them
for a week or so, please contact me off list.

We are sad to loose them, but I am happy to share such great people with
the good people on this list.

--
Bright Blessings,
Garth & Kim Travis
www.TheRoseColoredForest.com
Bedias, Texas


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Re: [papercreters] Re: PC in cold, wet, climes



The aggregates will increase the compressive strength but probably don't help any with tensile strength. That is normally not a concern with the way papercrete is commonly used, either as infill or under compression, but never under tension.

One really nice advantage of using filler in pc is that you get to mix that much less. I'm using lightweight filler, like bottles. Personally I'm not excited about the idea of carrying around a load of rocks, and luckily my place has none.

spaceman

On 12/21/2011 6:30 AM, trendawareness wrote:

I'm a papercrete newbie myself, but it's my understanding that using stone and gravel aggregates will strengthen papercrete, but decrease its R-value in the process, much in the same way adding a lot of sand does.  I'm sure some of the more experienced users on this forum could speak to this better than I can however.  --- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "ANNALIS" <n2art25@...> wrote: 
 I lived in Walton Ky for a 1.5 years in 1989-1991.  It is a great area and reminds me much of where I live now which is in Oklahoma.  The summers are brutal with lots of humidity which make the heat seem unbearable.  We are wanting to do some papercrete here and are thinking of doing slip forms.  Has anyone used stone with their papercrete.  I live on what seems to be a stone garden.......  
    ------------------------------------  Yahoo! Groups Links  <*> To visit your group on the web, go to:     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/papercreters/  <*> Your email settings:     Individual Email | Traditional  <*> To change settings online go to:     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/papercreters/join     (Yahoo! ID required)  <*> To change settings via email:     papercreters-digest@yahoogroups.com      papercreters-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com  <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:     papercreters-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com  <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:     http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/    ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2012.0.1890 / Virus Database: 2109/4693 - Release Date: 12/20/11   


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[papercreters] Re: PC in cold, wet, climes

I'm a papercrete newbie myself, but it's my understanding that using stone and gravel aggregates will strengthen papercrete, but decrease its R-value in the process, much in the same way adding a lot of sand does.

I'm sure some of the more experienced users on this forum could speak to this better than I can however.

--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "ANNALIS" <n2art25@...> wrote:
>
> I lived in Walton Ky for a 1.5 years in 1989-1991. It is a great area and reminds me much of where I live now which is in Oklahoma. The summers are brutal with lots of humidity which make the heat seem unbearable. We are wanting to do some papercrete here and are thinking of doing slip forms. Has anyone used stone with their papercrete. I live on what seems to be a stone garden.......
>


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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

[papercreters] Re: PC in cold, wet, climes

I lived in Walton Ky for a 1.5 years in 1989-1991. It is a great area and reminds me much of where I live now which is in Oklahoma. The summers are brutal with lots of humidity which make the heat seem unbearable. We are wanting to do some papercrete here and are thinking of doing slip forms. Has anyone used stone with their papercrete. I live on what seems to be a stone garden.......

