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  1. #1
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    Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    I have a couple of very small cracks in the concrete of my basement wall, and right now with the frost coming out, and the ground being fully saturated, water is getting in through them. It looks to me that a little concrete work would solve the problem, but obviously industrial grade cement is a little impractical, so I was thinking of grabbing some Quikrete, because it sets in about 15 minutes. Anyone have any luck (good or bad) with this stuff?

    It isn't a finished basement, and nothing is really getting wrecked, it's just a pain in the ***.
    In 1984, I was hospitalized for approaching perfection.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    I have used it to set a mailbox post, but it was the kind you just pour the cement into the hole and pour the water on top. I think they make some that you pre-mix and can spread or fill cracks with.

    If the cracks are small, you might be better off using a waterproofing sealer that you apply with a brush. There is one that is a thick white substance, but I can't recall the name of it right off hand.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    not sure that is going to be the answer as that would be the equivalent to putting a bandaid on after surgery. i think that after a week or two the water would start to come back in with a hard rain.
    hard to say without looking at it, but i would just call up a foundation specialist and see what their opinion is? i would guess there is not tiling around the house, if you don't have a proper grade that could cause grief as well.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Rockite is something to consider. It is easy to work with and works well for patching.

    Rockite, For Anchoring Cement and Patching, water based structural anchoring cement compond, for anchoring,bolts,fastenings,fixings

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Get an epoxy crack filler. Way easier, better result.

    Epoxy Crack Filler for Concrete or Masonry
    Now that MBB is back, do we still have to pretend that WBB matters?

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Quote Originally Posted by cycfan View Post
    I have used it to set a mailbox post, but it was the kind you just pour the cement into the hole and pour the water on top. I think they make some that you pre-mix and can spread or fill cracks with.

    If the cracks are small, you might be better off using a waterproofing sealer that you apply with a brush. There is one that is a thick white substance, but I can't recall the name of it right off hand.

    GO CYCLONES!!!
    That's my dad and I did at his new townhouse when he wanted to put his flagpole up. Quikrete is awesome for jobs like that.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    I work over at Lowe's and in the Lumber dept. we carry a specific concrete filler for repairing concrete walls, if I were you I would go and check out our supply if you are wanting to make a more permanent repair, as regular Quikrete may be rather porous than a filler and the water still will seep in....


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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Definitely use rockite or another kind of hydraulic cement. You're just wasting time with quickrete. Another thing that I would do after you cover the cracks with the cement I would use a product called drylok. It is a product that you would use on the whole basement. You brush or roll it on like paint and it actually will expand if water still gets into the basement and will hold the water until the pressure goes away from the outside of the foundation.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Thanks for the tips! I'm just renting, and the landlords probably aren't going to call a foundation specialist. I think it's just a problem of the frost coming out of the ground, as it rained after we moved in last fall, and there was no problem.

    Honestly, a band aid is fine with me. Nothing is getting ruined but I just want to keep the floor pretty dry.

    I'll go with a hydraulic cement/epoxy, and cover it with drylok. The actual cracks are really small, and they hadn't had a previous problem with leaking. I assume I should wait until everything drys out right? I don't care that much about a long term fix, because the landlord doesn't give a damn about the basement, and I just want something that will hold for a couple years. It didn't leak this fall when it just rained, I think we're just looking at a perfect storm of ground thaw + rain.
    Last edited by Al_4_State; 03-09-2010 at 08:15 PM.
    In 1984, I was hospitalized for approaching perfection.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    You might want to check with Austen Arnaud according to HILLCYD.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Yeah, i'd wait til it dries out, if you can or if it ever will.

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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    I've used DryLok Fast Plug hydraulic cement before with good results. Town I live in has nasty clay soil that puts alot of pressure on foundations and doesn't hold much water, to seepage happens in quite a few basements.

    You can use it while the walls are wet. Just chisel out the cracks some, mix and install.

  13. #13
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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    If I can use the DryLok while the walls are wet, I might go that route. Do I need any extra tools for that?


    Also, if it makes a difference, one of the cracks is in the floor, the other is an inch up from the floor.
    In 1984, I was hospitalized for approaching perfection.

  14. #14
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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    Yeah, anything like quikrete is basically just going to slow down the moisture as it comes through. I'd agree with some of the alternatives listed.

  15. #15
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    Re: Anyone do much with Quikrete before?

    I believe the hydraulic cement can be applied as water is seeping in - check the label. Make sure to wear gloves and use some kind of trowel. When I was doing similar stuff a few years ago I didn't and my fingers ended up really chewed up trying to push the stuff into the crack by hand. Plus it's not good on your skin; hands get really dry and cracked.
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