Although on larger projects iron-workers will place the reinforcing steel, most contractors place some reinforcement. Getting it in the right place and keeping it there during concrete placement is critical to the structure’s performance. Reinforcement should be placed as shown on the placing drawings. There, the detailer will indicate the number of bars, bar lengths, bends, and positions.

Cover

One important reason for placing the reinforcing steel properly is to achieve the right amount of concrete cover—the amount of concrete between the reinforcing steel and the surface of the concrete member. Cover is the single most important factor in protecting reinforcing steel from corrosion. Cover is also necessary to assure that the steel bonds to the concrete well enough to develop its strength. The requirements for minimum cover are usually listed in the project specifications or shown on the drawings. Where not specified, the minimum cover for cast-in-place concrete is specified by the ACI 318 Building Code.

Minimum concrete cover

  • For concrete cast against and permanently exposed to earth (such as footings): 3 inches
  • For concrete exposed to weather or earth (such as basement walls)
    #6 bars and larger: 2 inches
    #5 bars or smaller: 1½ inches
  • For concrete not exposed to weather or in contact with ground:
    Slabs, walls, and joists: #14 and #18 bars: ½ inch
    Slabs, walls, and joists: #11 bars and smaller: ¾ inch
    Beams and columns: 1½ inches

Positioning

What’s important to remember is that the design of the structure is based on having the steel in the right place. Incorrect reinforcing steel placement can and has led to serious concrete structural failures. For example, lowering the top bars or raising the bottom bars by ½ inch more than that specified in a 6-inch-deep slab could reduce its load-carrying capacity by 20%.

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Top: Reinforcing steel mats are supported by chairs to keep the steel at the proper elevation in the slab. Bottom: Concrete must be held in the proper position during concrete placement.
Placing reinforcement atop a layer of fresh concrete and then pouring more on top is not an acceptable method for positioning. You must use reinforcing bar supports, which are made of steel wire, precast concrete, or plastic. Chairs and supports are available in various heights to support specific reinforcing bar sizes and positions. In general, plastic accessories are less expensive than metal supports. The Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute’s Ready Reference Reinforcing Steel Resource Guide or the classic Placing Reinforcing Barshas three tables that show most of the currently available supports in the various materials and describing the situation where each is most effectively used.
Simply placing the bars on supports is not enough. Reinforcing steel must be secured to prevent displacement during construction activities and concrete placement. This is usually accomplished with tie wire. Tie wire comes in 3- or 4-pound coils. Wires are placed in a wire holder or a reel is suspended from the worker’s belt for accessibility. The wire is typically 16½ or 16-gauge black, soft, annealed wire, although heavier reinforcement may require 15- or 14-gauge wire to hold the proper position of the rebar. A variety of tie types (ties are basically wire twists for connecting intersecting bars), from snap ties to saddle ties, are used in the concrete reinforcing industry. CRSI’s Placing Reinforcing Bars illustrates the types of ties and describes the situation where each is most effectively used.
For tying epoxy-coated bars, use PVC ties (available from American Wire Tie). Proprietary snap-on ties are also available, such as the Speed-Clip Rebar Tie from Con-Tie Inc. This is a simple device that attaches rebar in parallel or at any angle by hand. No tools are required.
When tying bars, there is no need to tie every intersection—every fourth or fifth is normally sufficient. Remember that the tie contributes no strength to the structure, so more are necessary only when the steel might become displaced during concrete placement. Be sure to keep the ends of the tie wires away from the surface of the concrete where they could rust. For preassembled mats or reinforcing steel, tie enough intersections to make the assembly rigid enough for placing—typically every intersection around the outside and every other in the middle of the mat. Tack welding the intersections is typically not permitted, because it reduces the cross section of the bars.

Tolerances on placement

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Tolerances on reinforcement position
Although bars should be placed as close to the specified position as possible, there will always be a little bit of variation. The tolerances on rebar position, as defined by ACI 117, “Tolerances for Concrete Construction and Materials,” are shown in the table. Remember what this means: a tolerance, according to ACI 117, is the permitted variation from a given dimension—in other words, how far off the rebar actually is from what’s shown in the drawings. So, for example, if the clear distance between the outside of a reinforcing bar and the face of a 6-inch-wide concrete beam is specified to be 2 inches, the tolerance allows it to be no less than l 5/8 inches.
The tolerance on the position of longitudinal bars, is pretty loose— ±3 inches. That’s because the exact position is not that critical, as long as the proper cover is maintained and the specified number of bars are included.

Tips

Here are some things to remember about placing rebar:

  • Bar supports are not intended as support for construction equipment such as concrete pumps, buggies, or laser screeds.
  • Spacing of bar supports depends upon the size of the reinforcing bar being supported. For example, for a one-way solid slab with #5 temperature-shrinkage bars, high chairs are used at 4 feet on center; for #4 bars, high chairs would be placed 3 feet on center.
  • Placing reinforcement onto layers of fresh concrete or adjusting the position of bars or welded wire reinforcement during concrete placement should not be permitted. The ill-advised practice in slab construction of placing reinforcement on the subgrade and pulling it up during concrete placement is called “hooking.”
  • Spacers for vertical concrete (wall construction) have traditionally been optional. Side form spacers include double-headed nails, precast concrete blocks (dobies), and proprietary all-plastic shapes.
  • The ironworker, ironworker foreman, contractor, and inspector all have the responsibility to see that the reinforcing bars in concrete construction are properly placed.
Deviation from specified location: In slabs and walls, other than stirrups and ties ±3 in. Stirrups: depth of beam in inches divided by 12. Ties: width of column in inches divided by 12.
Resource : http://www.concreteconstruction.net/concrete/placing-reinforcing-steel.aspx
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