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The Work of Art and The Art of Work
Kiko Denzer on Art



Cob: Earth Floor!

Vicki Wicker vcwicker at asub.edu
Fri Nov 2 10:16:28 CST 2001


I have to disagree. We troweled and we rammed. Ramming was much easier. 
Because you sprinkle the soil down dry (much lighter) and trowelling is 
massively hard work. Plus all of the mixing is totally  eliminated.

At 08:37 AM 11/2/01 -0800, Patricia Kerns wrote:
>Darel,
>
> From my experience, it is the clay/sand ratio that affects the shrinkage,
>not the moisture content of the material.  Clay shrinks, sand doesn't.
>
> > You mention the word "pour" below, but from my reading and it makes
> > sense,the less moisture in the mix the less cracks and shrinkage upon
> > drying.  You can always fill in small cracks though.
>
>
>Can you elaborate on your comments that a rammed earth floor is the
>strongest?  I have never heard anyone speculate that making the floor dry as
>opposed to wet would make it stronger.  Have you actually tried this?  It
>seems to me it would be much more labor intensive than trowelling on a wet
>mix.  Also, what is your basis for the comments about lime?
>
> > A rammed earthen floor would give you the strongest, especially if you
> > gave it about a 14% slaked lime content.   The ash you use sounds like a
> > good additive to.
> >
> > Darel