Author: BLYTH, CHARLES E;Martin, Geoffrey;Tongue, Harold
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BLYTH, CHARLES E;Martin, Geoffrey;Tongue, Harold
The Structural Engineer, Volume 2, Issue 6, 1924
THIS3 question of density when relating to concrete for all purposes, and particularly when the concrete is to withstand a hydrostatic pressure, is all important to the engineer, and hence it is no wonder that he is tempted to administer “patent medicines” to the concrete when he has doubts as regards its “bodily fitness.” Alfred S. Grunspan
The treatment of concrete surfaces with siicate of soda is by no means a new process. Until quite recently it has been confined to the treatment of factory floors to prevent dusting, and the best results have not been contained consistently because the grade of silicate of soda used has been unsuitable and the methods of application have not been properly studied. L.A. Munro
Increasing attention is being given, by engineers to this branch of civil engineering, principally in connection with the manufacture of the necessary steel reinforcement and in the selection, grading and mixture of the requisite concrete aggregates. That the latter question is of the utmost importance there can be no doubt; in fact, many of the successful reinforced concrete roads, for which the manufacturers of various fabrics are taking no little credit upon themselves, are in reality due to the quality of the concrete rather than to the amount and arrangement of any embedded mesh. H. Weston