--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "trendawareness" <trendlinesystems@...> wrote:
>
> I live in "Cincitucky" (South of the Ohio river on the Kentucky side of the greater Cincinnati Metro area), but most folks don't know where that is. So I say "Ohio" or "Ohio Valley" when referring to the climate.
>
> I have a nice tool shed now. The folks that built it did pour it a slab and I have nothing against concrete. My only problem is it's full of tools and I don't have anywhere to store paper and other combustibles away from the house. So I figure I'd make a PC structure come spring. A "lean-to" against my existing shed might be an option as it's rather tall w/ 8'ft walls plus a sloped roof.
>
> Since PC is so light, I could also build a free-standing structure above-ground.
>
> Thanks again!
>
> --- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, JUDITH WILLIAMS <williams_judith@> wrote:
> >
> >
> > I poured a papercrete floor in early May (or maybe it was April). It was about 4" thick. I made some big mistakes with the mix and had to tear the entire floor out about 5 months later. It was still very wet underneath and had a strong moldy smell so I would not recommend a papercrete floor. If I had the money and did not have a prejudice against concrete I would pour a slab and build up from that with the blocks. That would simplify things a lot. What I did was use a rubble trench foundation and use latex paint in the first 2 courses of papercrete to water proof it. This worked out OK but it would be a lot easier to do the slab. Or raise the building on a platform.
> >
> > Keep in mind that a 12 x 12 building is a big project so make sure you have a lot of help. I used a combination of blocks and slip forming in my little buildings and it went quite a bit quicker than the straight block method. There are a few things I would do differently but I feel it was a good way to use up the old blocks and speed up the process.
> >
> > I lived in Ohio for a while and yes it is a wet climate. I wouldn't worry too much about the moisture issue except to be very careful about keeping all papercrete away from standing water or from roof leaks.
> >
> > Have fun with your project and please keep us posted on how you are doing.
> >
> >
> >
> > Follow progress on the new project at http://www.papercretebyjudith.com/blog
> >
> > More papercrete info at http://squidoo.com/papercretebyjudith
> >
> >
> > To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> > From: trendlinesystems@
> > Date: Sat, 3 Dec 2011 14:31:02 +0000
> > Subject: [papercreters] PC in cold, wet, climes
> >
> >
>


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Monday, December 12, 2011

Re: [papercreters] Re: Out door drying in Ohio

I think he was just asking about protecting the slabs from all the rain until they harden up enough so he can carry them into his garage and place them on shelves.

Alan in Michigan

--- On Mon, 12/12/11, Gary Olsen <gobug@live.com> wrote:

> From: Gary Olsen <gobug@live.com>
> Subject: [papercreters] Re: Out door drying in Ohio
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Monday, December 12, 2011, 10:04 AM
> I know exactly what a movable hoop
> greenhouse is; however, I am not sure how you might use PC.
>
>
> Are you thinking the skirt wall is PC?
>
> I could imagine a mesh attached to a welded wire frame
> (like cattle panel) then sprayed with PC. Since the
> greenhouse heat loss is the least if the air movement can be
> controlled, the PC could be thin, hence lightweight. Then
> the greenhouse motion would include the PC skirtwall.
>
> Good luck if you proceed. I look forward to postings
> because I am in the process of doing the same thing come
> spring in the Colorado mountains.
> gary
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>     papercreters-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com
>
>
>


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[papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question

Can you send me this picture aswell? Please?

Rusty
Slaytonfarms@gmail.com


--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, Ron Richter <ronerichter@...> wrote:
>
> If you pour like in Bob's pictures you can leave the forms on till the next layer is poured.  If you use slip forms like in my pictures you can see there is a "skirt" on the form.  That is there because the next day after all the drainage over the course of a day, the top of the pour will be the driest hence the most shrinkage will have occurred.  Placing the forms on this without a skirt enables a lot of slurry to slip through to the ground.  With the skirt however, all the slurry will fill and become a stable portion of the wall.  In one of the pictures I sent you can see the skirt made of new plywood pointed up on the corner.  Either method will produce exactly what you asked about, basically a filled vertical wall.
> Ron
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: trendawareness <trendlinesystems@...>
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2011 4:06 AM
> Subject: [papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question
>
>
>  
>
> Thank you for the detailed reply.
>
> The drainage from the molds shouldn't pose much of a problem, except around the electrical boxes. I'll probably place some pre-formed PC around those and fill it in a non-conductive insulator.
>
> However there's a thin board between the studs and the exterior aluminum siding. I presume that's water resistant and it won't mind getting damp for half a day or so while the PC cures. If not, should I set in a layer of thin plastic sheeting prior to the pour?
>
> Also, you indicate that the PC will pull back from the forms as it cures. My question is, when I pour on day 2 above day 1's pour, should I leave day 1's form in place to contain the slurry that may back-fill over where day 1 contracted? In effect walking two 1' boards up the wall by moving day 1 up to day 3 and so on?
>
> Thanks again!
>


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[papercreters] Re: Out door drying in Ohio

I know exactly what a movable hoop greenhouse is; however, I am not sure how you might use PC.

