Do you always consider alternative porting methods as you prepare to execute an epoxy crack injection repair project?
Maybe not. Yet the method selected by your field technician may make a significant difference in the quality, linear footage productivity and job profitability. Many crack injection specifications intentionally leave port selection and type as a field selected option to be determined by the practical experience and judgment of the concrete repair contractor. Some epoxy injection specifications call for a minimum of 90% of the crack length to show epoxy and some specifications require proof by examination of cored specifications, so port selection is often more critical for these specifications.
With a goal of filling (injecting) a crack with epoxy quickly, neatly, and completely, several factors to consider are:
Many of our concrete restoration contractors use a combination of several porting methods:
Taped surface ports
Rubber tips, pins, wire, (finishing) nails, straws, golf tees and toothpicks
Injection molded of PE plastic or nylon, surface ports for crack injection
Packers, Zerk fittings and grease fittings
These port options for epoxy injection are popular when high pressures are used and are standards for use with chemical grouting, a term usually affiliated with polyurethane (PU) injection. PU chemical grouting is a viable material option for waterproofing and leak-proofing but is usually not considered for structural repairs because it does not meet structural load bearing requirements such as ASTM C881, Type IV. Almost always these types of port connections are a most expensive cost option and are used with a drilled hole (see below). These connectors are often self-sealing with a spring loaded ball so the field technician doesn’t have to worry about material leaking from an uncapped port.
Drilled Injection Ports
Port connections for drilled holes can be made by the contractor at low cost by cutting sections from 1/4 or 3/8” polypropylene supply hose (same as used for the water supply line for an icemaker), purchased as pre-molded units or supplied as a tapered Semko® tip. This method is one of the first choices when injection flows are obstructed by the type of crack, surface obstructions, plugging, or for accessing voids under a sound surface (such as a de-bonded topping slab). If the crack is narrow, a 1/2" diameter water-flushed core bit is far superior to an impact bit for drilling port holes as it is less likely to pack the crack around the hole with drill fines (leading to more obstruction).