Basic crushing schedule

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When is this schedule used?

  • In cases where the mix does not have extreme early strength gains (pre-24hrs).
  • Where construction application does not require actions to take place at low values of strength.
  • Or where additional lab costs due to lab staying open overnight are prohibitive. Or where lab does not have the capability to stay open overnight.

How many samples are required?

18 samples (including 2 instrumented samples which should not be crushed)

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General Crushing Guidance

A crushing schedule should be agreed in advance between the contractor and the appointed lab. The selection of a crushing schedule is the responsibility of the contractor, and this decision can be based on several factors, including:

  • Application - certain applications will require understanding of the early strength gain of the concrete (eg. strength gain at <24 hours) whereas other applications will not.
  • Mix type - Strength gain of the mix (eg. some high-performance mixes need crushes at <24 hours to characterise their initial strength gain)
  • Lab availability - availability and opening hours of the lab (eg. some labs are not open on Sundays, so certain crushes can be removed from the schedule to accommodate this)

Crushes can be added or removed at the discretion of the contractor.

See 'crushing guidance' to compare our two example crush schedules.

Related
Calibrate using Converge sensors
Advanced crushing schedule
Calibration prep checklist
What is the calibration process?
How do I calibrate with my DeWalt sensor?
Crushing Guidance

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