CSU East Bay has a new Concrete Testing Lab

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David had taken some samples at a recent pour and wanted to get them tested. Fortunately, Cristian Gaedicke, Concrete Materials Professor at CSU East Bay, had a new lab with brand new equipment to try out. We headed over for a tour and a testing field trip. Below are some photos of our compression test. We also did a void and density test but I hadn’t started taking photos at that point. Below you will see Cristian sawing off the top of the samples, to make them flat for capping.
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Next, we capped the 2 samples in sulfur, which makes them totally -perfectly- flat. That is also the way we have tested all of the rest of our samples, so we can keep our data consistent. The sulfur is heated in an industrial-type crock pot, under a hood for total ventilation. The green corner piece is the mold that sets the final edge so it is exactly at 90 degrees.
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David stirs the melting sulfur chips. Since the lab was pretty new, the sulfur pot hadn’t been used yet!
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Once the 2 samples were capped, they were put into the crush test. This measures the PSI load of the sample. Below you can see the sample in the crushing machine.
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I am taking copious notes, while Cristian is making sure the machine works.
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David is also taking notes as the test is being set up.
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David and Cristian compare notes, and discuss the results. They review the smashed cylinders, seeing the pattern and reviewing paste adhesion in this mix.
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David is very happy with the results!
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You can see that both cylinders had very consistent crush pattern.
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The whole crew, minus the photographer!
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