PhysAssist
Elite Member
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2011
- Messages
- 2,639
- Tractor
- Kubota B2320
sdkubota said:Here is where you are mistaken...topsoil may pack fine but is prone to swelling and shrinking with changes in moisture levels. Once a concrete floor is constructed the evaporation/transportation (capillary action) mechanism is blocked and moisture levels will increase below the concrete floor.
Footings can be placed on compacted fill without any problem. Having it all undisturbed would provide for uniform bearing but in most cases with a large light framed building it is not the down pressure that exerts the greatest pressure but the uplift (giant wing). A good compacted clay will work fine and in fact is capable of supporting greater forces than the undisturbed soil.
As to insulating with vapor barrier or not, having worked in a heated building with uninsulated concrete floors, unheated building with insulated (but no vapor barrier), and an unheated building with an insulated floor with vapor barrier- having the floor insulated and dry makes working so much more comfortable that I never even considered not having the floor insulated and dry when we planned our soon-to-be-built building...
While I'd love to have a radiant heated floor, we can't afford tp put one in, and while this probably should be a no-brainer for anyone living in the rust belt, the dry insulated floor is next best....
Thomas
No matter where you go; there you are...