Windsor Star

OUT ON A LEDGE

A cracked concrete lintel proved to be quite the conundrum that confounded various industry experts, writes Jeanne Huber.

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Q The concrete lintel over one of our front windows has cracked. The house was built in 1989 and has wood framing, with brick facing on only the front of the house. We have been unable to find anyone to repair or replace it. Can we do this ourselves?

A These cracks are a real head-scratcher. An experience­d mason, a structural engineer and representa­tives of several trade associatio­ns that deal with concrete masonry all said it's difficult to explain why horizontal cracks would occur as they show in the lintel in the picture you sent.

Precast concrete can sometimes crack because of problems in the manufactur­ing process, but “if there is a problem, you'd usually see that soon,” said Gabriela Mariscal, director of market segments for the National Concrete Masonry Associatio­n in Herndon, Va. (ncma.org). She noticed that the cracks appear to be wider in the front than they are deeper into the concrete, and said the only explanatio­n she could offer was there might be something pressing out against the lintel from inside the wall. She suggested calling a structural engineer for an assessment.

Hadi Rahnama, a profession­al engineer at HRA Structural Engineers in Potomac, Md., (hrastructu­ral.com), and Rogan Stearns, a registered profession­al engineer at Stearns Engineerin­g in Rockville, Md., (stearnseng­ineering.net), both said that, judging from the picture, it's unlikely your house has a structural problem. The lintel appears to be carrying only its own weight, Rahnama said.

Stearns said that if there was outward pressure on the lintel, there would typically also be diagonal cracks in the brick radiating out from the corners of the lintel. But the bricks on your house don't show any cracks. If the lintel cracked because of excessive pressure from above, Stearns said, the cracks in the concrete would be vertical and in the middle of the span. It's also possible that cracks in a lintel could be caused by steel reinforcin­g that's rusting, because steel expands to 10 times its original size as it rusts, he said.

“But then you would see the bottom surface falling off,” he said. In the picture, the bottom surface of the lintel looks fine.

If these were normal times and the company were making house calls, Stearns could arrange an in-person inspection by his associate, who bills at US$175 an hour. With travel time, that might take two hours, and another couple of hours might be invested in writing a letter with recommenda­tions, bringing the fee to around $700. But the letter would probably just recommend patching the concrete and monitoring it to see whether the cracks reappear, Stearns said.

Based on this, you might want to get right to patching the concrete, with a big caveat that there are no guarantees the patches will hold. You could do this yourself, keeping costs at a minimum, or hire someone who specialize­s in small home-repair tasks.

Chad Corley, director of public relations for Quikrete, which makes concrete mixes and patching products, recommends using Quikrete Polymer Modified Structural Repair (available at home building retailers). This product contains a pre-blended mixture of cement, sand and a polymer that helps it bond well and resist sagging and shrinking. It's ideal for vertical repairs, Corley said.

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