Cracked calcium silicate brick installed

  • Erstellt am 2017-10-03 14:36:00

bleibt_alles

2017-10-03 20:14:22
  • #1
Thank you for your answers, that is already reassuring. I still don't understand why a stone that is obviously torn during transport has to be installed. Such a single stone is not that expensive. Well, thanks again.
 

Bau-Schmidt

2017-10-03 20:16:23
  • #2
I think you will still get gray hairs while building.
 

11ant

2017-10-03 20:17:35
  • #3
Should one collect them and then use them all in one construction project, or "melt them down"? There is more breakage in every cookie box than in a wall. That disperses itself.
 

bleibt_alles

2017-10-03 20:28:17
  • #4
yes, you're really right about that.
 

Alex85

2017-10-03 20:35:10
  • #5


Do you have a heart for cracked sand-lime bricks now or what? Straight into the construction waste container and take a new one. Even if the house might not collapse because of it, it’s unnecessary. The gluing action and subsequent discussion is 50 times more expensive than simply sorting out the stone.
 

bleibt_alles

2017-10-09 23:13:21
  • #6
I looked around our construction site (many houses are now in shell construction) and did not find such cracked sand-lime bricks on any other house. The sand-lime brick with a crack is on the exterior wall. Is the load-bearing capacity still ensured despite the crack? If the brick were to be replaced now, would it be a lot of effort?
 
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