Concrete & ferro scanning

Post-Tension Cable Detection

In a post-tensioned slab, high-tensile tendons run through the concrete under enormous load and follow a draped profile that is not obvious from the surface. Cutting or drilling into one of those tendons is one of the most serious things that can happen on a coring job: the stored energy releases suddenly, the structure can be compromised, and re-stressing or repairing a severed tendon is difficult and expensive.

Post-tension cable detection uses ground penetrating radar (GPR) to locate those tendons before any work begins, so penetrations can be planned around them. We scan the slab, identify and mark the line of the post-tension cables along with reinforcement and services, and confirm the clear zones where you can safely core, cut or drill.

This is a specialist application of concrete scanning, and it depends heavily on interpretation. Distinguishing a draped tendon from ordinary reinforcement takes an experienced operator reading the depth and profile of the reflections, not just a machine. We scan for main contractors, structural engineers, M&E and fit-out teams working in post-tensioned buildings across London and the surrounding region.

What we locate

Before you break into a post-tensioned element, we locate and mark:

  • Post-tension cables and tendons, including their draped profile within the slab
  • Conventional reinforcement running alongside or above the tendons
  • Embedded electrical conduits and services
  • Anchorage zones where tendons terminate at slab edges
  • Clear zones where a core or cut can be made without striking a tendon

When you need it

Post-tension detection is essential:

  • Before any core, cut, chase or drilled penetration in a post-tensioned slab
  • Before installing anchors or fixings into a post-tensioned floor or soffit
  • When forming new openings, risers or service routes in an existing PT structure
  • During fit-out and alteration where the slab type is post-tensioned or suspected to be
  • Whenever drawings are unavailable or unverified and the tendon layout must be confirmed on site

Deliverables

We mark the line of the post-tension cables and the surrounding reinforcement and services directly onto the slab, and we identify the safe zones for each proposed penetration. This on-site markup is what allows coring and cutting to proceed with confidence.

Where a record is needed, we provide annotated drawings or sketches showing the detected tendon runs, reinforcement, estimated depths and the agreed clear penetration points. For larger programmes across several floors we can record findings in a consistent format so the information can be shared with the design and construction team and reused as the works progress.

How we work

A survey you can plan around.

A clear, repeatable method on every job, so you know what is happening on site and what lands on your desk afterwards.

01 · Scope

Scope

We confirm the slab is or may be post-tensioned, review any available drawings, and agree the penetration locations to be checked.

02 · Capture

Scan on site

We run GPR across each area, building a picture of the tendon profile, reinforcement and services.

03 · Interpret

Interpret and mark up

We interpret the data to distinguish tendons from reinforcement, mark them on the surface, and identify clear zones for each penetration.

04 · Report

Report

Where required, we issue annotated drawings recording the tendon layout, depths and safe penetration points.

Frequently asked questions

Questions we are asked about this service.

What is post-tension cable detection?

Post-tension cable detection is the process of locating the tensioned tendons within a post-tensioned concrete slab before any coring, cutting or drilling. It is usually carried out with ground penetrating radar so that penetrations can be planned to avoid the tendons, preventing a strike that could compromise the structure and endanger workers.

Why is it so important to locate post-tension cables before drilling?

The tendons in a post-tensioned slab carry very high loads. Cutting or drilling into one can release that energy suddenly, damage the structural integrity of the slab and create a serious safety hazard, and repairing or re-stressing a severed tendon is costly and disruptive. Locating and avoiding the tendons first removes that risk.

Can GPR tell a post-tension cable apart from rebar?

GPR shows where objects are, and telling a draped post-tension tendon apart from conventional reinforcement relies on skilled interpretation of the depth and profile of the reflections. Tendons typically follow a curved, draped path through the slab depth, which an experienced operator can distinguish from the more regular pattern of reinforcement. This is why interpretation is central to reliable PT detection.

Can you scan a post-tension slab from one side?

Yes. GPR only needs access to one face of the slab, so we can scan a post-tensioned floor from above or a soffit from below without needing access to both sides, and without the exclusion zones that X-ray methods require.

Do I still need to scan if I have the original drawings?

Drawings are a useful starting point, but tendon positions can differ from the design, and drawings are often unavailable, incomplete or unverified in existing buildings. Scanning confirms the actual layout on site before you commit to a penetration, which is why it is recommended even when drawings exist.

What do I get at the end of the scan?

At minimum, the tendon lines, reinforcement and services are marked directly on the slab along with the safe penetration zones. Where you need a record, we also provide annotated drawings showing the tendon layout, estimated depths and agreed clear points.

Request a survey

Send us the brief. We will scope it.

Tell us the site, the deadline and what you need to know. We will confirm the right survey or test, the standard it meets and exactly what you will receive.