Are you thinking the skirt wall is PC?

I could imagine a mesh attached to a welded wire frame (like cattle panel) then sprayed with PC. Since the greenhouse heat loss is the least if the air movement can be controlled, the PC could be thin, hence lightweight. Then the greenhouse motion would include the PC skirtwall.

Good luck if you proceed. I look forward to postings because I am in the process of doing the same thing come spring in the Colorado mountains.
gary

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[papercreters] Re: Thought: Using "demo" debris for infill

In response to a previous post, it's been suggested that I try pouring PC between the open wall studs in my garage rather than molding blocks.
I think that would save me a lot of work.But since I have no experience with slip forming PC, my question is how long should I leave the temporary forms up, and how do I know they're ready to be removed?

From My experience in slip forming stone you are trying something that I would not call slip-forming. . A slip form is 2 to 4 feet high and made of steel with bracing to force it upright and plum during the drying process. Rocks or short logs , or a mixture of both are laid up in a way they carry their own weight and the mortar is poured and vibrated around them . Care is taken to arrange the stones or logs so they will have an attractive facade when the forms are removed. .Rebar is placed into the wet mortar and protruded into the next course to tie them together.

Papercrete is much lighter than what would be used in a traditional slip-form , my main concern would be that it would pull away from the forms as it dried and that it might take forever and a day to dry. Unless you find someone who has done this already I would either try testing the theory by trying it between 2 or three studs and see how it dried or abandoning the idea for another.

One alternative that is very beautiful in my opinion is to use fairly flat rocks on the outside of the studs to give the appearance of large heavy stones and tie the walls together with fairly small "1/2 to 3 1/2 inch" hardwood branches long enough to span from the outside of the rocks on both sides, to tie the wall together. If you burn the end grain with a torch and then use rough steel wool to rough it up and then seal it with exterior grade polyurethane it is gorgeous. Oil base is prettier but water base is harder, try both and see which one floats your boat. Use a fairly dry , high Portland content mortar and chicken wire to build strong outer walls. After the mortar dries pack the infill in the void and that will give you lots of strength to add the second course. Even the 2 to 3 inch plaster applied to the the outside of 150 year old straw bale houses is structurally sound to this day and these walls will be much stronger than they are.You will have to "point" the exterior of the walls after the forms are removed for water proofing and appearance . It is a good idea to cover the exposed "log" ends with plastic stapled on before mortaring the walls.
http://www.appropedia.org/CCAT_greenshed_west_wall
I would use Rice Hulls to infill because it requires no prep and is totally fireproof , does not settle much at all , varmints don't eat it and it is a little better insulation. If I was set up for papercrete and/or Rice Hulls were too hard to get in my area I would use clay instead of Portland with little if any Portland added. There is no real need to use Portland here and it will reduce the r factor and increase the cost with little if any benefit in strength.

This system could also be called a modified cordwood/slipform . There are lots of cordwood / stone combination slip form houses but this one is a facade packed with insulation . It will be much stronger than a strawbale house and they last for centuries.
There are all kinds of really cool additions like cutting and joining glass bottles to extend through the wall and let in clear of coloured light.

I would read up on all these techniques such as cordwood and stone slipforming . This posts has some info on slip forming papercrete but I like to stick to long proven methods when possible , to have a building fail is a nightmare.

http://papercretenm.com/papercrete-faqs.htm
http://www.nbne.org/natbuild/owalls.php\
http://www.appropedia.org/CCAT_greenshed_west_wall

--
Forrest Charnock


--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "thelandyachtaustin" <thelandyacht@...> wrote:
>
> Anyone ever thought of using the debris from demolitions (old concrete, etc) when pouring slipforms? Think it would be worth the time/effort?
>
> Set up the slipforms.
> Drop in big chunks of concrete where they'll fit.
> Pour the 'crete around 'em, locking them in place.
>
> Could conceivably cut the amount of 'crete needed by a fairly sizable amount...and at least in some places, the "demo" junk is just waiting to be hauled off.
>
> Thoughts?
>


