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Thread: Retaining wall

  1. #1
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    Default Retaining wall

    Hello folks,

    One of the projects I have on the go at the moment, started before I went to the Melbourne WWW show is a retaining wall. I'm using garden wall blocks - you know the type get the base right and the rest just stack on top with a lip at the back.

    Anyway the situatiuon I have is that one end of the wall will be some what free standing (the low end in the pic), what I need to know is what sort of adhesive could I use on this end to make sure that the blocks dont go wondering off, mainly concerned with lateral movement.

    The end will be about 3-4 blocks high.

    For what it's worth the original retaining wall was made up from redgum sleepers held back with star droppers (very elegant ), Oh well at least I get some salvaged timber out of it.

    Himzo.
    There's no such thing as too many Routers

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  3. #2
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    Default

    When you say free standing, do you mean there is nothing behind the bricks? If I have it right the bricks you are talking about are generally held in place by their own weight and the weight behind them. I suspect if you take the weight from behind them they will mot likely topple over, regardless of the glue/mortar. Have you got a photo of the bricks or wall?

    For the record you could use either liquid nails (there is a mortat mix) or mix up a brickies mud (4 parts brickies sand to one part cement - more or less)
    There was a young boy called Wyatt
    Who was awfully quiet
    And then one day
    He faded away
    Because he overused White


    Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....

  4. #3
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    Default

    What Namtrak said but drive some Reo rod vertically down through the bricks, at least for the lower two courses, if you can.


    Cheers
    Squizzy

    "It is better to be ignorant and ask a stupid question than to be plain Stupid and not ask at all" {screamed by maths teacher in Year 8}

  5. #4
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    Default

    When you say free standing, do you mean there is nothing behind the bricks? If I have it right the bricks you are talking about are generally held in place by their own weight and the weight behind them. I suspect if you take the weight from behind them they will mot likely topple over, regardless of the glue/mortar. Have you got a photo of the bricks or wall?
    No, there will be plenty behind the wall, what I reall need is something that will stop the last one or two blocks from moving sideways.

    How waterproof is the liquid nails ? where I am and more importantly where the blocks will be gets a bit of rain and run off during the winter months.


    Himzo.
    There's no such thing as too many Routers

  6. #5
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    Reo rod
    :confused: :confused:

    Whats that,

    H.
    There's no such thing as too many Routers

  7. #6
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    Default

    Reinforcing rod that is normally put into concrete construction. Better known as Reo. Cheap as chips from most steel suppliers and hardwares. Nothing to do with Rio.

    Cheers
    Squizzy

    "It is better to be ignorant and ask a stupid question than to be plain Stupid and not ask at all" {screamed by maths teacher in Year 8}

  8. #7
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    Default

    Thanks Squizz,

    I don't think I'm going to need that, the bottom two or three or somewhere in between will butt up against a fairly substancial step (brick/morter etc..).

    I mainly wanted to know what adhesive was available as the wall will "step up" away from this end towards the higher end of the wall. The last block on each step up is what I want to fasten so that there is little lateral movement.

    Himzo.

    PS. I thought it was a Hot Rod made from a REO Speed wagon
    There's no such thing as too many Routers

  9. #8
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    Okay, use the reo (should use it on the whole wall anyway) and fill the blocks with a nice slurry. Are you capping off the blocks or are they solid already?
    There was a young boy called Wyatt
    Who was awfully quiet
    And then one day
    He faded away
    Because he overused White


    Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....

  10. #9
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    Are you capping off the blocks or are they solid already?
    Solid already,

    I'm not sure that the rod will be necessary as there will not be a huge amount of prssure behind the wall, the embankment is fairly stable it's mainly for asthetics and to stop soil erosion. In any case what I've done is made the base layer halfway below the soil line after the compacted roadbase etc. so it shouldn't move forward (touch wood).

    As I said the original wall (if you can call it that) was just redgum sleepers held back with star droppers, this didn't move after a year to 18 months which is how long we've been at this place. The reasons for change is that I don't believe that redgum should be put in the ground to rot, and this is where we have our BBQ's in summer and it looked really ugly.

    Himzo.
    There's no such thing as too many Routers

  11. #10
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    Default

    hi himzol

    how deep were your original star pickets into the ground? If only a few inches you are probably right that your embankment is stable. If they went down more than a foot then I suspect you would probably be safer with reinforcing rods. Wet earth can exert quite a pressure.

    The extra effort and cost would be minimal.

    cheers

    Jackie
    no-one said on their death bed I wish I spent more time in the office!

  12. #11
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    I agree - dont underestimate the weight behind the retaining wall. The load is known as the lateral earth pressure. Any manufacturer of retaining wall blocks should have handy the specs for load carrying.

    Having said that though, I think what your looking for would just be a mortar mix of some sort, either brickies mud, or pre-mix mortar. I personally have only used liquid nails mix on caps and they seemed to hold okay.

    Cheers
    There was a young boy called Wyatt
    Who was awfully quiet
    And then one day
    He faded away
    Because he overused White


    Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....

  13. #12
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    Default

    Himzol, what kind of blocks are you using? The place we recently bought has the same Euc sleepers and star pickets and we are looking to replace them. Can't identify the timber 'cause it has been in the weather for many years. And we don't like subsidising housing for termites (already had to replace the pergola). Anyway, what made you decide on the type of blocks you are using?

    Slavo
    If I do not clearly express what I mean, it is either for the reason that having no conversational powers, I cannot express what I mean, or that having no meaning, I do not mean what I fail to express. Which, to the best of my belief, is not the case.
    Mr. Grewgious, The Mystery of Edwin Drood - Charles Dickens

  14. #13
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    As a matter of interest, most of the paving, block makers have technical support people who will be able to tell you what their product can and can't do and how to do it.

    Just a thought coz around these parts with the heavy rain earlier in the week one guy came home and found the terraced site he'd recently completed was siting on the road in front of his house Another one got crossed of the Christmas card list of his neighbour over the back fence when his landscaping moved significantly and prevented his neighbour from getting in or out of his house :eek: :eek:
    Perhaps it is better to be irresponsible and right, than to be responsible and wrong.
    Winston Churchill

  15. #14
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    how deep were your original star pickets into the ground?
    Jackie,

    Not very far, just far enough to hold the wall upright. All but one came out pretty easily. Most of the material behind the original wall was a mixture of topsoil and mulch which had been washed down behind the wall. I think the original wall was only put up to stop this stuff washing down onto the lawn (flat area covered in weeds).

    Slavo,

    Anyway, what made you decide on the type of blocks you are using?
    The choice was made for me, I was given about fifty blocks by a work colegue who was moving house and these were surplus to requirements, I do however need to purchase more as there was only enough to start the job.
    They are the solid concrete blocks that have a lip at the back on the bottom and sort of a rought three face front. I think they call them garden block. At the moment they are about $5-$6 each in Adelaide.

    Before you even start to replace the stuff you have, check with the council, you may have to get an engineer in if the wall is over a certain height.

    Himzo.
    There's no such thing as too many Routers

  16. #15
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    The main cause of failure of any retaining wall is from water pressure. Think of all of the crooked walls that youve seen around the older suburbs - evidence of drainage through the base of the walls is not to be seen. You MUST have some form of drainage behind the wall to release any water, either out the ends or through the base.


    Den
    The only way to get rid of a [Domino] temptation is to yield to it. Oscar Wilde

    .....so go4it people!

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