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Thread: mixing 1m3 by hand/wheelbarrow?
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28th July 2007, 03:38 PM #16
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28th July 2007, 06:43 PM #17Member
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I just finished mine today...2000mm x 2000mm & 340mm at one end & 120mm at the other. Sloping block & its a long story as to why i couldnt dig it level.
I ordered 1 x MT3 & it took a cats whisker under that (one shovel full under actually) ..anyway i asked the driver how many builders barrows in a MT3 & he said about 15.
I had considered doing it myself but after that no way in hell would i have done it myself.
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29th July 2007, 09:31 AM #18
I only needed 0.8m3 for my shed base, and getting it pre-mixed and delivered was one of the best decisions I've made.
The bloke turned up at 8am, poured it all into the formwork (I was lucky that he could back the truck right up to where I wanted it poured), and I was kicking back with a coffee by quarter to nine, admiring my new slab.
I got mine from Boral, the guy I dealt with when I was ordering it was very helpful. I had no idea there was so many variables with concrete.
I reckon if I did it by hand, I would have still been going by tea time.Cheers,
Anthony
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29th July 2007, 11:16 AM #19
theres 35 cubic feet in a cubic metre so the truck driver must be used to using ladies garden barrows.
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29th July 2007, 11:51 AM #20
You always have to order extra, I usually order 0.2 cu.m extra minumum.
I'm with you re the ladies barrows Bob. If you leave it to the truck driver to fill the barrows you get about 6 per cu.m ...but don't make waves.
For every nice helpfull driver out there there seems to be one that wants to make your pour as difficult and rushed as possible. These are usually the same ones that result in the big time penalties.
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29th July 2007, 02:39 PM #21Senior Member
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- Melbourne
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Mate....why kill yaself doing it the hard way ??.....to hire a cement mixer only cost me $30 for the weekend ....there must be places like that around you, I think even bunnies hire em out ...pour it all in one, and mixed correctly first time .......save ya a lot of headaches mate ..
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29th July 2007, 06:35 PM #22Senior Member
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29th July 2007, 06:36 PM #23Senior Member
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29th July 2007, 06:40 PM #24Senior Member
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29th July 2007, 07:48 PM #25Member
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- Jun 2007
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Yeah i got a good driver which really helped for someone like me whom has never laid a slab before. He got in & showed me how to work it into everywhere & not get air pockets. I had some wobbly ground so he spared me with smaller barrow loads. Man the stuff is heavy for its quantity !!
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30th July 2007, 03:12 PM #26Member
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- Jun 2007
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- South Coast NSW
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Just in petrol it would cost me about $50 to go and pick up a mixer. I think ill just mix it up on some ply and shovel it into the barrow. I still have to wheel it about 30 meters uphill no matter what as the ground is too uneven to mix by the formwork. Even if i got a delivery i would have to barrow it all up the hill..It is a possibility one of the nearby farms has a mixer. Might drop in on them...
thanks boys
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31st July 2007, 09:33 PM #27Member
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- Vite Vite, SW Victoria
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Ask one of the farmers if they've got a PTO mixer for their tractor, 1) you'll mix a larger batch at a time, 2) you can reverse the tractor up the hill to your formwork, 3) it would probably cost a slab.
We've done silo bases here in no time. Also done a dairy yard extension a few years ago, a lot of concrete all mixed on site in a day.
Only way to go, not every farmer has one, but theres bound to one that does.
Regards
Matt
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31st July 2007, 10:00 PM #28
As you can see I've gone back over this thread.
from your info I'd strongly advise you to forget the concrete and go with a substantial timber or steel base.
Based on what you have said, your tank supplier is recommending a 20MPa or concrete slab. You will not achieve anything like this strength using found (dirty) gravel and sand, especially if you're mixing it in a barrow and pouring it in very small blobs on very uneven ground.
The likely outcome is several largely independent lumps of concrete that over time will move leading to failure of your tank.
ian
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