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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Re: [papercreters] Out door drying in Ohio



Not sure what you mean by a "moveable" greenhouse.  Are you wanting to use the greenhouse as a form for building a PC structure, have a foundation made of PC, or using a greenhouse to cure PC?  If you are considering using a greenhouse to "dry" PC bricks it doesn't work.  The moisture comes out of the PC and ends up coating the walls with moisture in 100 degree days without keeping the humidity so high they never dry.  I was able to dry blocks out faster on rainy days with the blocks on the ground.
Ron


From: Richard <richvollnogle@gmail.com>
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2011 6:02 AM
Subject: [papercreters] Out door drying in Ohio

 
I have an idea but don't know if the extra work is worth the effort. The idea was to make a moveable greenhouse out of 6mil plastic sheeting in like a hoop style green house.It would not be heated but enclosed as much as possible. It could be used in the summer because of rain. I have promoted the PC idea but no one local has done anything that I am aware of. Will consider any and all ideas. Small batches is all I can do at the moment since I live in town.





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[papercreters] Rip Rap

Using used concrete is nothing new.
However , I am not sure papercrete makes the best mortar. For all
intents and purposes used concrete chunks are just artificial stones.
I used to have pictures of a house built with rip-rap {concrete
chunks} in a slip form . All so for garden walls. It is quite pretty
when painted white and dramatically cheaper than natural or purpose
made synthetic stone.

In Houston `there are huge {multi-acre} piles of the stuff 40 to 60
feet high. Houston is the only major city in America more than 150
miles from a source of rock and tremendous quantities of rip-rap are
needed to shore up the banks of the bayous for flood control .
It is free to dump concrete , brick and tile at these places.

The large pieces are broken up , the rebar separated , and much of it
is crushed and graded for use as aggregate in new concrete and the
best road base for sub-tropical climates like the Texas Gulf Coast.

Of course it is extremely heavy which makes for a very good thermal
mass but the insulting advantage of papercrete makes them very
different products. If I was going to use concrete as stone I would
build a minimum 6" wall filled with rice hulls for insulation and use
the rock for the exterior. If the infill is not structural I would use
rice hulls in that situation as well. it is better insulation and much
cheaper to install labor wise.

http://www.coastalcrushed.com/
http://www.scctx.com/


--
Forrest Charnock


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Re: [papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question



If you pour like in Bob's pictures you can leave the forms on till the next layer is poured.  If you use slip forms like in my pictures you can see there is a "skirt" on the form.  That is there because the next day after all the drainage over the course of a day, the top of the pour will be the driest hence the most shrinkage will have occurred.  Placing the forms on this without a skirt enables a lot of slurry to slip through to the ground.  With the skirt however, all the slurry will fill and become a stable portion of the wall.  In one of the pictures I sent you can see the skirt made of new plywood pointed up on the corner.  Either method will produce exactly what you asked about, basically a filled vertical wall.
Ron


From: trendawareness <trendlinesystems@gmail.com>
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2011 4:06 AM
Subject: [papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question

 

Thank you for the detailed reply.

The drainage from the molds shouldn't pose much of a problem, except around the electrical boxes. I'll probably place some pre-formed PC around those and fill it in a non-conductive insulator.

However there's a thin board between the studs and the exterior aluminum siding. I presume that's water resistant and it won't mind getting damp for half a day or so while the PC cures. If not, should I set in a layer of thin plastic sheeting prior to the pour?

Also, you indicate that the PC will pull back from the forms as it cures. My question is, when I pour on day 2 above day 1's pour, should I leave day 1's form in place to contain the slurry that may back-fill over where day 1 contracted? In effect walking two 1' boards up the wall by moving day 1 up to day 3 and so on?

Thanks again!





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Re: [papercreters] Re: Valves on my mixer.



Judith uses a soccer ball that is held in by inflation, and to dump the pc she inserts an air needle to release the ball. It just fits the PVC pipe she has for a drain.

