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Concrete Decor Archives
Hover Trowel walk-behind concrete trowel
Photo courtesy of Hover Trowel, Inc.

 

Choosing a Power Trowel
for Decorative Concrete
The type of equipment you use should reflect careful consideration of the surface you’re working on and the region you live in.
by John Strieder

Varel’s company, Stone Construction Equipment, makes power trowels with unique features of their own. An RPM adjuster and hand-disconnect clutch allow the engine to rev up to speed before the blades are engaged. When the operator isn’t actively troweling, he or she simply disengages the blades. The engine continues to hum at the same RPM, ready to resume work at a second’s notice.

A safety switch on Stone’s machine disengages the blades automatically if the machine spins one full turn, safeguarding against the power trowel running amuck, injuring workers and ruining the pad.

Then there is the remote-control power trowel. White Cap Construction Supply exhibited a Tibroc CCF-40 radio-controlled power trowel at the 2005 World of Concrete conference. The 85-pound machine, which the company bills as the first of its kind, is controlled with two joysticks.

Remote-control power trowels aren’t in wide use right now, but they might catch on. They would reduce operator fatigue without being as big or expensive as a ride-on, Varel says. “They would be a little bit of both worlds, is what I’m thinking.”

Fagley also likes the idea. “I personally think down the road there is going to be a lot of remote troweling done,” he says.

Choosing a blade
After picking a machine, a contractor must decide what will go underneath it.
The blade “spider” of a power trowel extends from the center like the blades of a lawnmower. There are three categories of blades: float, finishing and combination.

The float blade is used first, spinning flat at a relatively low RPM rate. As it works over the surface, high spots are leveled, water rises to the top and larger rocks sink.


Photo courtesy of Multiquip, Inc.

Then comes the finishing blade, applied with a higher RPM and at a slight angle. The heavier pressure seals the concrete and increases its density.

Combination blades can be used to both float and polish, as long as they are reset at the necessary angle between tasks.

Instead of float blades, an operator may attach paddle-shaped float pans to the spider. The attachments are often used to smooth epoxy coatings over concrete floors. They will also leave a flatter surface than float blades, given the same number of passes. But because pans don’t close up a surface as effectively as blades, they are not used for finishing.

Each type of blade is progressively narrower, with floats being the widest and finish blades the skinniest. Smaller, stiffer finish blades will produce a harder swiping action and better densify molecules in the concrete, says Jeff Snyder, sales manager with Wagman Metal Products Inc. “The hardest surface is going to be achieved by a finish-style blade.”

Wagman Metal Products makes several series of plastic trowel blades that should last as long as the steel variety. And unlike steel blades, plastic floats won’t leave burnish marks, an important consideration when power-troweling color hardener. “You can get a high-polish finish with plastic blades without burnish marks,” Snyder says. “You can spin plastic on a surface until the machine runs out of gas and not mark it.”

Power Trowel Manufacturers
HoverTrowel Inc.
Stone Construction Equipment Inc.
Wagman Metal Products Inc.
White Cap Construction Supply
Multiquip Inc.

Other specialty attachments will go underneath too. Grinding blocks can be attached to rub out screed marks. Edger blades, with ends that are curved instead of square like traditional blades, can get right up against a wall.

The HoverTrowel takes mahogany or magnesium floats, which would tear apart a conventional trowel. This feature may come in handy when a contractor doesn’t want to use steel trowels because of their tendency to close the pores of the surface. Closed pores can lead to spalling in cold parts of the country where the concrete is subject to freeze-thaw cycles. “With mahogany, pores stay open and the concrete can breathe,” Fagley says.

more ›››
 
This Issue
Concrete Decor, Vol. 5, No. 1
February/March 2005
Concrete Decor Vol 5 No 1
 

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Other articles in this issue:
Choosing a Concrete Overlay
New Tech: Concrete Additives: Metakaolins
Contractor Profile: GLC3 Concrete
Manufacturer: Proline Concrete Tools
Tooling: Choosing  Power Trowel
Final Pour: WOC 2005
Decorative Concrete Tips
Concrete Industry News
Concrete Association News
Product News
Product Profile

 

 

 

   



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