Making a Concrete Fire Pit the Right Way || Ultimate Fire Pit Build
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 2 июн 2021
- I’m Making a Concrete Fire Pit the Right Way. Check out the Ultimate Fire Pit Build. The first 1000 people to use this link will get a free trial of Skillshare Premium Membership: [skl.sh/bourbonmothwoodworking...
Merchandise & Plans: www.bourbonmoth.com
Patreon Page: / bourbonmothwoodworking
Cameo: www.cameo.com/bourbonmoth
Instagram: / bourbonmoth
Links below to tools and supplies:
3M Cubitron Sandpaper: lddy.no/1hset
Fire Bricks: amzn.to/3ccHiRx
Metal Fire Ring: amzn.to/3uTjLLX
Eye Protection: amzn.to/2LmqOMA
Square: amzn.to/2tiTPQr
Drill & Driver amzn.to/2xyJPEo
Festool Dust Extractor: amzn.to/32hgBpo
Festool Chop Saw: amzn.to/31fbsx0
ISOtunes Bluetooth Hearing Protection (10% off code- BOURBONMOTH10) bit.ly/BourbonMoth10
Bits & Bits Precision Cutting Tools (10% off code- BOURBONBITS)
bitsbits.com/ref/6220/
RZ Mask (15% off code: BOURBONMOTH15)
www.awin1.com/cread.php?awinmi...
Total Boat Epoxy: (10% coupon code TOTALMOTH) www.totalboat.com
Nicks Handmade Boots: bit.ly/3vZ8uMR
Firm Grip Work Gloves: thd.co/3LEO5TE
PowerPro Fasteners: amzn.to/3u3Mgtj
Pony Jorgensen Clamps: bit.ly/3knr9fZ
Spec Ops Hammer: amzn.to/3fMjAOd
Spec Ops Tape Measure: amzn.to/3w1M788
Spec Ops Pry Bar: amzn.to/2Ro3iC2
Spec Ops Chisels: amzn.to/3ga8kKv
Spec Ops Screw Drivers: amzn.to/3ciV8ls
Spec ops utility Knife: amzn.to/3g5ysWZ
Grizzly Tools:
Table Saw: amzn.to/2FBGs3q
Jointer: amzn.to/3aFYSM2
Planer: amzn.to/31cZAxa
Dust Collector: amzn.to/3l4rJOQ
Air Filtration: amzn.to/32pHx6r
Band Saw: amzn.to/32dEdea
Drill Press: amzn.to/31hzFEF
Lathe: amzn.to/2EiNolB - Хобби
Man made his geometry teacher proud.
This press has worked like a charm for my projects ruclips.net/user/postUgkxajoEbapTfqWaadnqb04h6U576yxXp-FE . I didn't even secure it to my table top, mainly due to the fact that I was using a 15 lbs drill vise. It's not flimsy at all as to what others have claimed it to be. Make sure the locking nuts and levers are secured and there won't be any issues with light pressure and patience. I was able to drill through aluminum, plastic, and steel (steel took a while) with no problems at all. Yeah it took a little longer than a regular drill press, but I don't have the space OR the money for one.The instruction manual was worthless, but luckily assembling the press was intuitive. However, the manual would be good for ordering replacement parts if needed. There is a nice breakdown of the parts that are included in the kit. Before ordering, make sure it is compatible with your unit, it is clearly stated what models the press is compatible with.This was an excellent purchase for $40!!
Bro... Your commentary was on point. You could narrate other people's videos and I would binge watch it.
After watching the video advert i was still skeptical. But when i finally downloaded the plans ruclips.net/user/postUgkxZF0EMnrujZvqHhGkxiz559uIABJWR9TG i was very impressed. The whole plan was just as you said in the video. Thank you very much. I now have a large and valuable collection for my woodworks. This is great!
damn, when he put the premade fire ring insert in, it went straight from a 6 to a 10.
i agree. pretty interesting to see a little detail make a big difference.
Ohh mogawty
I guess the algorithm brought the Genshin players here?? I have no manuel skills what so ever and won't ever make something like that but it was great to watch lol
"im not renting a concrete mixer" said by everyone... once! lol
Until you mix concrete by hand, everyone says that!
