Tiffaney Dex wrote:Hello,
I'm not sure if this is okay to ask here, but it goes along with durability issues of earthen floors. We made a rocket mass heater next to our bathroom, which we will use start using as a hot water heater next winter. I would like to put an earthen floor alongside it, as a buffer before the heater and a wood floor. But I worry about the fact that it would be applied on top of a very rough concrete. Does anyone know if the concrete would cause durability issues?
Good day to all of you.
Tiffany in Brittany
Tiffany, there are additional variables. How thick is the cob layer, is there
straw or another reinforcing and binding material added to the floor mix. And considering the rough concrete, how rough?
I’m imagining very rough, with sharp peaks. Where the cob material passes over the sharp concrete peak, the floor material will be the thinnest. I’m not an engineer, nor a professional, nor have I ever done this. It’s just my thought experiment. I think where the floor is the thinnest, it would likely be the least durable. If an extreme point load were to press down on the point above the concrete point, the floor material might fail, it could be crushed.
Lotta points in that sentence!
Anyway if you minimize the pointyness of the concrete below, or have room for a thick enough layer of floor material that the load is dispersed as it travels through the floor, seems like you would minimize the chances of floor failure.
An engineer, or a person with experience with this may come along and post a different
answer. I would take their recommendations over mine thought experiment.
Good luck