How to lift/raise/repair a segment of concrete slab?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












4















I have an 8-year old concrete slab around my pool. One slab has sunk by about 2 inches on the short side. The slab measures about 6 feet by 3 feet by 4 inches. It rests against the pool structure on the long side. The opposite long side is grass. The two short sides are separated by a 1 inch wood separator from other slabs. There is a thin "cool deck" covering of on the slab.



My question: what is the best choice of action for me to repair this?



Can I raise it to fill underneath it with sand? How? How do I prevent the slab from cracking?



Should I pour concrete on it? It will be tapering from 2 inches to 0 and probably won't stick. Also the cool deck cover gets covered by concrete.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    I would imagine you could pour self-leveling cement on top of the sunken slab. It will (as it says on the tin) level itself on the surface. You'd probably have to create a dam to prevent it from running off the low edge. You may need to rough up the surface of the existing slab to create a key so they stick together well, or maybe even some holes for it to key into. You'd probably need to rough up the surface as it cures so it's not slick under wet feet. You may want to investigate and fix the cause of the sinking first, though. (Not enough detail/experience to warrant a full answer.)

    – FreeMan
    Mar 5 at 16:49















4















I have an 8-year old concrete slab around my pool. One slab has sunk by about 2 inches on the short side. The slab measures about 6 feet by 3 feet by 4 inches. It rests against the pool structure on the long side. The opposite long side is grass. The two short sides are separated by a 1 inch wood separator from other slabs. There is a thin "cool deck" covering of on the slab.



My question: what is the best choice of action for me to repair this?



Can I raise it to fill underneath it with sand? How? How do I prevent the slab from cracking?



Should I pour concrete on it? It will be tapering from 2 inches to 0 and probably won't stick. Also the cool deck cover gets covered by concrete.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    I would imagine you could pour self-leveling cement on top of the sunken slab. It will (as it says on the tin) level itself on the surface. You'd probably have to create a dam to prevent it from running off the low edge. You may need to rough up the surface of the existing slab to create a key so they stick together well, or maybe even some holes for it to key into. You'd probably need to rough up the surface as it cures so it's not slick under wet feet. You may want to investigate and fix the cause of the sinking first, though. (Not enough detail/experience to warrant a full answer.)

    – FreeMan
    Mar 5 at 16:49













4












4








4








I have an 8-year old concrete slab around my pool. One slab has sunk by about 2 inches on the short side. The slab measures about 6 feet by 3 feet by 4 inches. It rests against the pool structure on the long side. The opposite long side is grass. The two short sides are separated by a 1 inch wood separator from other slabs. There is a thin "cool deck" covering of on the slab.



My question: what is the best choice of action for me to repair this?



Can I raise it to fill underneath it with sand? How? How do I prevent the slab from cracking?



Should I pour concrete on it? It will be tapering from 2 inches to 0 and probably won't stick. Also the cool deck cover gets covered by concrete.










share|improve this question
















I have an 8-year old concrete slab around my pool. One slab has sunk by about 2 inches on the short side. The slab measures about 6 feet by 3 feet by 4 inches. It rests against the pool structure on the long side. The opposite long side is grass. The two short sides are separated by a 1 inch wood separator from other slabs. There is a thin "cool deck" covering of on the slab.



My question: what is the best choice of action for me to repair this?



Can I raise it to fill underneath it with sand? How? How do I prevent the slab from cracking?



Should I pour concrete on it? It will be tapering from 2 inches to 0 and probably won't stick. Also the cool deck cover gets covered by concrete.







concrete leveling






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 5 at 13:58









isherwood

51k460130




51k460130










asked Mar 5 at 13:11









MaesumiMaesumi

1315




1315







  • 1





    I would imagine you could pour self-leveling cement on top of the sunken slab. It will (as it says on the tin) level itself on the surface. You'd probably have to create a dam to prevent it from running off the low edge. You may need to rough up the surface of the existing slab to create a key so they stick together well, or maybe even some holes for it to key into. You'd probably need to rough up the surface as it cures so it's not slick under wet feet. You may want to investigate and fix the cause of the sinking first, though. (Not enough detail/experience to warrant a full answer.)