@@multidinero I had to use a shovel and wheelbarrow for the whole time I was doing fences and decks lol .
@@ramsaybolton9151 as a Finish Carpenter, I watch those guys from inside and ask the age old question.....
“Where’s that guy’s mixer?”
@@multidinero You should ask " Who's the mixer " instead lmao
@@ramsaybolton9151 Same. I am both cheap and a glutton for punishment.
Former concrete guy here. I did residential construction in Florida and we'd spray our forms with oil to get them to release easier from the slabs. The other little trick is that you can fill screw holes or nail holes with petroleum jelly for exposed surfaces that you don't want to see fasteners. You can also cover seams with clear packing tape and get a smooth finish.
Wonder if its still there.
Great tips. For the inner circle, it doesn't matter what you would coat it with because the direction to pull to release the forms is a reverse circle and geometrically doesn't allow it to release. Sort of like the Chinese finger traps.
What was the company? I am in orlando and would love to hire someone to do this
@@garrettsanford5683 Carpenter Contractors of America.
I was a roadway worker on the I-4 project and then worked on the runways at OIA. You're exactly right. Using form oil, even on wood, will make them fall right off after the concrete dries enough.
As this was a DiY project, a follow up on how it's holding up in a few years would be great.
He just did an update video
I’m just jealous of the grass
How did the grass look so good during the complete build. ????????
That's due to all the rain in the Pacific Northwest. Grass grows like crazy here but you can't always find a dry day to cut (mow) the lawn between rainy days. It's always a crapshoot till after the 4th of July!
@@BigHeinen That sir is a true story. The last couple months have been fair to great for a mow in between sun and rain lol
@@BigHeinen And then it all turns brown until it starts raining again
Unless it’s Astro ?
@6:13 Jason: “I bought $2M worth of 2x4s”
Scrap 2x4s in the corner: “Do we mean nothing to you?”
Would have only been $1M worth in 2019...
He broke my heart pulling that stunt..and he call himself a wood worker lol
A single 2x4x8 is $8.50 at my local Lowe's right now
@@johnettipio 10.97 up here in canada.
I'm glad that I'm not the only person to see that. So I came to the comments to check, and here we are.
when you pulled the forms off and smiled back at the camera I let out the biggest smile man. I was so happy for you for all the work put in. We just bought a new house and property this last year and Im anxious to build a firepit area. Getting ideas and found your channel. Subbed!
Your cleaning operation was impeccable throughout the entire project. Clean as you go, makes the job site so much easier. Beautiful work good sir, I might do this myself. I'll save a double of Woodford for you after I finish mine
The interior part, I would not have bothered removing.... just light a fire in it and let it burn 😂
I was thinking the same thing
Exactly what I was thinking
I think he just said, “Dooooooooh!”
Thats what we did. Worked like a charm
Same !!!
DUDE SAFETY!! Concrete can detonate when exposed to fire. My sister lost her eye and had three teeth smashed out when the fire that was on a concrete base detonated. It's the trapped water turning to steam, then expanding. Stay safe - do your research on concrete / fire explosive failure, great skills in the video man tho.
Thats why he put in the fire brick on the interior part of the concrete
Dude... You didn't watch the video did you?
@@averystrawn9819 You've never seen concrete explode before, it Doesn't explode by direct contact from fire it explodes from water trapped inside air pockets evaporating causing pressure build up Doesn't have to be direct heat lmao.
Concrete can be safe as long as you allow allotted time for it to cure . Me personally would have lined the firebrick the proper way around the inside.
It May last 100 years it may cure and then get rained on trapping water and frag, Id rather be safe If I'm investing that much money into a fire pit.
Do your research bud concrete takes 42 days to fully cure that means all moisture is gone green concrete is the few hours before it dries to the normal white color and by vibrating your separate cream from aggregate every thing he did ensured proper safety the only thing he could’ve done better would’ve been to mix in fiber
@@jake_god_of_sleep6564 Concrete is most effective and stronger when it still got moister in it, Once it's dried out over time and age it will crack and get rained on if its an outdoor concrete.
Concrete even fully cured can soak up more water retaining it. Concrete poured directly on the ground without a barrier can still absorb moisture through the ground.
