He explains what he's doing and make's sure it suits the building. That's going to be build on the slab. This is what I like about this guy.He even put's insulated blankets so the concrete to cure the first 500 psi so there's no cracking before its fully cure in about 28 days.Who else dose that accept me... Great job Jesse. Keep these great video's coming. GOD BLESS.
@@jmuller86 Yes. I done it for 35 years but semi retired from this kind of work. I'm a Computer/Electronics/ Electrical and Mechanical Engineer this is what I do now.
Great to see you bringing your son on the job. It’s funny how those little moments, can become the vivid memories that stick with us for the rest of our lives. BOL
If I was the home owner, I would definitely use you. A very high quality cement pour. The attention to detail, shows up with a great foundation. You will always get work given the honesty & quality you put in to your business..
Interesting you don’t use reo chairs to lift the reo up into the middle of the slab. Also. A slab that size with no expansion gaps/pre cuts? I feel like this would be crack city right now? It’s great people share videos that others can learn from, I’m only asking because every slab I’ve been involved in, we use chairs to raise the reo and pre concrete saw it afterward to ensure that when it does crack (because it will), it does so neatly.
great video thank you for sharing it is quite obvious why this homeowner keeps bringing you back to do work your attention to detail and looking out for their best interest is awesome
That was fabulous, Jesse. We really enjoyed the 360 clip you inserted as well as those beautiful drone landscape views. That foam around the perimeter looks like a very good idea, and those tips about overlapping the rebar are very good as well. Looking forward to the rest of the build. Thanks for taking all the time to post this.
Yay. I have seen so many pole barn video's where they do the concrete slab after the building is up. At least this is a nice pad and done the right way :-)
there really is many ways to do it, I have tried a bunch of different screed guides and it works good too, I dont know why I like this method the best, just seems fastest
many hoses on a skid steer are to big for a garden hose, i use a nylon woven sock, comes in many sizes in 50 or 100 foot rolls, cheap, just put a good tie wrap on at each end
Bobcat Smith That leak was not from any abrasion that could be protected by wrapping with any sort of protective layer. It was right next to a fitting which means it is caused by being flexed thousands of times as hydraulic functions are started and stopped.
Great video! I love the Drone shots mixed in showing the project and the beautiful land and Fall colors! Very well produced and edited as well! If I ever needed a slab poured you would definitely be the man! Your attention to detail is amazing!
AWESOME. Another awesome Video Jesse. Well done on the slab too. Great tips and fun to watch. I see that foundation lasting longer than the building and never need to worry about anything !!!! WOW
Thank you! Very informative, PRICELESS, and more informative! The PRICESLESS came midway of this video with your 'son' working with you - absolutely PRICELESS! Informative because you gave a ton of information of what & why you were doing something, so KUDOS on all that. WOW, really looks like a stick built home. Who would of thunk it! Nice work, hard word, snow sucks and keep the videos coming & big thanks. Sonny (CT)
Morning Jesse. Another good video showcasing your trade and skill. I have followed you for a while now and must say I've seen a significant advancement in the quality and thought you've taken to present your videos in a true professional manor. Kudos! I just finished watched you and Andrew on his roof project.....Not sure you guys discussed this, but I'm sure you did...you could have used a couple of extra sets of hands! The last spancrete panel...looked a bit dicey to me but again Kudos for getting it done. Look forward to your next one.
lol me and Andrew will probably do most of the work ourselves, its just kind of how we roll, I had help on this slab but I went many years with no help. thanks
@@jmuller86 I figured that was the way you guys worked. Been there done that..LOL Question, I didn't see any expansion joints or will you saw cut the slab later. Out here on the west coast we do both..dependent on the situation.
@@robertsimmons3556 I will probably saw cut it when the guys are there helping me build it, I do both too, alot of slabs dont get the cuts around here but they hold up good with no cracks if the prep work is done right
When the hose broke on my Yanmar VIO50 I borrowed Crows Foot wrenches. That was the best way to get into the mess of hoses to loosen and tighten the fittings. I have since bought both metric and standard as the space limitations sometimes require a wrench that is slightly loose to get on and off the nut.
