Thinset sounds like a good idea for easy installation, as long as it is rated
for exterior use. Professionals use epoxy for concrete repair and there are a
lot of different types and ways to use them. What I see most often is a clear
liquid epoxy that is injected under pressure into cracks, but preparation for
this work involves applying injection ports and plugging the outsides of cracks
using a more opaque epoxy that is probably more of a paste. I think epoxy
would really be a pain for the type of repair mentioned here.
That loctite product mentioned earlier might be an easy solution too. It looks
like you put it in a caulking gun and have at it. The loctite page also
mentions a polyurethane sealer that could probably be used. Urethanes are
typically not sold for home use because of the additional precautions that they
require but they really arent hard to use, just harder to clean up. For that
matter you might be able to stick the pieces back together with common silicon
caulk. I've even bonded to concrete with normal wood glue, so of course YMMV.
And yes if water gets in the crack and freezes it will separate the pieces.
Some years ago my wife had a concrete bird bath that broke. This is the kind
with a concrete column that varies about 4" to 6" in diameter, plus a concrete
bowl that sets on top. Somehow it fell over and the column broke in half. I
used masking tape around the ends of each piece to protect the surface,
following the joint edge carefully. I bought a package of normal epoxy at the
store, the kind where the epoxy mixes and comes out of one hole. I coated one
surface with the epoxy, placed the other piece on top of it, and wiped off what
epoxy squeezed out. When it cured a little bit I peeled off the tape. There
is a thin line visible where the joint was but it doesn't detract from the
appearance of the thing.
> > A while back my wife had (more or less) decorative curbing installed
> > around the driveway, shrubbery beds and the back yard. A couple of
> > weeks ago we had a contractor in to do some dirt work and he drove a
> > rubber tracked mini excavator across part of the curbing and some of
> > the face spalled off. I still have all the pieces, but what do I use
> > to bond it all back together?
> Thinset mortar, like used to install tile. Coat both surfaces and let it
> ooze out. Come back a couple of hours later with a stiff brush and
> clean off the excess.
>
> What ever you use, make sure the gap is completely filled or frost will
> separate it.
_______________________________________________
Shop-talk@autox.team.net
Donate: http://www.team.net/donate.html
Suggested annual donation $12.96
Archive: http://www.team.net/archive
Forums: http://www.team.net/forums
|