DIY Builds
Photo: Dmitry Alexandrovich
Sometimes you need steel fibers, and sometimes you need rebar, and only in a few limited situations can one effectively replace the other. To put it simply, steel fibers prevent cracks, while rebar limits the width of cracks. Let's consider two examples: a wide-slab floor and a continuously-reinforced concrete highway.
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These are! They guide you every step of the way to complete your dream shed.
Learn More »But here’s the trick. The imbedded steel has to be very close to the source of the microcrack to stop its growth. Once a crack has developed enough momentum, nothing can stop it from ripping all the way across a slab. This is where steel fibers prove their worth, because only fibers can provide the dense distribution of steel needed to catch every microcrack (Photo 3). If you make concrete with CFS 100-2 steel fibers at 70 pcy (pounds per cubic yard), you get, on average, 12 fibers in each cubic inch of concrete. No microcrack can go more than a fraction of an inch without running into a fiber. In contrast, rebar designs always space the bars several inches apart, giving microcracks plenty of room in which to grow. If you make concrete with CFS 100-2 steel fibers at 70 pcy (pounds per cubic yard), you get, on average, 12 fibers in each cubic inch of concrete. No microcrack can go more than a fraction of an inch without running into a fiber. In contrast, rebar designs always space the bars several inches apart, giving microcracks plenty of room in which to grow.
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