Main feed pressure hose is a common break down . suggest you stock an extra one. It allow flexs under the pressure causing addition wear that leads to a leakage. It is continuing being shocked by the pump with high pressure.
Love the in depth the long length of video. Most channels only do like 10-20 min video and u really don’t get much valuable info from them. So cudos to that. But personally I would rather here a voice over instead of the background music. Just my opinion
Pretty good. I would have liked to see 'dobes or chairs and #4 or better #5 on a tight schedule since this is going to be a 'floating' slab. If it moves you really want it to move as a single unit made more difficult by the point load on the bedrock. Makes keeping it in an even plane when it cracks more challenging.
Nice thought process and execution of what was a difficult foundation and ground work, it turned out well Jesse, I wish you and your Family Merry Christmas and a great 2020 Russ, Germany.
Wow that’s crazy not bringing at least 10 feet on the backside of the building grade up to the building I would think the back side would just start eroding and washing away. Undermining the building. Good video.
Very interesting Jesse! I see your a student of construction and always learning. I have worked with many know-it-alls in my 50 years of construction and have seen them stupidly repeat moronic behaviors because that is what some other moron taught them. Keep up the great work!
I watch kens carpentry when he pours slabs with the insulation he puts down plastic vapor barrier over the insulation to take care of the seams then his rebar
Something you might try on setting wet screeds. Put the elevation pad in first with the laser. Then pour the wet screed. I watched the the crew who built. A football stadium do it this way and the slab was incredibly flat. They could empty a ten yard truck in les than 15 minutes
The pour was a 50x50 steel building six inches deep. Done in hour and a half. I think it went so well because one guy set the wet screed while the crew power screeded next to him. This gave the truck driver a sighting point and all the drivers did very well with it. Pouring crew was 4or5.. They had ride on finishing power trowells, a beautiful thing.
1:07:56 When they built the Hoover Dam, they had to put water pipes all through the structure which was used to dissipate the heat the concrete curing created. I can't remember if it would take 50 or 150 years for the "heater" to finally turn itself off. I was astounded that it would take so long for it to finish the process. Many, many years ago I worked on a construction site and we had a concrete pour that went 24/7 for 4½ days non stop (the overtime was excellent!!) so the Hoover Dam info cooling I found very interesting because of my previous experience. Thanks for the videos Jesse. They are very much appreciated. 👍 Can someone tell me what a Pole Barn is please. I have tried Google but don't know if what I read is related to Jeese's location. *Thanks* in advance if someone reads the 11½ month old comments to this video and answers.
Interesting about that concrete work you did, a pole barn is just a structure that is built by using 6x6 pressure treated posts, with horizontal girts to hang the siding. It uses less materials and goes up quicker than traditional studded buildings
not a floating slab, I explained why in the video. in a normal foundation yes, but this is not frost free so its meant to move when the frost heaves it, if you pin it to bedrock then the whole thing needs to stay on bedrock or 4' down. this is only 12" down so it needs to not touch bedrock so it can move
Jesse Muller okay you do a great job, You explained after I commented. If rock is shallow why not pin the entire perimeter, rather than float? Thank you for replying.
@@maraudermitchelli the left side had deep bedrock, like 4 or 5 ft deep, thats how it always works when I hit bedrock, its always sloped so I can never do that without a big deal. rock is bad around here
@@jmuller86 Thanks for the explanation. For the life of me, I didn't understand why not really bonding to the Bedrock. Now I have honestly learned something first thing this morning!! Awesome video and EXCELLENT work! Happy New Year!!
This was an Excellent video to watch this morning. Very interesting and Educational! Thanks for providing explanations both during the video and in the comments below. Jesse: I totally appreciate all the thought that went into this pour prior to weighing all the options. There is a reason this guy keeps you coming back year after year. Outstanding results! Happy New Year! ...... Weav New Sub....