The more you know lmao
As I stated before it could last 100 years with a fire or 10 days depends on his climate humidity and so forth. as I myself don't need to do research I come from a family of brick layers and concrete drivers who own a concrete business in VA. I am well versed in the what and what nots of concrete.
He's such a big kid. I love your video because it was funny and informative. This is the kind of video I like watching
Turned out great. I have a solo stove and wanted to make a square table with a cement table top that the stove would fit inside and this helped me figure out a good way to approach the circle in the middle of my square form!
I'm sure you've considered it, but remembered that ample airflow is the whole point of a solo stove
Concrete can and will blow up with fire don't do it ...
Easy 1 person concrete mixing tip. Need 5gal bucket, power drill, mixing paddle. Put in 3-5inch water depending on consistency wanted, start with less and add more as needed. Place concrete bag on top of bucket, poke hole and let concrete drain in while using power drill and mixing paddle. By the time the bag is empty(shake it as you go) the concrete is mixed, pour in. I've done 80 bags of 60lb mix by myself in a few hours with breaks. Average about 2min a bag including set up. Still hard work moving bags and pouring buckets, but easy mixing.
Additional benefit to that is you can just pour your concrete where needed rather than shoveling it
Mixing is easy but it still weighs 80 pounds.
@@danstiverson you can max half a bag at a time if you have to
Sounds rough on the drill
@@odin0438 since water is added first and concrete slowly poured in, it's actually not too bad. Been using the same dewalt drill for years doing this. Usually in 1st gear, but yeah it will wear it down faster than drywall screws.
Watching this just confirmed that yanking that old wringer washer tub out of the metal dump and setting it up as my fire pit was the right decision! 😂
I used an old tractor rim and cut the center hub out...
Its so wide that i can throw 3 entire wood pallets in it!
😆 🤣 😂
@@garyhaber333 hell yeah!!!! I love me some good ole southern ingenuity/engineering
Love your humor. Also appreciate you taking your time to explain how you did things. It was easy to follow. Thank you!
You took a lot of time and effort and money to build that and it's awesome! Congratulations on your new fire pit!
Perfect timing. I literally have to build a fire pit this weekend.
Probably cheaper to get his old form mailed to ya than buying all the materials lol
Look into the type of concrete you actually want. Regular concrete cracks and breaks down in heat.
Biggest smile on my face when “The Foreman” showed up lol 😂
Me too lol
Whose kid is that?
@@INT_MAX Jason's adopted son ...also featured in the lawnmower-tank vid, the office millwork vid, etc.
Now that was something. It may have even proven to be empowering, on a positive note.
I loved the ''once again the foreman made me do all the heavy lifting"
The internal should have put like a 3/4" piece of wood between the three connectors, with the melamine overhanging 1/2 the width of the separator board so no space on the ring touching the concrete. Then when done you take the connector screws out and slide the 3/4" wood pieces out. That leaves a little space so you can pull the inner ring piece toward the center and then can take them out.
Phew! What preparation! The effort and the energy seemed so much more than the value of the fireplace could ever be. The workshop is a marvel.
I’m so glad you researched this. My concrete friend (contractor....he wasn’t made of concrete) made one that was solid concrete on the bottom and it exploded shooting big chunks of concrete 40’ in the air like a cannon. He had his daughters Girl Scout sleep over that night. They called the kids inside for pizza and a few minutes later it blew the bottom out. Some large pieces went over the house and landed out front. Someone was watching over them that night that’s for sure!
I call bullshit.
This happened to me as well. nobody got burned but a few chairs had holes put in them.
Why do you call bullshit Nathan? You do know concrete explodes when extreme heat is consistently applied right? Try google buddy. There’s even videos on YT of it happening.
@@nathansmith22 Of course you do, cause you have no idea what your talking about. Your just talking. Concrete always has water in cavities within the concrete if left outside. It soaks in. That makes steam. What does steam do when it can't get out? Basic science there scooter. You just had to say something though.
Yes all concrete has air in it exterior concrete has at least 2 to 3 times more air into the mix so when it heats up it will explode
“Like the moron I am, I just persevered” A statement I can sadly relate to.
For a guy that dont know what he's doing with concrete, you sure made it look good. Would I have done it differently? Parts of it, Yes, but it turned out really nice. Overall, I'd give it a 9.5. Well done.
