Posted by msabatini2001 on July 31, 2010, 12:11 pm
The area between the garage doors and the driveway has a 1" gap. The
driveway seems to have "shrunk" with the icy winters. The depth is
about 4-5".
How do I fill this gap? I thought of using cold patch, but since the
gap is so narrow, I probably will not be able to get the patch chunks
in compactly. Can I use sand to fill in most of the depth, then cold
patch the last 1"?
I am looking for any suggestions.
thanks
Mark
Posted by Robert Neville on July 31, 2010, 2:20 pm
msabatini2001@yahoo.com wrote:
>The area between the garage doors and the driveway has a 1" gap. The
>driveway seems to have "shrunk" with the icy winters. The depth is
>about 4-5".
More likely the ground under the driveway has settled and pulled back from the
garage.
>How do I fill this gap?
Why do you have to? In the grand scheme of things it isn't harming anything and
you are probably the only one who notices it.
>I thought of using cold patch, but since the
>gap is so narrow, I probably will not be able to get the patch chunks
>in compactly. Can I use sand to fill in most of the depth, then cold
>patch the last 1"?
If you really feel the need, I would just use expansion joint material, cut to
fit. You can double up thinner stuff if you can't find 1" locally.
http://www.wrmeadows.com/wrm00009.htm
Posted by Stan Brown on August 1, 2010, 8:53 am
On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 12:20:49 -0600, Robert Neville wrote:
> msabatini2001@yahoo.com wrote:
>
> >The area between the garage doors and the driveway has a 1" gap. The
> >driveway seems to have "shrunk" with the icy winters. The depth is
> >about 4-5".
>
> More likely the ground under the driveway has settled and pulled back from the
> garage.
>
> >How do I fill this gap?
>
> Why do you have to? In the grand scheme of things it isn't harming anything and
> you are probably the only one who notices it.
To keep cold air out? The better sheltered it was during the night,
the better the car will start in the morning.
Plus, if you close up the gap, you'll reduce the number of critters
that come inside to take up residence. Notice I said "reduce":
complete interdiction is probably not achievable.
--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA
http://OakRoadSystems.com
Shikata ga nai...
Posted by msabatini2001 on August 1, 2010, 10:06 am
> On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 12:20:49 -0600, Robert Neville wrote:
> > msabatini2...@yahoo.com wrote:
> > >The area between the garage doors and the driveway has a 1" gap. The
> > >driveway seems to have "shrunk" with the icy winters. The depth is
> > >about 4-5".
> > More likely the ground under the driveway has settled and pulled back from the
> > garage.
> > >How do I fill this gap?
> > Why do you have to? In the grand scheme of things it isn't harming anything and
> > you are probably the only one who notices it.
> To keep cold air out? The better sheltered it was during the night,
> the better the car will start in the morning.
> Plus, if you close up the gap, you'll reduce the number of critters
> that come inside to take up residence. Notice I said "reduce":
> complete interdiction is probably not achievable.
> --
> Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA
> http://OakRoadSystems.com
> Shikata ga nai...
Ok let me clarify. The gap is not between the driveway and the bottom
of the garage door. The gap is on the driveway. I am looking to fill
this so that it does not expand with water/ice freezing this winter. I
was thinking of first filling in with sand, then patching with cold
patch.
thanks
Posted by Una on August 1, 2010, 11:32 am
>Ok let me clarify. The gap is not between the driveway and the bottom
>of the garage door. The gap is on the driveway. I am looking to fill
>this so that it does not expand with water/ice freezing this winter.
You have a drainage problem? Does water collect there? Or is the
water there only what falls on the garage door?
Una
>driveway seems to have "shrunk" with the icy winters. The depth is
>about 4-5".