Great video and very nice job on the slab. That will make for a great shed. On the forms where you ran into the bedrock, I have had luck drilling down in the ground with a hammer drill with a 7/8" bit (assuming your pins are 3/4") where I would like to set the pins, then using an 18, 24, or 30 inch pin depending on the underlying ground hardness. Also, on the kickers, I took and drilled a hole in the back of the kickers with a woodboring bit for the back pin. The way you had it seemed to work too, just thought I would share an alternative.
yea I thought about drilling the bedrock but I dont have a giant hammer drill so it would have taken a while, drilling the kickers seems like a good idea, do you run them on the flat?
@@jmuller86 yes, turn the kickers on the flat side. I usually try to put a kicker every 5 feet or so. Unless, you get a board that has a bow in it, then you kind of have to try to do your best with that. I apologize, I misunderstood at first.
Good Job Jesse with the prep work 👍 that's where it counts! Why didn't you use the pizza 🍕 pan? I know you had it! I had JC ship it from Syracuse they said you picked it up! Nice project! Mike
I got that pizza pan for this job but it wouldn't fit my trowel, I have a 36 inch trowel and the space between the inserts is 35..maybe the next size bigger?
Dirt Boss Tri-County Masonry & Excavating & @ Jesse Muller I’m a fan of the channel (and Dirt Boss’s) and been a sales rep up the road at AH Harris /HD Supply in Albany for 13 years. They make pans for 36” trowels in 35-3/4” and 36-1-2”ID (inside the lip of the pan) How far are you off? What brand blades and pan do you get from JC? I live right by the Old Castle Plant in Ravena. I’m happy to come help you measure the trowel. 518-331-4430 is my cell. Also- You have bad ass concrete blankets. Those are 6 layer R2.8 blankets made by Midwest Canvas in Fonda, NY.
I hope to build a post frame building. I'm considering doing a slab instead of burying posts. We're on a mountain and there's very little soil. I hit rock around a foot to 18' when we built the house. I'd do a 12" deep slab on the perimeter except where I would have to dig for 3 posts for a covered section for my RV.
Very Nice Job Jesse.....Perfect content for a lazy Sunday afternoon. Thanks for your considerable effort in producing this video. BTW....did I see you giving Andrew a hand with his Roof addition?
He explains what he's doing and make's sure it suits the building. That's going to be build on the slab. This is what I like about this guy.He even put's insulated blankets so the concrete to cure the first 500 psi so there's no cracking before its fully cure in about 28 days.Who else dose that accept me... Great job Jesse. Keep these great video's coming. GOD BLESS.
you do this kind of work too? thanks
@@jmuller86 Yes. I done it for 35 years but semi retired from this kind of work. I'm a Computer/Electronics/ Electrical and Mechanical Engineer this is what I do now.
Great to see you bringing your son on the job. It’s funny how those little moments, can become the vivid memories that stick with us for the rest of our lives. BOL
Such a gorgeous view. Reminds me of Algonquin park in my back yard. ROCKS, TREES and WATER. Sigh.
I grew up in Chenango county and now live in Steuben county. Great videos, keep up the good work.
If I was the home owner, I would definitely use you. A very high quality cement pour. The attention to detail, shows up with a great foundation. You will always get work given the honesty & quality you put in to your business..
thank you, I appreciate the good feedback, this customer has been using me for like 8 years or so, every year there is always work to do there
Interesting you don’t use reo chairs to lift the reo up into the middle of the slab. Also. A slab that size with no expansion gaps/pre cuts? I feel like this would be crack city right now? It’s great people share videos that others can learn from, I’m only asking because every slab I’ve been involved in, we use chairs to raise the reo and pre concrete saw it afterward to ensure that when it does crack (because it will), it does so neatly.