Do you work with concrete regularly? If so, what would you have done differently?
would have added sand and small pebbles to the concrete mix for starters.. makes it a lot more durable and less brittle..
Dude, hilarious video...and masterful work. Instant subscribe. I love that you're clearly a professional in carpentry/wood-working, but you don't take yourself too seriously.
lol, thought the same
It'll be interesting to know later if the concrete form cracks after the first fire. I had a firepit built out of stone with mortar and it cracked not only the mortar joints but the limestone two piece top. My firepit builder used a steel ring insert tight up against the stone and the heat caused the ring to expand, thus cracking the mortar and a couple of stones. My fix was to buy a steel insert that was smaller than the pit diameter by 1.5" all around. I also filled that void with mineral pour insulation to reduce thermal shock. My insert has a large enough lip to cover the void. I think your insert should be at least 1" smaller then your form to prevent contact between the steel insert and the inside of your form to prevent steel expansion from pushing out your form.
This right here is a great point - should be voted up
@@gabrielh.2506 Or do what I did by not allowing a flush steel ring up against the stone to expand as it gets hot by replacing with a full depth steel insert with a smaller diameter packed with pour mineral insulation in between the insert and stone. Much easier than lining with firebrick after the pit was built. That has worked now for many years.
@@JJ-fd2ob The calculation for a 48" steel ring (my pit) is an expansion of almost 1/2" when the temp rises by 1000F. A 3" ring will expand by 1/3". If a ring is mortared to the brick, stone or concrete, the pit will crack.
@@bobbray9666 what about using a fire rated mortar instead of concrete. Like what they'd use for chimneys?
@@driver902 If you use a steel ring, which I suppose the purpose of it is to protect the concrete from flaking away, you'd still have expansion of the steel under heat up against concrete whether it be refractory cement or not. The expanded steel will either push out and crack to concrete or just warp if the concrete doesn't give way. Better to insert a slightly small diameter steel ring to allow for the expansion when hot.
I subscribed for the skillfully executed projects. I watch for the soothing, dulcet narrations.
You forgot the epic opening scenes lol
@@lechatbotte. Well of course, he performs his own stunts.
@@bradleypayne2495 I know very impressive too!
You have been given a "bloke in his shed " award. It hold's a lot of value in Britain, kudos to you and for going for it.
Spray some oil (used) on the inside of the forms that meets the concrete prior to pour.
It’ll make removing the forms a lot easier.
Doesn’t effect outcome - as oil and water does not mix 👍🏻
I’ve done this same concept before and I can confirm it defiantly explodes
Gotta be the right mix brother
Wouldn't be an explosion of if it was meek. It has to be defiant.
I have a small charcoal fired forge. It’s a used helium tank with the top cut out, a piece of 1/2” iron pipe in the side to blow so air and sackrete I bought from Lowe’s. It did not explode and it hasn’t really even pitted with probably 100 hours of use at temps high enough not only to forge but to actually melt steel
That's really dangerous, the concrete explodes. Doing this is not safe at all.
@@marciaccalas5799 it's actually more like a vigorous cracking you might lose an eye under the exact wrong circumstances but it isn't the end of the world.
20:15 Pam. The cooking spray. Works on River tables too!
You could run an edge around the top to soften the edge. Also the outer form could be removed when it's firm to smoothen out any seams
Always remember, when using wood for forms, always spray with diesel or form oil. This helps the wood release from cured concrete...in all reality, you did very well. I do this all the time and can say you did better than most. Another hint, is, when it is curing, if it is hot outside, keep everything sprayed down and wet. This gets a better cure that is less likely to "dry out" and crack. Concrete does NOT dry. It cures. The end project is pretty amazing. As for your inside form, you should have burned it out...after all, this is a fire pit...
Came to the comments to see if I was the only one thinking he should have just burned it out. Lol
Never spray with diesel
Use any oil. Even vegetable.
@MACizera it breaks down concrete compound so the layer touching the Crete will degrade much faster.
But the real issue is why not use canola oil. (Form oil works) and not hurt the environment?
@MACizera form oil is mineral oil.
You can just buy that it's best.
@@thenarrator1984 Totally agree.
