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  1. #1
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    Default Reconstituted Stone Paving Project for long weekend -- HELP

    Hello everyone, need your input with our reconstituted stone pavers project over the long weekend.

    We want to paved our patio aprox 40 sqm (4 width x 9 lenght m), we bought reconstituted stone pavers 500x500x400mm, It will be pave against the wall of the house and the water fall will go towards the raised planter box/bench 60(w)x60(h) mm (next project after the paving).

    This is what i will be doing

    Excavate the area approx 150mm -done and the soil is clay
    Put in road base approx 100 mm or road base mixed cement (how)?? Then compact it
    Level it
    Lay in pavers using mortar or using beding sand?
    Finised off with putting some mortar or sand in between the joints of the pavers.

    The fall will be 1 cm every 1 m so the total fall will be 4 cm towards the raised planter box. Should I use ag pipe with sock in between the pavers and raised planter box as drainage (how) or should i use grate (it looks ugly though).


    Could you please tell me if thats ok (steps or procedure) or if I missed anything else

    I appreciate your valuable input and help on this thanks in advance

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by latinkgb View Post
    Hello everyone, need your input with our reconstituted stone pavers project over the long weekend.

    We want to paved our patio aprox 40 sqm (4 width x 9 lenght m), we bought reconstituted stone pavers 500x500x400mm, It will be pave against the wall of the house and the water fall will go towards the raised planter box/bench 60(w)x60(h) mm (next project after the paving).

    This is what i will be doing

    Excavate the area approx 150mm -done and the soil is clay

    Very good start, a good foundation is the key to any construction.


    Put in road base approx 100 mm or road base mixed cement (how)?? Then compact it
    Level it

    Road base with some cement, mix it with a rake then compact, the moisture in the road base is enough to set the cement.

    Lay in pavers using mortar or using beding sand?

    Mortar blobs are far better, 5 of them.

    Finised off with putting some mortar or sand in between the joints of the pavers.

    All depends on how you want the finished pavers to look, if you are going for the joint between then yes, if the pavers are close with no joint, then I wouldnt bother.

    The fall will be 1 cm every 1 m so the total fall will be 4 cm towards the raised planter box. Should I use ag pipe with sock in between the pavers and raised planter box as drainage (how) or should i use grate (it looks ugly though).

    I like the look and functionality of the black plastic strip grates.


    Could you please tell me if thats ok (steps or procedure) or if I missed anything else

    You missed beer.

    I appreciate your valuable input and help on this thanks in advance

    Al

  3. #3
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    Mortar blobs are far better, 5 of them


    Al are you suggesting that you lay each paver on 5 blobs of mortar?

  4. #4
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    Its only for foot traffic so, yes.

    By blobs I mean 100mm sized or larger.

    Al

  5. #5
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    No way Al, 40 sq.m!!! it would look like shyte unless latinkgb was a professional tiler.

    I would suggest screeding off paving sand to get your falls and laying the pavers over that. Sweep dry Sydney sand into the joints

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bleedin Thumb View Post
    No way Al, 40 sq.m!!! it would look like shyte unless latinkgb was a professional tiler.
    If the base is done correctly then laying the pavers is easy, all you do is follow the base plus 50mm or so.

    Al

  7. #7
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    That means :

    1. You have to get your subgrade (road-base) perfect which is pretty hard to do as you can't screed road-base and you have to wet it down then run a compactor over it so the best you could get is +/- 25mm to start with.

    2. The person laying the pavers has got the skill of someone like yourself that can SEE levels like its second nature and can make fine adjustments to keep them level.

    I can lay pavers in my sleep, I wouldn't be suprised if I haven't layed over 60K sq.m but I'm crap at tileing the way you describe even when I have a blind slab that is perfect.

    So I'm not saying you're wrong - its just whats easiest for a novice.

    Well actually I am saying your wrong

  8. #8
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    I like Al's way, surely a rubber mallet and a straight edge remove the risk, and the method sees the pavers bed down well. However I have to date opted for washed sand with a bit of cement mixed in which seems to work OK.