It is not attention to detail it is just doing it right
@@ibsn87 cuts are mentioned in the video
@@jmuller86 . ,मृ,9ज्प्क़ #3;2,_€;र62
Nice job on the prep the slab and overcoming obsticles. 🇺🇸
thanks
@@jmuller86 thanks for the cool videos
great video thank you for sharing it is quite obvious why this homeowner keeps bringing you back to do work your attention to detail and looking out for their best interest is awesome
thanks, yea I did alot of work here and the immediate neighbors around too
Almost 40 years as a contractor. Good to see people who care about the quality of their work. Many other TH-camrs on here take a lot of shortcuts.
That was fabulous, Jesse. We really enjoyed the 360 clip you inserted as well as those beautiful drone landscape views. That foam around the perimeter looks like a very good idea, and those tips about overlapping the rebar are very good as well. Looking forward to the rest of the build. Thanks for taking all the time to post this.
thanks Dale
Yay. I have seen so many pole barn video's where they do the concrete slab after the building is up. At least this is a nice pad and done the right way :-)
Beautiful views. Aerial shots so fascinating So much planning and care
Never seen a level laser use in the top of a pour. Very nice touch. Thus set you apart from the others who do a pour as the PRO.
there really is many ways to do it, I have tried a bunch of different screed guides and it works good too, I dont know why I like this method the best, just seems fastest
I use old garden hose to protect my hoses on my Bobcat. Some can be a real pain to get to. Love the video's, keep up the good work.
many hoses on a skid steer are to big for a garden hose, i use a nylon woven sock, comes in many sizes in 50 or 100 foot rolls, cheap, just put a good tie wrap on at each end
Bobcat Smith
That leak was not from any abrasion that could be protected by wrapping with any sort of protective layer. It was right next to a fitting which means it is caused by being flexed thousands of times as hydraulic functions are started and stopped.
That skidstier is definitely purchase of the year. Very useful piece of equipment.
yea I could have used the loader but this skidsteer is quicker to turn or turn around
Jesse you are a hell of a tradesman really do great work.
Great video! I love the Drone shots mixed in showing the project and the beautiful land and Fall colors! Very well produced and edited as well! If I ever needed a slab poured you would definitely be the man! Your attention to detail is amazing!
thanks
I like the tip about not going all the way through the foam with the table saw. NICE! 👍
That was a great tip 👍
Wow, you guys do such great work, especially for a pour this big. This is so satisfying to watch! Thanks for being a part of my day.
A great video Jesse you sure have learned a lot and taught yourself so much. You know your stuff and it shows in your quality of how you do things.
thank you
Perfect example of behind the scenes. When shit just never goes as intended. Thanks for adding this into the video
Super job,well done. Thanks for the great narration as always. ⛄Happy Holidays 🎄and GOD BLESS YOU ALL😇
thank you, happy holidays to you as well
You are very talented. Nice jog, thanks for sharing.
Hi Jesse, Neil here for England. Great job, look forward to the build. Merry Christmas.
thanks
AWESOME. Another awesome Video Jesse. Well done on the slab too. Great tips and fun to watch. I see that foundation lasting longer than the building and never need to worry about anything !!!!
WOW
Quite a collection of antique chainsaws! Nice work on the slab too.
those were some cool chainsaws, that place is pretty good
Awesome content Jesse. I really enjoy your longer video's
Smart idea using the drain pipe for an extension. Enjoyed the video.
Best concrete pour I have ever seen and I have been around for 68 years! Prep work and planning ahead is everything!!!!!! Great job!
Thank God I don't do concrete anymore 30 years of flat working stamping walls and forms but I do like criticize other people's work😁 great job guys👍
I used to bust my butt doing flatwork but now I use the power screed its not so bad
Every video of yours I see, I am more and more impressed with the work you do.
Thank you! Very informative, PRICELESS, and more informative! The PRICESLESS came midway of this video with your 'son' working with you - absolutely PRICELESS! Informative because you gave a ton of information of what & why you were doing something, so KUDOS on all that.
WOW, really looks like a stick built home. Who would of thunk it! Nice work, hard word, snow sucks and keep the videos coming & big thanks. Sonny (CT)
Learning a lot from your videos one hell of a builder amongst other skills
Morning Jesse. Another good video showcasing your trade and skill. I have followed you for a while now and must say I've seen a significant advancement in the quality and thought you've taken to present your videos in a true professional manor. Kudos!