    – FreeMan
    Mar 5 at 16:49












  • 1





    I would imagine you could pour self-leveling cement on top of the sunken slab. It will (as it says on the tin) level itself on the surface. You'd probably have to create a dam to prevent it from running off the low edge. You may need to rough up the surface of the existing slab to create a key so they stick together well, or maybe even some holes for it to key into. You'd probably need to rough up the surface as it cures so it's not slick under wet feet. You may want to investigate and fix the cause of the sinking first, though. (Not enough detail/experience to warrant a full answer.)

    – FreeMan
    Mar 5 at 16:49







1




1





I would imagine you could pour self-leveling cement on top of the sunken slab. It will (as it says on the tin) level itself on the surface. You'd probably have to create a dam to prevent it from running off the low edge. You may need to rough up the surface of the existing slab to create a key so they stick together well, or maybe even some holes for it to key into. You'd probably need to rough up the surface as it cures so it's not slick under wet feet. You may want to investigate and fix the cause of the sinking first, though. (Not enough detail/experience to warrant a full answer.)

– FreeMan
Mar 5 at 16:49





I would imagine you could pour self-leveling cement on top of the sunken slab. It will (as it says on the tin) level itself on the surface. You'd probably have to create a dam to prevent it from running off the low edge. You may need to rough up the surface of the existing slab to create a key so they stick together well, or maybe even some holes for it to key into. You'd probably need to rough up the surface as it cures so it's not slick under wet feet. You may want to investigate and fix the cause of the sinking first, though. (Not enough detail/experience to warrant a full answer.)

– FreeMan
Mar 5 at 16:49










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















13














This slab is small enough that you should be able to easily lift it out and repair the base soil. Unless the concrete was weak initially or in otherwise poor condition it won't break.



  1. From the lawn side, trench along the slab about 6" wide and to the bottom of the concrete. Save the sod by wrapping it in a tarp.

  2. Using heavy steel or wood bars and some fulcrum blocks, begin lifting the concrete. Work in stages and block it up as you go.

  3. Once you're high enough, move the blocks rearward, underneath the slab. Continue maneuvering it until the entire slab is floating above the level of the surrounding slabs.

  4. Lever the raised slab sideways as needed to gain access to the soil below. It's not necessary to move it completely out of the hole area.

  5. Repair your soil base using non-organic sand or gravel. Tamp it well and leave it 1/2" higher than necessary.

  6. Move your slab back into position and remove the blocks. Be careful not to drop it to prevent damage to it and the surrounding slabs.

Allow the slab to settle for a few weeks, ideally through a rain event. If it doesn't rain, flood the area well to allow the soil to compact and settle.



If you find that you've left it too high, a hose worked under the slab from the lawn side will allow you to wash out some fill soil. Work slowly so as to not go too far.






share|improve this answer























  • This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

    – ArmanX
    Mar 6 at 4:17


















3














You might want to look around your local area for contractors that offer 'mudjacking'. Essentially they pump a grout-like mixture using a powerful hydraulic pump under the slab and bring it level. I think it generally requires cutting a hole in the slab.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 18:48



















2














One method to correct this is to jack up the sunken edge to its original height and fill the space between the slab and the ground underneath with polyurethane expanding foam. The details of the process are way beyond an answer here, but in a nutshell:



You dig a trench along the sunken edge so you can get jacks under the slab then slowly, carefully jack it into position. Once it's in position, you drill holes through the slab and squirt the expanding foam into the void below. Once the foam sets you can remove the jacks, backfill the trench you dug, and you're set.



Note - per comments - the spray foam that's readily available for filling gaps and cracks is probably not what you want, they make specialty foam for this purpose.



Note that this doesn't necessarily fix whatever made the slab sink. If it was just settling of the soil under the slab it might not happen again and you're done. If there is water runoff eroding the soil under the slab, it's likely the soil under the slab and foam will erode again. Whatever method you use to fix this - even if you remove and replace the slab - you'll want to remedy any drainage problems first so that your fix holds.






share|improve this answer

























  • I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 13:59











  • @isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 14:22











  • It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 14:29












  • There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 15:14







  • 2





    I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

    – blacksmith37
    Mar 5 at 16:52











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









13














This slab is small enough that you should be able to easily lift it out and repair the base soil. Unless the concrete was weak initially or in otherwise poor condition it won't break.



  1. From the lawn side, trench along the slab about 6" wide and to the bottom of the concrete. Save the sod by wrapping it in a tarp.

  2. Using heavy steel or wood bars and some fulcrum blocks, begin lifting the concrete. Work in stages and block it up as you go.

  3. Once you're high enough, move the blocks rearward, underneath the slab. Continue maneuvering it until the entire slab is floating above the level of the surrounding slabs.

  4. Lever the raised slab sideways as needed to gain access to the soil below. It's not necessary to move it completely out of the hole area.

  5. Repair your soil base using non-organic sand or gravel. Tamp it well and leave it 1/2" higher than necessary.

  6. Move your slab back into position and remove the blocks. Be careful not to drop it to prevent damage to it and the surrounding slabs.

Allow the slab to settle for a few weeks, ideally through a rain event. If it doesn't rain, flood the area well to allow the soil to compact and settle.



If you find that you've left it too high, a hose worked under the slab from the lawn side will allow you to wash out some fill soil. Work slowly so as to not go too far.






share|improve this answer























  • This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

    – ArmanX
    Mar 6 at 4:17















13














This slab is small enough that you should be able to easily lift it out and repair the base soil. Unless the concrete was weak initially or in otherwise poor condition it won't break.



  1. From the lawn side, trench along the slab about 6" wide and to the bottom of the concrete. Save the sod by wrapping it in a tarp.

  2. Using heavy steel or wood bars and some fulcrum blocks, begin lifting the concrete. Work in stages and block it up as you go.

  3. Once you're high enough, move the blocks rearward, underneath the slab. Continue maneuvering it until the entire slab is floating above the level of the surrounding slabs.

  4. Lever the raised slab sideways as needed to gain access to the soil below. It's not necessary to move it completely out of the hole area.

  5. Repair your soil base using non-organic sand or gravel. Tamp it well and leave it 1/2" higher than necessary.

  6. Move your slab back into position and remove the blocks. Be careful not to drop it to prevent damage to it and the surrounding slabs.

Allow the slab to settle for a few weeks, ideally through a rain event. If it doesn't rain, flood the area well to allow the soil to compact and settle.



If you find that you've left it too high, a hose worked under the slab from the lawn side will allow you to wash out some fill soil. Work slowly so as to not go too far.






share|improve this answer























  • This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

    – ArmanX
    Mar 6 at 4:17













13












13








13







This slab is small enough that you should be able to easily lift it out and repair the base soil. Unless the concrete was weak initially or in otherwise poor condition it won't break.



  1. From the lawn side, trench along the slab about 6" wide and to the bottom of the concrete. Save the sod by wrapping it in a tarp.

  2. Using heavy steel or wood bars and some fulcrum blocks, begin lifting the concrete. Work in stages and block it up as you go.

  3. Once you're high enough, move the blocks rearward, underneath the slab. Continue maneuvering it until the entire slab is floating above the level of the surrounding slabs.

  4. Lever the raised slab sideways as needed to gain access to the soil below. It's not necessary to move it completely out of the hole area.

  5. Repair your soil base using non-organic sand or gravel. Tamp it well and leave it 1/2" higher than necessary.

  6. Move your slab back into position and remove the blocks. Be careful not to drop it to prevent damage to it and the surrounding slabs.

Allow the slab to settle for a few weeks, ideally through a rain event. If it doesn't rain, flood the area well to allow the soil to compact and settle.



If you find that you've left it too high, a hose worked under the slab from the lawn side will allow you to wash out some fill soil. Work slowly so as to not go too far.






share|improve this answer













This slab is small enough that you should be able to easily lift it out and repair the base soil. Unless the concrete was weak initially or in otherwise poor condition it won't break.



  1. From the lawn side, trench along the slab about 6" wide and to the bottom of the concrete. Save the sod by wrapping it in a tarp.

  2. Using heavy steel or wood bars and some fulcrum blocks, begin lifting the concrete. Work in stages and block it up as you go.

  3. Once you're high enough, move the blocks rearward, underneath the slab. Continue maneuvering it until the entire slab is floating above the level of the surrounding slabs.

