At some point - hopefully in the not-too-distant future - I'll build a new shop with isolated pads for all three machines. Question - would glass fiber reinforced concrete be suitable for such a pad, or should I stick with steel rebar?
The thing that counts the most related to stability is what you do to prepare the area where you pour the machine pad. The pad is essentially floating on top of the place you pour it. If it is bed rock, which is the best, one can just pour the pad on top of it and not worry - it will move depending on how the bedrock is moving but that won't be a lot unless you are in an earthquake zone.
If it is undisturbed earth there are more things to worry about. One is whether or not it is subject to seasonal moisture infiltration which can be compensated for to some extent by making sure the area is well drained. The second is how well compacted it is.
In any event, the area where the shop floor will go should have a well compacted 4" (minimum) thick layer of crushed rock, no fines under the floor and any pads.
I have sandstone ridges and Hagerstown Clay under my shop. the ridges are, well, rigid. The clay is greasy when wet. Not the best situation by a long ways.
To compensate I dug it down 2' with my Nephew's CAT953C, had shale hauled in and compacted in 6" lifts with a 100" vibrating roller to bring it back up to 10" below the designed floor, then compacted crushed rock over that to build up a 4" layer. When I was done it felt like walking on an airport runway.
Then I had a 6" thick reinforced floor poured over that. No seperate machine pads.
I moved the 2 lathes and mills in about two years ago. I didn't get them set up and leveled for about a year with all the other things I had to get done. I check the two lathes now and then with my precision level (.0005" in 12" sensitivity or something extreme like that), but they don't move much. It if stays within one mark on the level, I leave it alone.
The home made lathe benches have jacking screws in the bottom of each leg. The jacking screws were machined to a point and rest in counter sunk holes in steel floor pads.
Fitch