I just finished watched you and Andrew on his roof project.....Not sure you guys discussed this, but I'm sure you did...you could have used a couple of extra sets of hands! The last spancrete panel...looked a bit dicey to me but again Kudos for getting it done. Look forward to your next one.
lol me and Andrew will probably do most of the work ourselves, its just kind of how we roll, I had help on this slab but I went many years with no help. thanks
@@jmuller86 I figured that was the way you guys worked. Been there done that..LOL Question, I didn't see any expansion joints or will you saw cut the slab later. Out here on the west coast we do both..dependent on the situation.
@@robertsimmons3556 I will probably saw cut it when the guys are there helping me build it, I do both too, alot of slabs dont get the cuts around here but they hold up good with no cracks if the prep work is done right
When the hose broke on my Yanmar VIO50 I borrowed Crows Foot wrenches. That was the best way to get into the mess of hoses to loosen and tighten the fittings. I have since bought both metric and standard as the space limitations sometimes require a wrench that is slightly loose to get on and off the nut.
Awesome! Great roof work too, inspirational! Thanks
Looking great. Keep up the cool vid's.
Main feed pressure hose is a common break down . suggest you stock an extra one. It allow flexs under the pressure causing addition wear that leads to a leakage. It is continuing being shocked by the pump with high pressure.
Jesse , you and the crew do good work and make good videos. Merry Christmas to you and your family.
thanks joe
Een geweldige oplossing TOP,!!!!👍
Groetjes uit Holland. 🙋🏻♀️
Love the in depth the long length of video. Most channels only do like 10-20 min video and u really don’t get much valuable info from them. So cudos to that. But personally I would rather here a voice over instead of the background music. Just my opinion
Nice work. especially teaching your son to do or help his father.
Great to see on the job training for your son .
Pretty good. I would have liked to see 'dobes or chairs and #4 or better #5 on a tight schedule since this is going to be a 'floating' slab. If it moves you really want it to move as a single unit made more difficult by the point load on the bedrock. Makes keeping it in an even plane when it cracks more challenging.
always impressed with your work
Nice attention to detail, excellent job!
I know this is about building, but your dog is fantastic. So cute.
Jesse, you've done an awesome job on the videography here. It's impressive to see how your videos have changed over time. Great job!
Beautiful Job‼️👍👍. Vinny 🇺🇸
Great job, I love the quality of your work.
Nice thought process and execution of what was a difficult foundation and ground work, it turned out well Jesse, I wish you and your Family Merry Christmas and a great 2020 Russ, Germany.
thank you. and you as well
Nice vid. You need better compaction and more of it. Good luck we need more youth like you.
Wow that’s crazy not bringing at least 10 feet on the backside of the building grade up to the building I would think the back side would just start eroding and washing away. Undermining the building. Good video.
I did actually go back and add like 50 tons on those sides
Wow that hose replacement was crazy
Very interesting Jesse! I see your a student of construction and always learning. I have worked with many know-it-alls in my 50 years of construction and have seen them stupidly repeat moronic behaviors because that is what some other moron taught them. Keep up the great work!
I like your chute extension system ... sure beat a wheel barrow. Save the expense of a cement pump
yea and when I got done I unscrewed the boards and they were like new again. thanks
Way better than anything Andrew has poured. Nice job
Andrew makes very nice slabs.
@@DAS-Videos No, he doesn't. Doesn't even use a float or an edger
@@Aqufrank He used Jesse's float. Jesse was helping him.
Thanks for that frost heave info@ 8:11
I watch kens carpentry when he pours slabs with the insulation he puts down plastic vapor barrier over the insulation to take care of the seams then his rebar
Someone is going to have a damn nice building when you are all done, I wish I had that kind of space!!
Great pour .