    John.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bleedin Thumb View Post
    That means :

    1. You have to get your subgrade (road-base) perfect which is pretty hard to do as you can't screed road-base and you have to wet it down then run a compactor over it so the best you could get is +/- 25mm to start with.

    2. The person laying the pavers has got the skill of someone like yourself that can SEE levels like its second nature and can make fine adjustments to keep them level.

    I can lay pavers in my sleep, I wouldn't be suprised if I haven't layed over 60K sq.m but I'm crap at tileing the way you describe even when I have a blind slab that is perfect.

    So I'm not saying you're wrong - its just whats easiest for a novice.

    Well actually I am saying your wrong
    Ok, point taken.

    I dont like doing paving as its too far down.

    Al

  10. #10
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    Funny how brickies complain about doing walls that are too low to.

    Well actually its not funny cause I know how bad brick laying is on the back.

    But for some reason I find laying pavers good for the back - never had a problem with mine until I had kids - lifting babies into cars etc.

    Anyway I'm too old for that sort of caper now, I'd rather pay young blokes to do it for me......... except you watch them fiddle about and you end up showing them how its done,IE you end up doing it yourself with the labourers standing around watching you!

  11. #11
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    Question Stable paving, weeds and ants

    Quote Originally Posted by ozwinner View Post
    Al
    Guys thank you all for your input and yes im very novice with this paving thing.

    I understand that doing wet paving is harder than using paving sand however my only concern is to have stable paving which i dont have to touch again ever!!!

    So you mean i can just mix cement with roadbase and i dont have to wet it???
    Just leave it like that then compact it??
    Also can you tell me the ratio of cement with road base, im thinking to have 5 to 6 tons of road base to be deliver.

    So if i used paving sand then compact it before laying pavers and used sydney sand (or mixed with cement) for joints wont they wobble later on, i mean in the future?

    Also what about the weeds and ants?? isnt thats a problem aswell if you lay the paving on sand?

    If they wont then thats good coz thats way easiser than wet paving man

    and yeah i wont forget the BEER!!! I'll have my Peroni

    Again Guys thanks for all of your input, I will post before and after photos later

  12. #12
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    Also does it matter if the paving material is recontituted stone, concrete or clay paver?? I just thought that reconstituted stones are more pourous than others thats why they needed to be put on wet paving.

  13. #13
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    Just a note don't try to carry to many at once, I spent a few weeks in pain because I didn't. Tried to carry to pavers each hand just gripping them with my fingers. Tore a muscle in my shoulder.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by latinkgb View Post
    Guys thank you all for your input and yes im very novice with this paving thing.

    I understand that doing wet paving is harder than using paving sand however my only concern is to have stable paving which i dont have to touch again ever!!!

    I have used both methods, mortar and sand, the mortar is far superior, sand based paving tends to move around and sink after a while.

    So you mean i can just mix cement with roadbase and i dont have to wet it???
    Just leave it like that then compact it?? Yes
    Also can you tell me the ratio of cement with road base, im thinking to have 5 to 6 tons of road base to be deliver.
    You wont need much cement, the compacted road base is almost enough by itself.
    If you have to barrow it into place just sprinkle some cement on top of each barrow of base, when you tip it it will almost be mixed enough

    So if i used paving sand then compact it before laying pavers and used sydney sand (or mixed with cement) for joints wont they wobble later on, i mean in the future?

    Also what about the weeds and ants?? isnt thats a problem aswell if you lay the paving on sand?

    If they wont then thats good coz thats way easiser than wet paving man

    If you get the base right the pavers should almost lay themselves whether dry or wet.

    and yeah i wont forget the BEER!!! I'll have my Peroni

    Again Guys thanks for all of your input, I will post before and after photos later
    Al

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by latinkgb View Post
    Also does it matter if the paving material is recontituted stone, concrete or clay paver?? I just thought that reconstituted stones are more pourous than others thats why they needed to be put on wet paving.

    I think there are all basically the same in the way you would lay them, clay pavers take a little bit more work as the dont suck up the moisture as quickly as the other types do when wet laying them..

    Al

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