Two part poly-foam injection procedures will leave your concrete slab propped up on foam blob, leaving 50 to 80% of the under slab area as open cavities.
Concrete slabs, such as driveways, are expected to support heavy vehicles and in order to do so the entire slab must be properly supported, with no cavities under the concrete slab.
However, the poly-foam injection process will result in differential uncontrolled support blobs scattered haphazardly below the slab, surrounded by cavities, which will result in unnecessary cracking and breakage when the precariously supported slab is back in service.
A consistently filled base using poly-foam injection is simply not possible. Foam can only fill 12-inch glass cube (poly-foam advertizing), because the two-part foam injection system set up in 5 seconds or less, therefore only a blob is created, which will take on the shape of a snowman should a second or third injection is required.
These poly-blobs conveniently out of the customer’s sight, under the concrete slab, are not structurally reliable, especially when your concrete slab was poured thin. If this is the case it becomes very important to insure the entire slab is universally supported. A concrete slab is typically referred to as a “slab-on-grade” for specific reasons.
The only true slab jacking process proven over decades is the conventional Mudjacking method that ensures universal support with no voids or cavities. There is no substitute or better method.
Poly-Foam Facts: