- Location
- Massachusetts
Just to give you a better picture of how this is all going together....I'm dealing with a mat slab that's 4' + in depth......we're pouring in stages.....working from the farthest point out into the water back to shore......i have columns that are going up along the existing seawall that are not really part of the mat slab pour......we are required to put a bonding jumper from the those columns and tie into the grid.......that's what started the quandary.....as has been suggested....we have placed a piece of regular re-bar in the pour and have done the same in the columns......bonded that together.....and have proceeded in the subsequent pours the same way heading towards shore......
It blows my mind that they are allowing you to install untreated rebar in the pours.
Why not use bare copper wire in the pour?
or consisting of at least 6.0 m (20 ft) of
bare copper conductor not smaller than 4 AWG