Something you might try on setting wet screeds. Put the elevation pad in first with the laser. Then pour the wet screed. I watched the the crew who built. A football stadium do it this way and the slab was incredibly flat. They could empty a ten yard truck in les than 15 minutes
The pour was a 50x50 steel building six inches deep. Done in hour and a half. I think it went so well because one guy set the wet screed while the crew power screeded next to him. This gave the truck driver a sighting point and all the drivers did very well with it. Pouring crew was 4or5.. They had ride on finishing power trowells, a beautiful thing.
Great video look forward to seeing your videos
1:07:56 When they built the Hoover Dam, they had to put water pipes all through the structure which was used to dissipate the heat the concrete curing created. I can't remember if it would take 50 or 150 years for the "heater" to finally turn itself off. I was astounded that it would take so long for it to finish the process. Many, many years ago I worked on a construction site and we had a concrete pour that went 24/7 for 4½ days non stop (the overtime was excellent!!) so the Hoover Dam info cooling I found very interesting because of my previous experience.
Thanks for the videos Jesse. They are very much appreciated. 👍
Can someone tell me what a Pole Barn is please. I have tried Google but don't know if what I read is related to Jeese's location. *Thanks* in advance if someone reads the 11½ month old comments to this video and answers.
Interesting about that concrete work you did, a pole barn is just a structure that is built by using 6x6 pressure treated posts, with horizontal girts to hang the siding. It uses less materials and goes up quicker than traditional studded buildings
THUMBS UP EVERYONE ! Good job dude, on the house work as well. Thanks for sharing.
Jesse you got this great job! Great narration! Thank you! 😊
Awesome job mate ,well done.
hay great job thanks for the video have fun
You can pin the foundation directly to bedrock, we do this all the time. Bedrock does not freeze and heave.
not a floating slab, I explained why in the video. in a normal foundation yes, but this is not frost free so its meant to move when the frost heaves it, if you pin it to bedrock then the whole thing needs to stay on bedrock or 4' down. this is only 12" down so it needs to not touch bedrock so it can move
Jesse Muller okay you do a great job, You explained after I commented. If rock is shallow why not pin the entire perimeter, rather than float?
Thank you for replying.
@@maraudermitchelli the left side had deep bedrock, like 4 or 5 ft deep, thats how it always works when I hit bedrock, its always sloped so I can never do that without a big deal. rock is bad around here
@@jmuller86 Thanks for the explanation. For the life of me, I didn't understand why not really bonding to the Bedrock. Now I have honestly learned something first thing this morning!! Awesome video and EXCELLENT work! Happy New Year!!
This was an Excellent video to watch this morning. Very interesting and Educational! Thanks for providing explanations both during the video and in the comments below. Jesse: I totally appreciate all the thought that went into this pour prior to weighing all the options. There is a reason this guy keeps you coming back year after year. Outstanding results! Happy New Year! ...... Weav New Sub....
this was epic - also interesting on the story of the original mobile home
thank you, I will most likely be building that pole barn too, most likely with the boom lift I am getting from Andrew
@@jmuller86 Don't tip it over.... :)
For kicking on the bed rock, could Try a Hilti bit tiny bit bigger than some rebar ya have, drill your hole and put your kicker to the rebar 👍
..good info on concrete pouring.. great vid...
Great video and very nice job on the slab. That will make for a great shed. On the forms where you ran into the bedrock, I have had luck drilling down in the ground with a hammer drill with a 7/8" bit (assuming your pins are 3/4") where I would like to set the pins, then using an 18, 24, or 30 inch pin depending on the underlying ground hardness. Also, on the kickers, I took and drilled a hole in the back of the kickers with a woodboring bit for the back pin. The way you had it seemed to work too, just thought I would share an alternative.
yea I thought about drilling the bedrock but I dont have a giant hammer drill so it would have taken a while, drilling the kickers seems like a good idea, do you run them on the flat?
@@jmuller86 what do you mean by on the flat?