  4. Lever the raised slab sideways as needed to gain access to the soil below. It's not necessary to move it completely out of the hole area.

  5. Repair your soil base using non-organic sand or gravel. Tamp it well and leave it 1/2" higher than necessary.

  6. Move your slab back into position and remove the blocks. Be careful not to drop it to prevent damage to it and the surrounding slabs.

Allow the slab to settle for a few weeks, ideally through a rain event. If it doesn't rain, flood the area well to allow the soil to compact and settle.



If you find that you've left it too high, a hose worked under the slab from the lawn side will allow you to wash out some fill soil. Work slowly so as to not go too far.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 5 at 14:07









isherwoodisherwood

51k460130




51k460130












  • This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

    – ArmanX
    Mar 6 at 4:17

















  • This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

    – ArmanX
    Mar 6 at 4:17
















This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

– ArmanX
Mar 6 at 4:17





This has the added benefit of seeing what caused the sinking originally - an animal burrow, erosion, bad installation, whatever - and take steps to remedy that. In the case of erosion, for example, you might add a drainage tube to allow water through without washing out more dirt.

– ArmanX
Mar 6 at 4:17













3














You might want to look around your local area for contractors that offer 'mudjacking'. Essentially they pump a grout-like mixture using a powerful hydraulic pump under the slab and bring it level. I think it generally requires cutting a hole in the slab.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 18:48
















3














You might want to look around your local area for contractors that offer 'mudjacking'. Essentially they pump a grout-like mixture using a powerful hydraulic pump under the slab and bring it level. I think it generally requires cutting a hole in the slab.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 18:48














3












3








3







You might want to look around your local area for contractors that offer 'mudjacking'. Essentially they pump a grout-like mixture using a powerful hydraulic pump under the slab and bring it level. I think it generally requires cutting a hole in the slab.






share|improve this answer













You might want to look around your local area for contractors that offer 'mudjacking'. Essentially they pump a grout-like mixture using a powerful hydraulic pump under the slab and bring it level. I think it generally requires cutting a hole in the slab.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 5 at 18:07









JimmyJamesJimmyJames

1,167619




1,167619







  • 1





    This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 18:48













  • 1





    This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 18:48








1




1





This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

– isherwood
Mar 5 at 18:48






This works well, but would be costly for a single small repair. The holes are about 1" and the contractor fills them with repair cement.

– isherwood
Mar 5 at 18:48












2














One method to correct this is to jack up the sunken edge to its original height and fill the space between the slab and the ground underneath with polyurethane expanding foam. The details of the process are way beyond an answer here, but in a nutshell:



You dig a trench along the sunken edge so you can get jacks under the slab then slowly, carefully jack it into position. Once it's in position, you drill holes through the slab and squirt the expanding foam into the void below. Once the foam sets you can remove the jacks, backfill the trench you dug, and you're set.



Note - per comments - the spray foam that's readily available for filling gaps and cracks is probably not what you want, they make specialty foam for this purpose.



Note that this doesn't necessarily fix whatever made the slab sink. If it was just settling of the soil under the slab it might not happen again and you're done. If there is water runoff eroding the soil under the slab, it's likely the soil under the slab and foam will erode again. Whatever method you use to fix this - even if you remove and replace the slab - you'll want to remedy any drainage problems first so that your fix holds.






share|improve this answer

























  • I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 13:59











  • @isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 14:22











  • It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 14:29












  • There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 15:14







  • 2





    I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

    – blacksmith37
    Mar 5 at 16:52















2














One method to correct this is to jack up the sunken edge to its original height and fill the space between the slab and the ground underneath with polyurethane expanding foam. The details of the process are way beyond an answer here, but in a nutshell:



You dig a trench along the sunken edge so you can get jacks under the slab then slowly, carefully jack it into position. Once it's in position, you drill holes through the slab and squirt the expanding foam into the void below. Once the foam sets you can remove the jacks, backfill the trench you dug, and you're set.



Note - per comments - the spray foam that's readily available for filling gaps and cracks is probably not what you want, they make specialty foam for this purpose.



