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Signing UpStep 1Stuff you'll need
concrete (rockite works best). something to mix it in/with
something to make formwork. Plywood or melamine work well. Foam Core can also be used.
16" of 1 1/2" X 1/4" steel bar stock
3 pieces of glass: 1/4" thick: 12" X 4"; 1/8" thick: 12" X 3 1/2"; 1/16" thick: 12" X 3 1/2"
(you can cut these yourself, or easier yet have a glass store cut them. they need to be fairly precise.)
screws, drill, drill bits, driver
foamcore.
glue gun
ceramic lamp socket
4" threaded lamp post
light bulb (bright)
lamp cord
lamp switch
screw driver
space to make a mess
free time.
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I have built a few pony walls like that.
(pony wall = A short partition wall about 3 to 4 feet high.)
Canoeman
This is kind of a new technique used on concrete floors and some wall covering
where nails, screws, glass, and bits of well anything really is added, then ground flat to remove sharp bits using Carborundum Stones. mosaic of bits of crap
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogVYwPcsnqY
Canoeman
It can either be mixed in, or rubbed on soft curing concrete.
It comes in a powder form.
and to help with the Concrete/ cememnt argument , the English Oxford dcitionary defines the following:
" Cement/ noun/ : a powdery substance made by calcining lime and clay, mixed with water to form mortar or mixed with sand, gravel, and water to make concrete. "
Oh and i'm not sure but I remember seeing a documentary on the construction of a huge dam somewhere (maybe in the U.S. or China? pfft) where they actually had to chill the concrete to prevent it from curing too rapidly.
And I think they actually added ice to the mix when building the Burj Dubai. But that was to stop the mix from seizing under the pressure when being pumped up so high...
Large pours have to be watered, often for several days after being laid, because the curing reaction is exothermic. Setting concrete actually produces some heat, so a large amount of concrete setting can cause enough heat to be problematic.
I've never bothered with the semantics of concrete vs cement, and I figure nobody will be confused by using set, cure, and dry interchangeably.
Thats when concrete freezes, or cures too hot, and after curing the top smooth surfaces slake off in chunks, exposing the rough rocky interior, making surface look like broken concrete.
Canoeman
Without the expense of communications grade fiber optics, acrylic rods and fishing line have been used to transport light through concrete in years past.