Awkward job

Other groundworks tasks, such as roads and footpaths, terracing, fencing, foundations, walls and brickwork, tools and plant.
parishpaver
Posts: 144
Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2011 2:48 pm
Location: Stockport

Post: # 70258Post parishpaver

I thought bulking only applied to volume, not weight, Giles?

2 tons is 2 tons surely?

Carberry
Posts: 1366
Joined: Fri Apr 15, 2011 9:05 pm
Location: Edinburgh

Post: # 70261Post Carberry

parishpaver wrote:I thought bulking only applied to volume, not weight, Giles?

2 tons is 2 tons surely?
Which is heavier, 2 tonne of feathers or 2 tonne of iron?
Catches eejits out all the time :laugh:

seanandruby
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Location: eastbourne

Post: # 70265Post seanandruby

giles those skips are for a crane, they weigh a lot and are awkward to tip, you need plenty of room. I wold advise against using a 360 as a crane, apart from light lifting. You can get a round rollover skip but again not for a 360 to lift. You can get a small crane with stabilizers that lift a couple of hundred weight, then there is a merlo ( 360 fork lift with lifting arm attatchment. Maybe a conveyor belt?
sean

DNgroundworks
Posts: 1951
Joined: Sat Dec 06, 2008 10:28 pm
Location: Preston, Lancashire

Post: # 70272Post DNgroundworks

LLL it sounds like Giles has alot of muck to shift, manual handling will take for ever, and with family living in the house, especially a house like that i doubt they will want blokes with buckets coming through all day, not to mention ply wood everywhere.

Id say get the machine in, and use the skip with the little digger, and just take it slow and steady, just my 2p worth.

DNgroundworks
Posts: 1951
Joined: Sat Dec 06, 2008 10:28 pm
Location: Preston, Lancashire

Post: # 70273Post DNgroundworks

Or how about unic mini cranes - http://www.unic-cranes.co.uk/?gclid=CIiA3K6Lr6wCFZJc4QodRxM0Hg

Had one on demo once - when i had money, thought of buying one, was pretty good.

GB_Groundworks
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Location: high peak
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Post: # 70275Post GB_Groundworks

sean they do a 700 litre one = 1.2 tons the 16 ton will lift that all day long, will lift a full pack of bricks and grab at full extension.

to steep for a conveyour, and as dan says family arent going to want us and i dont want to be tramping through the house, think its going to be the bucket skip

those cranes look ace but why when youve got an 80k digger sat around buy something else hehe, i know not normally my logic lol




Edited By GB_Groundworks on 1321039879
Giles

Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.

http://www.gbgroundworks.com

GB_Groundworks
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Post: # 70276Post GB_Groundworks

parishpaver wrote:I thought bulking only applied to volume, not weight, Giles?

2 tons is 2 tons surely?
not when you are pricing by the ton ;)
Giles

Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.

http://www.gbgroundworks.com

Mikey_C
Posts: 952
Joined: Mon Oct 30, 2006 8:24 pm
Location: Bournemouth, Dorset

Post: # 70279Post Mikey_C

what about welding four hooks or bars on a bucket, so you can pick up filled ton/dumpy bags. 4 lantern irons holds the bag open while you fill it with the small digger. its bagged up ready to chuck on flat bed. i've had dumpy bags delivered by grab trucks with these on before.

henpecked
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Post: # 70282Post henpecked

Mikey_C wrote:what about welding four hooks or bars on a bucket, so you can pick up filled ton/dumpy bags. 4 lantern irons holds the bag open while you fill it with the small digger. its bagged up ready to chuck on flat bed. i've had dumpy bags delivered by grab trucks with these on before.

Sound like the solution ,or you can use the 4 brothers to just hook straight onto the bag, short 1/2 metre chain would do it. Nice and tidy with one one handling . Rather than load/tip/load again :cool:

lutonlagerlout
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Posts: 15184
Joined: Fri Aug 04, 2006 12:20 am
Location: bedfordshire

Post: # 70285Post lutonlagerlout

most of Britains canals and railways were built by navvies with picks shovels and barrows
once you get a lift of brickwork up the scaffold effectively becomes flat
I still feel even with hand balling that every man will excavate and remove 1m3 of soil per day minimum
just my tuppenceworth
LLL :)
"what,you want paying today??"

YOUR TEXT GOES HERE

seanandruby
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Location: eastbourne

Post: # 70288Post seanandruby

.......That's what i was on about DN, we use them when doing headings for drainage underground.
You could always overkill and go for a diaphragm wall excavation grab, now there is a tool, amazing. :laugh: :;):
sean

henpecked
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Post: # 70301Post henpecked

seanandruby wrote:.......That's what i was on about DN, we use them when doing headings for drainage underground.
You could always overkill and go for a diaphragm wall excavation grab, now there is a tool, amazing. :laugh: :;):
Like THIS?

Interesting as you negate the need for shuttering etc :cool:

seanandruby
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Post: # 70324Post seanandruby

It's a great system, used to be popular years ago and is making a big come back. You can do the whole building top down, doing each floor as you reach it. The reinforcing is rebated where the floors will be and lowered in, as you dig down, you just strike the box out and you have a rebate all ready in situ. We're doing 3 lower floors on this one.
sean

haggistini
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Location: South Wales
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Post: # 70340Post haggistini

Seen this on telly the other night for some dock somewhere hot....? they used some stabiliser chemical in pure sand then dropped the rebar cage in 1 and poured concrete in awesome engineering!
http://www.G-Tech.co
Bespoke Paving Contractor
M:07944036174

Less yap yap more tap tap!

seanandruby
Site Admin
Posts: 4713
Joined: Mon Jun 26, 2006 11:01 am
Location: eastbourne

Post: # 70350Post seanandruby

........bentanite
sean

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