On 12/11/2011 8:05 PM, thelandyachtaustin wrote:

I remember seeing where someone had used a basketball or something like that as the "valve".  Held in place with a bungee cord, when you wanna empty it, you just remove the bungee, hit the ball with the end of your shovel-handle...the ball goes flyin & out comes the 'crete.   


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Re: [papercreters] Thought: Using "demo" debris for infill



In essence that is what Judith did with her blocks. I have read about a fence that was done with stacked bags of compacted trash, covered with wire, and then plastered with pc. When I get back to the outer layer on my dome I will add bottles (plastic and glass) in the mix, giving nice dead air spaces and a great way to recycle the bottles.  I have used chunks of papercrete in the same way in the past.

I wouldn't want to throw in anything heavy because it would reduce the insulation value, but light things should be fine.

On 12/11/2011 8:03 PM, thelandyachtaustin wrote:

Anyone ever thought of using the debris from demolitions (old concrete, etc) when pouring slipforms?  Think it would be worth the time/effort?   Set up the slipforms. Drop in big chunks of concrete where they'll fit. Pour the 'crete around 'em, locking them in place.  Could conceivably cut the amount of 'crete needed by a fairly sizable amount...and at least in some places, the "demo" junk is just waiting to be hauled off.  Thoughts?    


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[papercreters] Re: Valves on my mixer.

I remember seeing where someone had used a basketball or something like that as the "valve".

Held in place with a bungee cord, when you wanna empty it, you just remove the bungee, hit the ball with the end of your shovel-handle...the ball goes flyin & out comes the 'crete.

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[papercreters] Thought: Using "demo" debris for infill

Anyone ever thought of using the debris from demolitions (old concrete, etc) when pouring slipforms? Think it would be worth the time/effort?

Set up the slipforms.
Drop in big chunks of concrete where they'll fit.
Pour the 'crete around 'em, locking them in place.

Could conceivably cut the amount of 'crete needed by a fairly sizable amount...and at least in some places, the "demo" junk is just waiting to be hauled off.

Thoughts?

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[papercreters] New file uploaded to papercreters

Hello,

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[papercreters] Re: Valves on thy mixer.

At work for a few days but I will posy a bad video I made on my phone of the thing in beta mode.

The funny thing about these valaves is that as soon as you pass 3 inches they jump to $100. Then the multiplier goes nuts.

Here is a link to what I have.

http://www.amazon.com/Valterra-T1003VPM-Bladex-Waste-Handle/dp/B000BGK22E

--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "Rob" <editable7@...> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Rusty,
> Can you get some good and revealing photo of your valve and maybe the larger one you'd mentioned too? Maybe we can then pull up a drawing about the one that worked the best and find a way to improve it. I bet that as soon as you drop $100 on one of these things - the next day the universe might just throw one at your feet for free.
> just saying...
>
> --- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "Rusty S" <slaytonfarms@> wrote:
> >
> > Hello all,
> >
> > Was hoping on assitance on finding a slide valve larger than 3in that I have on my mixer.
> >
> > I was able to find a 3inch slide valve that was placed at the dump side of my mixer. But after the first batch I can clearly see that this is to small once the mixer begins to empty. Eric's pto mixer which is extremely similar to mine slide valve that I copied. I cant seem to find one under $100, 6" thru 8" would be ideal but again the price I find is beyond my reach. Any suggestions on where I can find one?
> >
> >
> > Rusty
> >
>


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RE: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.



Long trip there.
I am close to Traverse City.
Alan

--- On Sun, 12/11/11, Nick Boersema <picknick@sympatico.ca> wrote:

From: Nick Boersema <picknick@sympatico.ca>
Subject: RE: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, December 11, 2011, 9:24 AM



Alan where about in Michigan are you?  I have a partially constructed mixer and pretty much everything you need to finish it sitting about a ¾ of an hr east of sarnia.  I sold my property and plans have changed so I won't be needing it.

 

Nick

 

From: papercreters@yahoogroups.com [mailto:papercreters@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Alan
Sent: December-11-11 8:18 AM
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.

