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Matt Welland
Приєднався 30 чер 2013
I'm interested in making things in general and right now I'm trying to develop a methodology for making small, semi-permanent structures such a sheds using aircrete. Aircrete is portland cement mixed with foam and allowed to harden making a light weight, insulating material.
Відео
Last az hike, goodbye az on to Gettysburg and a new idea that replaces aircrete!
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Last az hike, goodbye az on to Gettysburg and a new idea that replaces aircrete!
Cutting an old piece of aircrete
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I'm reusing some old pieces of aircrete to finish my shed project and need to trim off a few inches. In this video I'm demoing how by cutting in from each end of the cut you can prevent breaking the end or edges.
Results on the aircrete wall using movable forms
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A couple people asked how the wall came out. I bumbled the video at the end but got in a bit of a summary. I think there is potential with this approach but challenges remain. A super consistent method for making aircrete and strong, watertight molds are required.
Some thoughts on aircrete.
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I need to put the aircrete project aside for a while. Here are some thoughts on what I've learned. Also, I'm selling my equipment, if you are in Arizona and want to experiment with aircrete contact me in the comments or email me at matt at kiatoa dot com. I have a foamer, foming agent, poly mesh roll, ratio scale, latex bonding agent and lots of various bits of aircrete. I have several other pr...
Yet another Aircrete experiment!
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My goal is to make small, semi-permanent but potentially long-lived but cheap structures such as storage sheds using Aircrete. I have tried making panels, various brick shapes and sizes and I've tried casting walls in place. None of my attempts have been satisfactory but I wanted to try casting in place again. My previous attempt used coroplast sheets which were not rigid enough for the task. A...
Two inch thick aircrete panel with poly mesh can hold my weight.
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Aircrete alone is a limited construction material. However when a mesh is added it can be very strong. I tore down one of my experiments and used one chunk from it for a crude strength test. The mesh is on the under surface and was simply painted on.
latest experimental aircrete blocks
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latest experimental aircrete blocks
Mixing 8 gallons batch of aircrete and pouring blocks
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Using a air compressor driven foamer i make and pour cinder blocks style aircrete blocks. The phone overheated so the last couple minutes were lost. It turned out I did have enough aircrete mix to make all ten blocks... NOTE: I now know what I did wrong on the mix. The foam density was too low. I weighed the foam and it was about 60g per quart, way too low!
Setting up the mold to pour aircrete blocks
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To test the idea of building with aircrete blocks i made an experimental mold. This short video shows seeing up the mold.
Storage box made out of aircrete
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Although it's not adequate for the job this box is showing some of the potential for aircrete in making low cost useful items.
Making AirCrete without an Air Compressor Foamer
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A demo of how I use a 3D printed frother to make AirCrete, no air compressor or foam wand needed. The STL files for 3D printing the parts I used can be found here: www.kiatoa.com/cgi-bin/fossils/matt/wiki?name=Aircrete
Nice work! Speaking under correction here is another idea regarding extra strenght and adding waterproofing features should panels be used for walls for instance. Not absolutely sure about the volume needed but I recall 10% by volume of water used. Make your own waterglass liquid from cat litter and add to aircrete solution. Mix briefly and pour.
Good. I would love to know the diameter of the panel and the amount of cement in it. 😊
Interesting for how long was the panel curing? And how about fiberglass mesh? I would appreciate if you could help me clarify those two. Thank you very much
@@rahatlatcvehuzurverici946 it took a few days before the panel had strength. Fiberglass will be destroyed by alkali in cement. Better to use poly mesh. Special glass fiber is available, usually as chopped strands.
U need mix longer the foam
Hello. Dosificación cement arena
No wire or rebar reinforcement needed for the panel?
Awesome.. it seems you didn't add any chemical additives to strengthen the concrete?
No chemical additives but I did experiment with adding chopped fiberglass. The chopped fiberglass does make a big difference in strength. Be sure to get the kind of fiberglass that is compatible with cement.
AAh, AAh you saud like a dumbfk !
Have you ever tested this around fire? 🤔 Im wondering if it will Explode/pop....
Just what i was looking for, tanks you so much
what a waste of space, you need to get a life my friend
Looks like you need it a little wetter.
Hi guy ! .... Thank you so much for sharing Would you please show me how to make this foam generator you are using? Kind regards
Would this work for a water trough for livestock?
I can tell you use to live in South Africa, can still hear your accent. Thanks for this video!
For bubble formation, aluminium powder is being used. What is your thoughts?
I've wondered, when strengthen with construction iron mesh. How thick of aircrete slap needed to be to withstand 5 tonne weight of moving vehicle?
I don't think aircrete would be ideal for your application. Even if you were able to solve the challenge of reliably making aircrete I don't think it has the compressive strength to handle vehicles driving on it. Please let us know if you try it!
You made it look very simple to do . Thanks
1 like for the electronics
How do you know if you're making to much, to little, or right amount of foam? You don't weigh per liter?
I would periodically weigh a quart of foam to confirm i had a correct ratio.
P.S ur very handsome and smart are you are martied?😍
That was awesome bro👍.... Can you a slab for flooring to a garage? And what's the strength? Will it withstand at least two tons?
Why would anyone want a light weight floor for a garage. I’m taking about a normal basic garage ground level. Other than trying to be cheep nothing sounds good about a aircrete floor. As for holding two tons you have got to be nuts to think foam and Portland would withstand that kind of weight.
You should sell the 3D printed agitator...
Hello Matt, I was worried about hardening the aircrete and I did some molds to allow an easy mounting, then I was thinking to plaster the outside walls, but I'm just about to see this video, I think this cover many doubts about some damages may occur with the enviroment specialy with the rain and granize. ua-cam.com/video/-sa7jcDeqjI/v-deo.html :) I´m been almost broke, but will start this week now from this idea; obviously I will take care about temperature, the moisture is important to keep it for better curing and avoid cracking. :D I hope you are enjoying your new project, best regards!
Instead of high speed "mixer", maybe a very slow rpm prop with larger pals would be better. I guess the final phase should be more like "folding". Anybody who ever folded soufflée would know it. Too many bubbles are lost in the final battering.
I agree, just like a souffle it is very easy to fail with aircrete. I tried to make my mixer large for that reason but eventually I gave up on aircrete. I think styrocrete is likely a better option. I'm experimenting with some alternatives also.
No reinforcements?
You mean no steel rebar etc? Aircrete is not concrete and usage is different. A polyester mesh is used on the outer and possibly inner surfaces for structural strength, this is tensile strength (outer surface) and compressive strength (inner surface). All that said, note that I was never successful in making aircrete reliably and I gave up on it. Using it will need some research to find out why it works great sometimes and collapses other times.
Hi.How long does it take to dry?
After about 24 hrs it is firm but not ready to remove from the mold. After two or three days it can be taken out of the mold.
Why did not you add sand?
I think sand would make it heavy and collapse the bubbles but I didn't try it. Maybe very fine sand will work.
I agree with the conclusion 100%
Excellent video! what would you say is the concrete slurry to foam ratio? it is about 1:10? 1:8 in volume?
Good luck 🙂
Doing well my subcriber
can we add sand to the mix ?
how is the result of strength,?
nice
Fantastic
I think we are starting to get the hang of making aircrete. We are finding that the exact measurements aren't nearly as important as having the proper foam density. We have to adjust the pressure valve as we are mixing in the foam or it drifts, the foam gets too heavy, and the batch fails. To get good foam, it is also important to use soft water and Drexel rather than dish soap. It's a challenge, but we have learned a lot last week with the 15 batches we made.
Can you use Riverside plastic cement to make air crete?
I find it so interesting that everyone uses so much water in their mixes. Simply make a very dry mix and use the foam and water reducer to create the mix. Aircrete can be a lot stronger if the water to cement ratio is a lot lower. Yes wet concrete is easier to use but also very fragile.
Hi Konfidante, I was following the recipe from the dome gaia site as best I could. Do you think they also use too much water?
@@MattWellandMiscMarvels there is this tendency to make a really wet mix when it comes to AirCrete. The equation is very simple less water= stronger concrete. The advantage of a drier mix is less drying time = quicker de-moulding time if required. When I see sloppy wet mixes I associate these as laziness and lack of understanding of concrete. Why would I want so much water in my mix? Can’t think of a single reason. Dry mixes can be incredibly workable with water reducers and plasticizers.
@@konfidante i like to think lack of knowledge rather than laziness! Can you share your recipe and methodology?