@@jakeduffin4626 do you turn your kickers onto the flat side? I usually keep them upright, which would need a deep hole for the stake
@@jmuller86 yes, turn the kickers on the flat side. I usually try to put a kicker every 5 feet or so. Unless, you get a board that has a bow in it, then you kind of have to try to do your best with that. I apologize, I misunderstood at first.
I might have to try that next time thanks
Awesome job, take care my friend god bless and Merry Christmas 🎁🎄
Awesome video. Really enjoyed it.
Nice work Jesse
Nice design by Deer, quite easy to change.
Nice job and beautiful spot!
DC
I wish my shop's foundation was built like this! Mine has big cracks everywhere.
yea concrete usually always cracks if the site work wasnt done right and rushed
John I fix the cracks and fill them in
Thank you Jesse. I loved it. 1 hour passed as 15 minutes.))))
Love your new camera feature - it proves earth is not flat. LOL))))))
lol thanks
Okay, I'm subscribing. Any friend of Andrew Camarata is a friend of mine.
Me too, Jay! Between Jesse and Andrew these guys 'show' what I enjoy to watch and learn too.
interesting, we are building an apt building now in Maine, and we put the foam on top of concrete. i believe
That wouldn't make much sense. The point of the foam is to insulate the slab.
Cool video man. nice work.
Very cool!!! Nice video💪👍
thanks
Also your editing is getting awesome too!!!!
nice job Jesse, looks real good!
Crazy to think a year has almost gone by already! Damn quarantining made 2020 fly by.
Good Job Jesse with the prep work 👍 that's where it counts!
Why didn't you use the pizza 🍕 pan? I know you had it! I had JC ship it from Syracuse they said you picked it up! Nice project!
Mike
I got that pizza pan for this job but it wouldn't fit my trowel, I have a 36 inch trowel and the space between the inserts is 35..maybe the next size bigger?
@@jmuller86 no it should have fit no problem are you using combination blades? Not sure if that's the issue but that's what I use..
@@DIRT-BOSS yea combo blades, 36 inches from tip to tip, but the insides of the pan are 35 from tip to tip, we tried everything to make it work
@@jmuller86 I'll go measure mind hang on! Just measured 35 1/2 overall from outside to outside.. 34" on the flat.. weird that should work.
Dirt Boss Tri-County Masonry & Excavating & @ Jesse Muller
I’m a fan of the channel (and Dirt Boss’s) and been a sales rep up the road at AH Harris /HD Supply in Albany for 13 years. They make pans for 36” trowels in 35-3/4” and 36-1-2”ID (inside the lip of the pan)
How far are you off? What brand blades and pan do you get from JC? I live right by the Old Castle Plant in Ravena. I’m happy to come help you measure the trowel. 518-331-4430 is my cell.
Also- You have bad ass concrete blankets. Those are 6 layer R2.8 blankets made by Midwest Canvas in Fonda, NY.
All those chain saws at the hydraulic place! I thought you were in Andrew's garage!
I hope to build a post frame building. I'm considering doing a slab instead of burying posts. We're on a mountain and there's very little soil. I hit rock around a foot to 18' when we built the house. I'd do a 12" deep slab on the perimeter except where I would have to dig for 3 posts for a covered section for my RV.
at 1:08:00 the slab looks blue, translucent, good fricken job, bravo.
Man you guys do great work, thanks for the video, have you finished with Andrew yet, Merry Christmas to you and your family and friends.
Nice job! Lot of concrete!
Very Nice Job Jesse.....Perfect content for a lazy Sunday afternoon. Thanks for your considerable effort in producing this video. BTW....did I see you giving Andrew a hand with his Roof addition?
thanks and yes that was me, I will have a video about it soon, maybe tomorrow
Great video maybe look out for a hydraulic hose repair rig a very worthwhile tool.
yea they are expensive, but maybe someday
I just bought a hitachi 35 and need to replace the exact same hose. My machine actually looks identical parts wise to your deere
i watch you helping andrew
@Abdullah yes
Thanks for the video @Jesse Muller
Never seen polystyrene under a slab before... neat idea
Nice work! 👍👍