Concrete Maturity — Winter Pour (Protected)
Nurse-Saul maturity index (°C·h) for a winter pour (protected) against a required threshold.
At 10 °C average, concrete accrues maturity at barely half the summer rate — a week of winter curing equals three summer days. The datum temperature (−10 °C in the Nurse-Saul default here) matters most in exactly this regime; calibrate it per ASTM C1074, don't assume it.
Formula
Note: Planning estimate only — strength for structural decisions (formwork striking, post-tensioning, loading) must be verified by site-cured specimens or a calibrated maturity system per the project specification.
Nurse-Saul maturity index (°C·h) for a winter pour (protected) against a required threshold. A free concrete curing, maturity & strength tool — no sign-up, no upload, instant results in your browser.
About Concrete Maturity — Winter Pour (Protected)
Concrete Maturity — Winter Pour (Protected) computes the governing relationship M = Σ (T − T₀) · Δt [Nurse-Saul, ASTM C1074] live as you type. At 10 °C average, concrete accrues maturity at barely half the summer rate — a week of winter curing equals three summer days. The datum temperature (−10 °C in the Nurse-Saul default here) matters most in exactly this regime; calibrate it per ASTM C1074, don't assume it. Defaults are pre-filled with realistic values for this exact scenario, and the worked example substitutes your numbers step by step so the math is never a black box.
How to use Concrete Maturity — Winter Pour (Protected)
- 1Enter your values — Average concrete temperature, Datum temperature T₀, Elapsed time, Required maturity (sensible defaults are pre-filled).
- 2Read the live results: Maturity index, Share of requirement, Hours remaining at this temp.
- 3Check the "with your numbers" line to see M = Σ (T − T₀) · Δt [Nurse-Saul, ASTM C1074] substituted step by step.
- 4Adjust inputs until the scenario matches yours, then copy or share the result.
Why use Concrete Maturity — Winter Pour (Protected)?
- ✓Instant, free and private — every calculation runs client-side in your browser; nothing is uploaded
- ✓Built on the stated formula M = Σ (T − T₀) · Δt [Nurse-Saul, ASTM C1074] with authoritative sources cited on the page (ASTM C1074 — Estimating concrete strength by the maturity method; Neville, A.M., Properties of Concrete, 5th ed.)
- ✓At 10 °C average, concrete accrues maturity at barely half the summer rate — a week of winter curing equals three summer days.
- ✓SI ⇄ Imperial toggle converts your inputs in place, so you can work in the units your drawings use
Frequently asked questions
What formula does the concrete maturity — winter pour (protected) use?+
It evaluates M = Σ (T − T₀) · Δt [Nurse-Saul, ASTM C1074], exactly as published. Sources: ASTM C1074 — Estimating concrete strength by the maturity method; Neville, A.M., Properties of Concrete, 5th ed.. The substituted worked example on the page lets you verify every step against the textbook.
How should I read the result — and how far can I trust it?+
At 10 °C average, concrete accrues maturity at barely half the summer rate — a week of winter curing equals three summer days. Planning estimate only — strength for structural decisions (formwork striking, post-tensioning, loading) must be verified by site-cured specimens or a calibrated maturity system per the project specification.
When is this calculator the right tool for the job?+
Nurse-Saul maturity index (°C·h) for a winter pour (protected) against a required threshold. A free concrete curing, maturity & strength tool. The datum temperature (−10 °C in the Nurse-Saul default here) matters most in exactly this regime; calibrate it per ASTM C1074, don't assume it. For neighbouring scenarios, the related tools below cover the same engine with different presets.
Does it support both metric and imperial units?+
Yes — the SI ⇄ Imperial toggle converts the values already in the fields, preserving the physical quantity, so you can flip mid-calculation without re-entering anything.
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