@@MattWellandMiscMarvels Very simple, make a mix exactly the same as regular cement. Use water reducer, air entrainment and plasticizer. This mix can be extremely dry as long as it is mixed thoroughly. Now add your foam as desired. The water reducer and plasticizer will be activated by the foam and the mix will become wet enough to even cast fine details. I get away with very little foam because my objective isn’t weight reduction rather insulation and sound proofing. My recipe probably is close to 2000 psi and after 30 days it is structurally sound. The English statuary casters have another trick up their sleeves. They take sand and mix it with cement. Incredibly dry mix. The simple objective is to coat the sand kernels with cement. They put this creation on hard floors spread out and they let it dry out. When they need Mixing materials they hand tamp this sand making it into cement coated sand kernels. They use this as the main ingredient. The results are incredible. Lighter mix and incredibly strong for fine detailed statues and planters.
Too bad. I just found your videos and was wanting to discuss a few things for experiment like setting a thin coat of regular concrete over the aircrete/air Crete blocks as it would help tie blocks together and provide a better weather barrier with the fewer/no air pockets for water to get into before a freeze, etc…. Guess I’ll have to do them myself (I really don’t want to. Lol)…
Hi Rick, I like that idea, it'd be worth a try for sure. There are several other folks experimenting with aircrete. Try another search for aircrete on google or youtube.
I’ve seen lots of people use Dawn as their foaming agent… it’s eco friendly and makes lots of clean little bubbles…
Interesting, I hope we can figure it out. We want to use it to build our house. We have some ideas, but have never worked with aircrete. 🏠🙂
Our batches are going really well. We are starting to figure it out! There are definitely some tricks to getting it right. 👍
Can i use this to make light weight indoor planters?
Yes, that would work. You might want to add some fibre for strength. You can find glad fibre for cement on Amazon. Regular glass fibre will not work due to the alkali in the cement.
@@MattWellandMiscMarvelsthanks Matt fr your valuable advise
The concrete you made wont last 5 mins
Dude ur a moron stop with all the water
new friend 👍 nice video very informative
How strong is the finished product and how waterproof is it
Could it simply be because of not using an air compressor?
I have run a couple of homemade foam machines the style of the green dragon works the best with a electric pump and compressor.... tyed different mixing methods too, but experience collapse unless using twice the foam suggested and mix verry well, the way I see it the collapse happens a lot more the more you mix so it uses to much foam for the recipe... mixing by hand with an ore works well but can still collapse if not cured fast enough. Which is why I say wether affects it, temperature, humidity, berametruc pressure, and rain, cold nights are no good.... thats why I'm going to try heating the forms. Using type III, or fast set polymers tend to have to have there own problems. The need to be mixed fast and poured, but turn out better than most. Also type 3 uses half the water.
Most of my aircrete was made with my foamer which is the same kind as used by domegaia.
@@MattWellandMiscMarvels yeah a presure regulator, solenoid, toggle switch and ddp 10hp or 11hp pump. Wand out of pvc and ss wool fine 0000, messed with alternating ss spiritual scrubbers. Thay got the pump right. You can build one for around $150... less headaches with fine tuning if you buy domegaia's
Sorry your having the same problems as everyone else.... the problem is someone has tryed to overstate the qualities of aircrete. This is due to domegaia's formula. When people say they master aircrete, most good batches are mixed wrong, you get everything right and sill fail to get a good batch... and wether seems to affect it as well.
Yep, agreed. One thing is that I've been mixing small batches of 5-8 gallons. Maybe aircrete is more stable if you mix the bigger batches.
@@MattWellandMiscMarvels no, bigger batches don't make it better ones. Just wasts more, but you can't make hundreds of blocks without them. it was explained by someone else better. I'll have to look for that video, even if you get it right there are factors that can ruin the consistency especially deeper molds. The insulating aircrete is soft a material and is on the verge of collapse. Once bubbles start popping it can cascade, seperating foam and cement. Water can do something similar pushing up from below.... so I put holes in the plastic liner. but if you can speed set time thos problems goes away.... like I sead I've only had good batches when they are mixed differently than what I was taught... since there is only one original source for aircrete, I wold say they are holding something back, denying they have seen issues with consistent batches, or really are the only people on the planet that hasn't had problems replicating the process.... there could always be a better way they left it to us to figure the rest out.
Do you make the batch come to a specific volume or a specific weight?
I measured the cement by weight and water by volume then added foam until the target total volume was achieved.