 

 

Make one.
That is what I would do if I wanted a slide valve.
When I build my tow mixer I plan to use the Elephant Trunk as an exit.

Alan in Michigan
AKA (Rustaholic)

--- On Sat, 12/10/11, Rusty S <slaytonfarms@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Rusty S <slaytonfarms@gmail.com>
> Subject: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Saturday, December 10, 2011, 5:36 PM
> Hello all,
>
> Was hoping on assitance on finding a slide valve larger
> than 3in that I have on my mixer.
>
> I was able to find a 3inch slide valve that was placed at
> the dump side of my mixer. But after the first batch I can
> clearly see that this is to small once the mixer begins to
> empty. Eric's pto mixer which is extremely similar to mine
> slide valve that I copied. I cant seem to find one under
> $100, 6" thru 8" would be ideal but again the price I find
> is beyond my reach. Any suggestions on where I can find
> one?
>
>
> Rusty
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>     papercreters-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com
>
>
>





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[papercreters] Re: Out door drying in Ohio

I live just south of the Ohio River from Cincinnati. My winter plan was to pour small batches in my driveway on the good days and then stack the blocks on shelves in my garage to cure. That way they'll stay dry and above freezing.

Slow, but by spring I should have a respectable numer of blocks. I'm no concrete guru, but some sites have suggested that the concrete will cure even stronger in cool conditions due to the slower evaporation.

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[papercreters] Re: Valves on thy mixer.

Rusty,
Can you get some good and revealing photo of your valve and maybe the larger one you'd mentioned too? Maybe we can then pull up a drawing about the one that worked the best and find a way to improve it. I bet that as soon as you drop $100 on one of these things - the next day the universe might just throw one at your feet for free.
just saying...

--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "Rusty S" <slaytonfarms@...> wrote:
>
> Hello all,
>
> Was hoping on assitance on finding a slide valve larger than 3in that I have on my mixer.
>
> I was able to find a 3inch slide valve that was placed at the dump side of my mixer. But after the first batch I can clearly see that this is to small once the mixer begins to empty. Eric's pto mixer which is extremely similar to mine slide valve that I copied. I cant seem to find one under $100, 6" thru 8" would be ideal but again the price I find is beyond my reach. Any suggestions on where I can find one?
>
>
> Rusty
>


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RE: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.



Alan where about in Michigan are you?  I have a partially constructed mixer and pretty much everything you need to finish it sitting about a ¾ of an hr east of sarnia.  I sold my property and plans have changed so I won’t be needing it.

 

Nick

 

From: papercreters@yahoogroups.com [mailto:papercreters@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Alan
Sent: December-11-11 8:18 AM
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.

 

 

Make one.
That is what I would do if I wanted a slide valve.
When I build my tow mixer I plan to use the Elephant Trunk as an exit.

Alan in Michigan
AKA (Rustaholic)

--- On Sat, 12/10/11, Rusty S <slaytonfarms@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Rusty S <slaytonfarms@gmail.com>
> Subject: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Saturday, December 10, 2011, 5:36 PM
> Hello all,
>
> Was hoping on assitance on finding a slide valve larger
> than 3in that I have on my mixer.
>
> I was able to find a 3inch slide valve that was placed at
> the dump side of my mixer. But after the first batch I can
> clearly see that this is to small once the mixer begins to
> empty. Eric's pto mixer which is extremely similar to mine
> slide valve that I copied. I cant seem to find one under
> $100, 6" thru 8" would be ideal but again the price I find
> is beyond my reach. Any suggestions on where I can find
> one?
>
>
> Rusty
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>     papercreters-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com
>
>
>



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Re: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.

Make one.
That is what I would do if I wanted a slide valve.
When I build my tow mixer I plan to use the Elephant Trunk as an exit.

