What i did on my holidays - By ian age 41 1/4
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Took 4 days off work this week to make a start on my new shed. I thought I'd learn the value of doing things the 'manual' way rather than having a go with a mini digger. I'm now wondering whether I'm just a bit mad (a-wibble) and that someone created mini-excavators and dumper trucks for a reason ...
Shovelled and barrowed 8 tonnes of Type1 (£16/tonne delivered) from front to back:
Shovelled and barrowed 6000 x 4500 x 400 mm of soil from the new building site.
Probably a good thing I didn't hire an excavator, if I was using one then it may have been on its side after trying to remove this large length of rebar that seems to be driven a metre or so into the ground (it don't want to come out, so I'll get the angle grinder to it)
I'm quite proud of it all really - normally I'm stuck behind a keyboard. The last time I shovelled this much s--t was around 20 years ago whilst working for a Steel foundry (Blackett & Hutton in Guisborough) during its summer fortnight shutdown (that's the time when we had to clear all the year's moulding sand out of the furnace areas and other locations)
Hey ho, now for the 100mm of sub-grade and the 100mm of C20...
Shovelled and barrowed 8 tonnes of Type1 (£16/tonne delivered) from front to back:
Shovelled and barrowed 6000 x 4500 x 400 mm of soil from the new building site.
Probably a good thing I didn't hire an excavator, if I was using one then it may have been on its side after trying to remove this large length of rebar that seems to be driven a metre or so into the ground (it don't want to come out, so I'll get the angle grinder to it)
I'm quite proud of it all really - normally I'm stuck behind a keyboard. The last time I shovelled this much s--t was around 20 years ago whilst working for a Steel foundry (Blackett & Hutton in Guisborough) during its summer fortnight shutdown (that's the time when we had to clear all the year's moulding sand out of the furnace areas and other locations)
Hey ho, now for the 100mm of sub-grade and the 100mm of C20...
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Well done, a lot of ball-aching work there.
RW Gale Ltd - Civils & Surfacing Contractors based in Somerset
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Thanks TL and Dave, I was somewhat lucky in the fact that the garden is pretty good topsoil so dug out reasonably well, however, type1, as you are probably aware, is not quite so easy to shift
I had a nice long soak in a hot bath each night, I'm feeling it a bit now, but it's the "ah, I think I'll take it a bit easier today" feeling, rather than the "Oh my God! Why can't I move?" one...
I had a nice long soak in a hot bath each night, I'm feeling it a bit now, but it's the "ah, I think I'll take it a bit easier today" feeling, rather than the "Oh my God! Why can't I move?" one...
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Oh Yes, especially the extra you should charge for "Danger Money" - barrowing X kg load of soil up a treacherous 1in4 3m scaffold plank in the rain (that's the time I reduced the load in the barrow and started chucking sand on to the plank).seanandruby wrote:well done m8. the pain will go. i hope other key boarders, office wallers or people who do easy 9 to 5 jobs see that and appreciate what we have to do day in and day out, hence the prices etc.
Mind you, if you were doing that as a business, I doubt whether you'd be allowed to use the plank without a full Risk Assessment an safety precautions ...
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Quick question:
Seeing as I'll be pouring a 100mm reinforced slab on top of this sub base, how vital is it that it is flat (Tony quotes 10mm variation on the main site)?
As long as the shuttering is level (and enclosed at its base), will that be enough?
I'm trying to work out whether the effort of levelling the sub-base to the 10mm tolerance is required when pouring a load of concrete on top of it...
Cheers
Seeing as I'll be pouring a 100mm reinforced slab on top of this sub base, how vital is it that it is flat (Tony quotes 10mm variation on the main site)?
As long as the shuttering is level (and enclosed at its base), will that be enough?
I'm trying to work out whether the effort of levelling the sub-base to the 10mm tolerance is required when pouring a load of concrete on top of it...
Cheers