Concrete Crack Repair and Joint Infilling

There are 4 kinds of cracks or joints you may have to prepare before you install an epoxy floor. If you ignore these and just install over them then your finished floor will likely form cracks as well.

Irregular Crack

This is an irregular crack in the slab that does not follow a designated cut joint. We recommend treating them by:

iregular-crack.pdf
fibertape

Non-Moving Control Joint

These are contraction or control joints in a slab that supposedly do not move once the concrete has cured.
We can either

Contraction or Montrol Joint

Changes in temperature causes concrete to shrink and expand. A contraction joint is a sawcut or tooled joint to promote cracking in a “controlled” line. Without these we would have irregular cracks like the one above.

We “honor” these by:
foam-beaker

Tip

Put down a wide tape over the joint prior to cutting then remove it as you’re cleaning off the joint filler. Saves time from having to meticulously tape wither side of the joint after cutting. Test this first in a small area, as it doesn’t always work, sometimes the crack chaser saw tears up the tape or leaves a jagged edge.

Expansion Joints

Expansion Joints are usually through the entire slab rather then just a cut joint. They allow for more movement than a cut joint. These are not saw cut and filled by the flooring contractor, instead an expansion joint is installed. There are many different types of expansion joints, some can be installed bt the flooring contractor and others are structural.

expainson-joint