Alan in Michigan
AKA (Rustaholic)

--- On Sat, 12/10/11, Rusty S <slaytonfarms@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Rusty S <slaytonfarms@gmail.com>
> Subject: [papercreters] Valves on my mixer.
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Saturday, December 10, 2011, 5:36 PM
> Hello all,
>
> Was hoping on assitance on finding a slide valve larger
> than 3in that I have on my mixer.
>
> I was able to find a 3inch slide valve that was placed at
> the dump side of my mixer. But after the first batch I can
> clearly see that this is to small once the mixer begins to
> empty. Eric's pto mixer which is extremely similar to mine
> slide valve that I copied. I cant seem to find one under
> $100, 6" thru 8" would be ideal but again the price I find
> is beyond my reach. Any suggestions on where I can find
> one?
>
>
> Rusty
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>     papercreters-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com
>
>
>


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Re: [papercreters] Out door drying in Ohio

For low impact in town you could just make small ones that will cover a row of molds.
What are you making the slurry in?
How big of a batch do you do at once?

--- On Thu, 12/8/11, Richard <richvollnogle@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Richard <richvollnogle@gmail.com>
> Subject: [papercreters] Out door drying in Ohio
> To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Thursday, December 8, 2011, 10:02 AM
>    I have an idea but
> don't know if the extra work is worth the effort. The idea
> was to make a moveable greenhouse out of 6mil plastic
> sheeting in like a hoop style green house.It would not be
> heated but enclosed as much as possible. It could be used in
> the summer because of rain. I have promoted the PC idea but
> no one local has done anything that I am aware of. Will
> consider any and all ideas. Small batches is all I can do at
> the moment since I live in town.
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>     papercreters-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com
>
>
>


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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Re: [papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question



Your electrical boxes should have weep holes in the bottoms, so if you seal them you should leave those open. It might be just as easy to wrap the electrical boxes with duct tape and just pour around them. It would probably be a good idea to turn off circuit breakers while pouring.

The pc might bond to the thin board if it is rough, and that would be good. I think I would test a small area of it with a spray bottle and see if it absorbs water and swells, or even starts coming apart. Pc stays wet for days at best.

You've got the idea with the forms. Leaving a lower board in place will not only help contain drips but will also give support if that part of the wall wants to sag a bit. After the lower sections have drained and set for a couple of days then sagging is unlikely.

On 12/10/2011 6:06 AM, trendawareness wrote:

 Thank you for the detailed reply.    The drainage from the molds shouldn't pose much of a problem, except around the electrical boxes.  I'll probably place some pre-formed PC around those and fill it in a non-conductive insulator.    However there's a thin board between the studs and the exterior aluminum siding.  I presume that's water resistant and it won't mind getting damp for half a day or so while the PC cures.  If not, should I set in a layer of thin plastic sheeting prior to the pour?  Also, you indicate that the PC will pull back from the forms as it cures.  My question is, when I pour on day 2 above day 1's pour, should I leave day 1's form in place to contain the slurry that may back-fill over where day 1 contracted?  In effect walking two 1' boards up the wall by moving day 1 up to day 3 and so on?  Thanks again!    


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[papercreters] Valves on my mixer.

Hello all,

Was hoping on assitance on finding a slide valve larger than 3in that I have on my mixer.

I was able to find a 3inch slide valve that was placed at the dump side of my mixer. But after the first batch I can clearly see that this is to small once the mixer begins to empty. Eric's pto mixer which is extremely similar to mine slide valve that I copied. I cant seem to find one under $100, 6" thru 8" would be ideal but again the price I find is beyond my reach. Any suggestions on where I can find one?


Rusty

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Re: [papercreters] Slip Forming Question



In addition to what Bob posted and showed, I might add that only the time to make a new batch of slurry was necessary before the slip forms were moved.  I did not pour more than 2 consecutive layers before letting a day of drying take place.  Notice the water on the courses below.  I did not de-water my batches rather poured it right in the forms from the mixer.  There was a lot of shrinkage (top of pour dropping below the form top) as the water drained out but I kept filling with subsequent pours.  What you see in this photo is about one 120 gallon tow-mixer full of volume ready to be filled.  The wall is only 8" wide (my test structure).  Bob used steel forms because he had a source, I used old wood because I had that on hand.

https://picasaweb.google.com/105920026820293846718/Papercrete#5361288759916574098

In this photo you can see the beauty of this method where each successive layer is locked to the underlying layer because of the slot made from the ends of the forms.  If you use two-by stock that slot will be 3" wide.  The next layer has the form centered over the slot to fill it so slots are not lined up over each other.

https://picasaweb.google.com/105920026820293846718/Papercrete#5361289820488636642

From: trendawareness <trendlinesystems@gmail.com>
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, December 9, 2011 5:18 AM
Subject: [papercreters] Slip Forming Question

 
In response to a previous post, it's been suggested that I try pouring PC between the open wall studs in my garage rather than molding blocks.