Note that this doesn't necessarily fix whatever made the slab sink. If it was just settling of the soil under the slab it might not happen again and you're done. If there is water runoff eroding the soil under the slab, it's likely the soil under the slab and foam will erode again. Whatever method you use to fix this - even if you remove and replace the slab - you'll want to remedy any drainage problems first so that your fix holds.






share|improve this answer

























  • I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 13:59











  • @isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 14:22











  • It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 14:29












  • There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 15:14







  • 2





    I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

    – blacksmith37
    Mar 5 at 16:52













2












2








2







One method to correct this is to jack up the sunken edge to its original height and fill the space between the slab and the ground underneath with polyurethane expanding foam. The details of the process are way beyond an answer here, but in a nutshell:



You dig a trench along the sunken edge so you can get jacks under the slab then slowly, carefully jack it into position. Once it's in position, you drill holes through the slab and squirt the expanding foam into the void below. Once the foam sets you can remove the jacks, backfill the trench you dug, and you're set.



Note - per comments - the spray foam that's readily available for filling gaps and cracks is probably not what you want, they make specialty foam for this purpose.



Note that this doesn't necessarily fix whatever made the slab sink. If it was just settling of the soil under the slab it might not happen again and you're done. If there is water runoff eroding the soil under the slab, it's likely the soil under the slab and foam will erode again. Whatever method you use to fix this - even if you remove and replace the slab - you'll want to remedy any drainage problems first so that your fix holds.






share|improve this answer















One method to correct this is to jack up the sunken edge to its original height and fill the space between the slab and the ground underneath with polyurethane expanding foam. The details of the process are way beyond an answer here, but in a nutshell:



You dig a trench along the sunken edge so you can get jacks under the slab then slowly, carefully jack it into position. Once it's in position, you drill holes through the slab and squirt the expanding foam into the void below. Once the foam sets you can remove the jacks, backfill the trench you dug, and you're set.



Note - per comments - the spray foam that's readily available for filling gaps and cracks is probably not what you want, they make specialty foam for this purpose.



Note that this doesn't necessarily fix whatever made the slab sink. If it was just settling of the soil under the slab it might not happen again and you're done. If there is water runoff eroding the soil under the slab, it's likely the soil under the slab and foam will erode again. Whatever method you use to fix this - even if you remove and replace the slab - you'll want to remedy any drainage problems first so that your fix holds.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 5 at 15:19

























answered Mar 5 at 13:23









batsplatstersonbatsplatsterson

13.7k11742




13.7k11742












  • I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 13:59











  • @isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 14:22











  • It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 14:29












  • There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 15:14







  • 2





    I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

    – blacksmith37
    Mar 5 at 16:52

















  • I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 13:59











  • @isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 14:22











  • It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

    – isherwood
    Mar 5 at 14:29












  • There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

    – batsplatsterson
    Mar 5 at 15:14







  • 2





    I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

    – blacksmith37
    Mar 5 at 16:52
















I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

– isherwood
Mar 5 at 13:59





I wouldn't use foam. Your procedure is fine, but foam isn't a reliable support.

– isherwood
Mar 5 at 13:59













@isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

– batsplatsterson
Mar 5 at 14:22





@isherwood - have you seen problems with foam? I did the drilling for a friend that used this method but I don't know how it's held up for him. I wouldn't have thought of foam as reliable enough, but I did see there were a lot of DIY videos on YouTube talking about foam.

– batsplatsterson
Mar 5 at 14:22













It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

– isherwood
Mar 5 at 14:29






It compresses and degrades over time, especially where freeze-thaw cycles occur and where there's regular vibration, such as from foot traffic. That said, I'm talking about commonly available cans of urethane. Maybe there's something more dense to be had.

– isherwood
Mar 5 at 14:29














There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

– batsplatsterson
Mar 5 at 15:14






There is ... not sure if something like this is available in small quantities - specialty-products.com/spi_products/eco-rise-3-0 ... I am sure that my friend used something from the helpful hardware place

– batsplatsterson
Mar 5 at 15:14





2




2





I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

– blacksmith37
Mar 5 at 16:52





I used car jacks to lift smaller sections ( 4' X 2.5' ) and pushed in rocks ; it takes time and work but can be done . Scissors jacks can fit into a fairly low space. Crank it up, put in second jack, remove first jack and put rock into the hole under the jack , repeat,repeat,repeat.

– blacksmith37
Mar 5 at 16:52

















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