In my case, I cadwelded #4 wire between the legs of my tower base
(embedded in the concrete) and the rebar cage. I'm not saying that I
needed to do that ... only that I see no point at all in buying weldable
rebar if someone wants to cadweld to it.
Dave AB7E
On 7/15/2016 11:14 AM, jimlux wrote:
On 7/15/16 11:06 AM, David Gilbert wrote:
Normal rebar is made from random composition steel melted down from old
car chassis, bed springs, washing machine frames, older reclaimed rebar,
etc. Welds made to it have completely indeterminate strength.
Weldable rebar has controlled content and is spec'd where the rebar
joints need to be structurally strong. I think rebar cages for bridge
pylons and large building columns might be an example.
I don't see any problem cadwelding copper wire to normal rebar since we
aren't looking for structural strength anyway. The materials (copper
and iron/steel) are inherently different in the first place.
It's unclear why you would feel compelled weld the wire to the rebar
(inside the concrete) in any case. The Ufer design doesn't require it.
It's more about getting the appropriate length of metal into the
concrete.
That said, if you're doing the "piece of rebar sticking up through the
top" as the connection point, then some sort of welding of your copper
wire to the rebar at that point would be useful.
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