I think that would save me a lot of work.

But since I have no experience with slip forming PC, my question is how long should I leave the temporary forms up, and how do I know they're ready to be removed?

I take it actual times will vary, but should I plan on a couple of hours or a day?

Also, how soon before I can pour on top of a previous level?

Thanks





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[papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question



Well this is my third attempt to post the photo of the almost complete wall, if it is successful this time you will be able to see it has been one week since I took the first photo. I just continued to raise forms and pour ever day, even though the bottom rows are still wet, they are firm and soak up the water from the top pours.


--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "trendawareness" <trendlinesystems@...> wrote:
>
> In response to a previous post, it's been suggested that I try pouring PC between the open wall studs in my garage rather than molding blocks.
>
> I think that would save me a lot of work.
>
> But since I have no experience with slip forming PC, my question is how long should I leave the temporary forms up, and how do I know they're ready to be removed?
>
> I take it actual times will vary, but should I plan on a couple of hours or a day?
>
> Also, how soon before I can pour on top of a previous level?
>
> Thanks
>



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[papercreters] Re: Slip Forming Question



You can see by the date in the bottom right hand corner of the photo, that a week has passed since I took the first photo. The wall is almost complete at this point and I have continued to pour ever day even though the wall below is still wet, it also soaks up the water from the pours on top.


--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "trendawareness" <trendlinesystems@...> wrote:
>
> In response to a previous post, it's been suggested that I try pouring PC between the open wall studs in my garage rather than molding blocks.
>
> I think that would save me a lot of work.
>
> But since I have no experience with slip forming PC, my question is how long should I leave the temporary forms up, and how do I know they're ready to be removed?
>
> I take it actual times will vary, but should I plan on a couple of hours or a day?
>
> Also, how soon before I can pour on top of a previous level?
>
> Thanks
>



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[papercreters] Slip Forming Question



Same wall, almost finished. Notice how I have moved and added the form boards on top of the undry wall. The process took several days you can see by the date of the photo in the bottom right hand corner.


--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "trendawareness" <trendlinesystems@...> wrote:
>
> In response to a previous post, it's been suggested that I try pouring PC between the open wall studs in my garage rather than molding blocks.
>
> I think that would save me a lot of work.
>
> But since I have no experience with slip forming PC, my question is how long should I leave the temporary forms up, and how do I know they're ready to be removed?
>
> I take it actual times will vary, but should I plan on a couple of hours or a day?
>
> Also, how soon before I can pour on top of a previous level?
>
> Thanks
>



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[papercreters] Slip Forming Question



This is not exactly what you are thinking about doing, but it is similar, as I am poring up against a studed wall and also out past the studed wall.  As you can see I have poured the first 6"  high by 8" thick by 14 ft long course and have moved and added more boards in order to keep pouring even before the wall is dry, just as long as it is dry enough to remain in place when you move the bottom boards up and add more. I will show that in my next post.

West Wall Slip Form Picture


--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, "trendawareness" <trendlinesystems@...> wrote:
>
> In response to a previous post, it's been suggested that I try pouring PC between the open wall studs in my garage rather than molding blocks.
>
> I think that would save me a lot of work.
>
> But since I have no experience with slip forming PC, my question is how long should I leave the temporary forms up, and how do I know they're ready to be removed?
>
> I take it actual times will vary, but should I plan on a couple of hours or a day?
>
> Also, how soon before I can pour on top of a previous level?
>
> Thanks
>



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