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Apologies for the knucklehead comment. I have a coworker that will pull the end of the tape measure out Leaving me with the end to read the length. I can ask him, “well what do you have?’” He will without fail look down at the tape measure in his hands and ponder it.
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: I live on the road, I just stay here sometimes...
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The biggest problem with quonset huts seems to be making the metal to concrete joint water tight.
Dont rely on silicon sealant (I wouldn't use it at all). Instead, look into roofing or window flashing materials and sealants. I would squish something like butyl flashing in between as a gasket. I live in snow country. If you do too I'd also do the same where the wall meets the sill plate
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73 RSR replica (soon for sale) SOLD - 928 5 speed with phone dials and Pasha seats SOLD - 914 wide body hot rod My 73RSR build http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/893954-saving-73-crusher-again.html |
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Bill K. "I started out with nothin and I still got most of it left...." 83 911 SC Guards Red (now gone) And I sold a bunch of parts I hadn't installed yet. |
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You do not have permissi
Join Date: Aug 2001
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Make sure there is a a water drainage slope to it. Somewhere to a side area or a pit.
Always a sloped drain for that ice in the middle of winter. If there are chemicals and grease involved, you will want to install an "easy to clean" grease trap/more and not poison the neighbor's ground water or your own family. You could spray off those really nasty vehicles first quickly and be able to work on clean material. Before any big pour you might consider some sort of in-floor heating. Maybe electric and/or antifreeze lines powered by solar panels+. Also a few sloped PVC conduits with capped up-spouts located a foot away from the foundation. Good for power washer water hose, air hose, more electric lines for night lighting, or additional communication lines.
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Meanwhile other things are still happening. Last edited by john70t; 05-28-2020 at 04:40 PM.. |
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If you use a string level, just put it in the middle of the string, and follow up with a 4 foot level on the deck to verify you aren't way off. Decks don't have to be perfectly level to build off of, as long as they are flat. |
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okay FASTfred. you're pouring a big pad. i get it.
i think you can do it with your 4-foot level and a long ass straight edge. you are gonna have to form up the pad anyways. you wont pour 20x40 in one big pad. you are limited by the length of your screed. say it is a 12 footer. you would set intermediate forms (batter boards?) at 10 feet that way your screed has a board it can ride on. these boards are what need to be level. get those perfect with a good long straight edge, (we have aluminum ones in the office) with your regular bubble level on it, and pour it in 10 foot wide sections. then you pull the intermediate batter boards and level off the seam. boom!
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you are not doing it solo by the way. pulling a screed needs a few people. one guy with a shovel dumping extra mud in the dips, and two guys pulling the screed. minimum.
i seen guys pour 7 lane wide bridge decks. it is an event and a half. huge teams of laborers. awesome one. one day, i am gonna kidnap a group of them and make them do my driveway. ![]()
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Yes, I was going to do the pad in 4 pours, as I think 10 x20 is just about as much as I can handle in one shot. . I will have my son, and a helper for the pours .
I was going to do the footers, erect the building, then pour the pads . I have to be able to work around Pa weather, and reality is, that Ill be lucky be done by fall, most likely , Ill still be doing concrete in the spring . I am going to need about 4 guys to stand up the first few arches. I honestly , believe that I can do the rest from there solo or with my sons help Good thing is, I declined on that house that I looked at, so my free time is still wide open . Thanks for all the advice . I think I am going to grab up a lazer level anyhow, cool tool to add to the stash ... Tell me if I am wrong though. I am assuming , I should have the floor of the ditches as level as possible before I start dumping stone in , correct? This one is all you tube universtiy , and Ill probably ask lots of questions here . And Vash, you are all good . One of the coolest guys on the forums . I don't think you've ever offended anyone here . I took zero offense to the knucklehead comment. It was funny Really appreciate the advice . I am going to try and obtain a permit in the next few weeks, and its game on .
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Have you tried to get a price for a crew just to place the concrete for the pad? Do the footings and forms yourself, level and put in vapour barrier and rebar+heating tubes( if using) Slugging concrete is hard work, and you will prob need to rent a power trowel. Labour is expensive out here and I think they charged me about $1k ($600us) for about the same surface area. You will probably get hit with a fee for less than full truckload, (check that) do that four times and will pay for part of the crew.
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87 930, Last edited by 908/930; 05-29-2020 at 09:44 AM.. |
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Fred,
You can rent a rotary laser for your job. Just get it and the MINI Excavator at the same time. I have a friend in Mt Pleasant PA that I could talk to about making you a deal on the rental of the mini!
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Nick Last edited by cabmandone; 05-29-2020 at 11:59 AM.. |
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![]() ![]() ![]() Its one of the best tools I have ever purchased. I have done so much work with it over the years. Probably saved me twice its cost in equipment rentals
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What kind of finish are you looking for on the floor?
If looking for anything close to smooth you better have at least one guy that can finish concrete. This was the crew that placed and finished my workshop slab. ![]() |
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I was actually planning on purchasing a power trowel . I see them used all the time for around 500.00
I was kind of surprised how well the few pads I hand troweled turned out. I think I could pull off a decent job by hand if wanted to , but man, that is a lot of work when you are talking about that much area .
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