Boy, you don't know how right you are when it comes to licences on earthquake products and additions. I built an addition on my house that was 1700 square feet and did all the framing and foundation work myself. I used a common 2 part constuction epoxy sold at the lumber yard to dowel and glue rebar into the existing foundation at 2 ft. intervals at 16 inches and 36 inches below grade. The lumber yard assured me that they sell it all the time for gluing rebar into foundations and that they have never had any trouble. All subsequent rebar was tied to these dowels prior to the concrete pour. When the county inspector arrived, he commented on how neat the jobsite was and how professional all the formwork and rebar work was. He then asked to see an empty epoxy cartridge. You guessed it! No ISO certification label. I had to redo it all before the concrete went down.
Each one of those blasted cartridges cost 21$, <I used 26 of them for gluing the rebar into the holes> and around 46 hours labor to redrill all the holes; not to mention the rebar cost. I was heart broken and there was no talking the inspector out of his decision.
I learned a valuable lesson though... those little overlooked, seldom read, tiny labels can cost you a fortune in time and materials.
To keep this discussion Ram truck related... that's why I use Chevron Delo with the API label on the top. No one can accuse me of using the wrong oil or an unapproved oil and subsequently, refuse a warranty claim.
-Paul R. Haller-
Each one of those blasted cartridges cost 21$, <I used 26 of them for gluing the rebar into the holes> and around 46 hours labor to redrill all the holes; not to mention the rebar cost. I was heart broken and there was no talking the inspector out of his decision.
I learned a valuable lesson though... those little overlooked, seldom read, tiny labels can cost you a fortune in time and materials.
To keep this discussion Ram truck related... that's why I use Chevron Delo with the API label on the top. No one can accuse me of using the wrong oil or an unapproved oil and subsequently, refuse a warranty claim.
-Paul R. Haller-