My wife had shoulder surgery several years ago. I had to remove the needle tha gave her pain relief. I thought it was going to be short. WRONG ANSWER I started pulling that thing it was probably 6 inches long. WOW. I would love to buy merchandise.
I do recall one job that was like 100+ tons but the contamination was flowing down hill so the slope of the land was the slope to get deeper in the hole anyway.
There is no easy way to accomplish this remediation since it starts very deep and the extent of contamination is not really known. Removing the overburden from a large area first might sound like a good idea but would likely be unnecessary. Brian has a 6th sense for this sort of stuff and probably has picked the best way to do the work. Tracking back and forth one bucketful at a time might take a while, but without being able to dig directly into a triaxle, this is probably the best method. Lesson learned - burying a thin walled 1000-gallon tank deep in the ground is not a good idea.
Without you the homeowner would be absolutely screwed by State Farm which is no surprise as they are happy to take premiums but never want to pay claims!
Oh shit OG Craig back on crew what's up Craig, took day off work Fking migraine killing me turn on TH-cam and see new video drop and OG Craig is back in the house
Just because you say so doesn't mean shit, it's up to the State your opinions doesn't matter and if the state says bury the tank you bury the tank it's not the home owners fault and yes the home owner should get coverage these insurance companies are scamming mofkers
in my area (not far from these guys) you needed to get a STP-3 tank for burial, even in the mid 80s Those tanks were coated and anode protected. The warranty was only good if you did the periodic testing. 10 years after that (mid 90s) nobody was doing buried tanks. Basically, around here any buried residential tanks are at least 30 years old, if you find one. You can't get a bank loan on a house if there's one on site.
@@kidhenderson8260 the deal on insurance coverage is if you had that policy back since the days of leaks being covered. I have forgotten when they started the exclusion but guessing well prior to Y2K. Perhaps even in the 90s.
Love your videos! Glad you’re finally back with the videos! Sure missed you. Hopefully Craig will be 100% soon. 🙏🙏🙏
Quote "Boy the story I could tell you on this one" That is why this channel is great.
Merry Christmas to all of you.🎄
RED !! Another Fine job !!!
One day I will get one of them red hoodies lol good job boys as always
Brian, thanks for all the Holiday videos. Enjoy them all. Keep em comin!!
Nice to see Tank Masters again.
Nice job on the oil tank cut down to size.
How funny I had to watch a State Farm insurance commercial on this video.
Rhode Island saying Excellent Job as usual , nice to see the team Back 😊😊, Hope you all Have Happy Holidays 🎄🎄🎄🎅
Nice work Bri. and the boys. Merry Christmas.
Hey, like a surgeon
Cuttin' for the very first time
Like a surgeon
cleaning holes - takes time
Wow, I don't think I ever saw a tank that was thin enough to tear it like that with a machine!
My wife had shoulder surgery several years ago. I had to remove the needle tha gave her pain relief. I thought it was going to be short. WRONG ANSWER I started pulling that thing it was probably 6 inches long. WOW. I would love to buy merchandise.
Have u ever had contamination so deep u had to ramp in a hole to get it all out?
I do recall one job that was like 100+ tons but the contamination was flowing down hill so the slope of the land was the slope to get deeper in the hole anyway.
TO BE CONTINUED./.. WHAT!!!!!!!!!
Ok now you have put one half of tank in the other half I think you are so good you could thread a needle.
U should get a smooth bucket for when your digging off the ground and trying to not damage the yard
What a giant mess those underground tanks can make.
There is no easy way to accomplish this remediation since it starts very deep and the extent of contamination is not really known. Removing the overburden from a large area first might sound like a good idea but would likely be unnecessary. Brian has a 6th sense for this sort of stuff and probably has picked the best way to do the work. Tracking back and forth one bucketful at a time might take a while, but without being able to dig directly into a triaxle, this is probably the best method. Lesson learned - burying a thin walled 1000-gallon tank deep in the ground is not a good idea.
I'm willing to bet that tank was a lot thicker when it was new. Soil conditions play a major role here.
Ya
Without you the homeowner would be absolutely screwed by State Farm which is no surprise as they are happy to take premiums but never want to pay claims!
Oh shit OG Craig back on crew what's up Craig, took day off work Fking migraine killing me turn on TH-cam and see new video drop and OG Craig is back in the house
craig picked up his cash and left
Should have gave your grandson a $5 bill so he can stop and get a milk shake on the way home .
HVAC guy here, I told everyone 30 / 40 years ago its a bad idea to bury the tank. If they are the original owners they shouldn't get coverage.
Just because you say so doesn't mean shit, it's up to the State your opinions doesn't matter and if the state says bury the tank you bury the tank it's not the home owners fault and yes the home owner should get coverage these insurance companies are scamming mofkers
Are you the same guy that said to wrap everything in asbestos?
in my area (not far from these guys) you needed to get a STP-3 tank for burial, even in the mid 80s Those tanks were coated and anode protected. The warranty was only good if you did the periodic testing. 10 years after that (mid 90s) nobody was doing buried tanks. Basically, around here any buried residential tanks are at least 30 years old, if you find one. You can't get a bank loan on a house if there's one on site.
Shouldn't ???? or should for the original home owner. Did you mean if he wasn't the original home owner then he shouldn't?
@@kidhenderson8260 the deal on insurance coverage is if you had that policy back since the days of leaks being covered. I have forgotten when they started the exclusion but guessing well prior to Y2K. Perhaps even in the 90s.