Can't wait to see it burning for the first time. Hope the supervisor lets you sit and enjoy it with a Bourbon !! Keep up the great content
Worked for a forming and shoring company WAY back in the day. We used a mix of Diesel Fuel and Automatic Transmission Fluid sprayed on concrete forms as a release agent.
That firepit insert made it pop
looks really nice, good job
"I don't feel like renting a concrete mixer"
A hard lesson is gonna be learned today!
I bought a used concrete mixer so I never have to mix concrete by hand ever again.
I bought a used one to do a project with the idea I could sell it when I was done, getting back most if not all the cost.
When making inner circles for that make one little piece shaped as a V with the V point to the concrete, then you will easily pull it and have some room to pull the rest
It's even easier than that. The one little piece doesn't even need to be v-shaped. He could have done the 3 pieces as he did (or even only 2) but between two of them he could have put in a piece of 2 by 4 (or something similar with two parallel sides) which you can knock out first towards the inside. Then you have some wiggle room to loosen and take out the other pieces. Could even have worked with the whole circle as one piece cut open in one place plus a 2 by 4 or 4 by 4 inserted.
@@TheBackdrafter80 well you just crushed my two years of overthinking and overdoing simple stuff :D
@@samuelsilva8364 you're welcome. 😀
I absolutely love your interactions with your foreman. He's a cute kid. And you seems like a pretty cool dad.
That is the cutest 😍foreman I've ever seen.
So are we all just gonna ignore his supernatural ability to raise the garage door without touching it? Dude.
This is the advanced version of opening the grocery store door by waving your hand at it
The foreman is adorable bud, you are doing it right. Teaching the youngins skills is what will keep this world going around.
....it’ll start to crack after not many fires and need replaced. The youngins aren’t being taught right with this and no foresight.
I work as a technical designer at a factory in Denmark (Ambercon, Genner) that makes precast concrete elements (columns, beams, stairs, interior walls, etc.).
When we were building a new administration building a couple of years ago, the walls for the main hall were cast with wood grain texture using real boards as a bottom in the forms. All other walls are painted white, but these walls are raw and untreated. It looks real purty. :)
I have that very same Bosch reciprocating saw myself by the way (GSA 18 V-Li)...
Looks amazing man😊 great job! My dad and I are gonna make one! Thanks
Surprised you deconstructed the inner form instead of just lighting a fire in the pit! Turned out great!
I was thinking the same thing when I was watching it will all eventually burn away.
You said you did not know anything about building a Boat and you rocked that out, so I'm going to bet this will rock too. (Let's watch and find out )
Looks fantastic!
The only thing I would have done in your place would be to burn out the middle and next time remaking the center have the ends join in a parallel miter so they could be slid out of place towards the middle instead of only vertically
;)
I might have to do this myself now, great content, and screw it, I think it's due time I just subscribe XD
Love the idea of the wood grain and dont forgotten the helper always need help like that thank for the video
Great job Jason, and your foreman did a good job also! The metal ring turned it into an elegant project instead of just acceptably good.
I have never built a fire pit. But I have poured some manhole collars. On the internal ring we placed wooded wedges Knock the wedges out the internal ring comes right out..
You did reallly good! I have to say though, I feel like some upward smacks with a hammer to the underside of the top frame would've been quicker to slowly get it out. In future, or more so other people doing this, wrapping interior frames and PVCs with a foam makes them extremely easy to remove, just make sure you get a good tape layer, I found generic packing tape works well, the plastic stuff, otherwise you'll get the foam stuck to the concrete. Built probably 3000 concrete drainage pits and that was the best thing we ever learned, and a slit in the PVC can make life easy too!
your dry sense of humor made this video even more so a work of art!
Me at 1:06: Who the heck is “Jason?” oh well, let’s just keep watching and see what Bourbon is doing in this video
Honestly, this was really well done. Couple things I would have done differently.
1. If you had mitered the edges of your interior forms you'd have much less pressure pushing them together, and would have been able to remove the forms intact.
2. I would have poured a pad first. The weight of that ring will likely have it settling into the dirt over time, especially after rain. The pad would also have made interior form removal easier.
Going to implement this in my yard though, great idea 👍
Dude, I’ve never seen your channel videos. You, sir, are a MASTER! Damn, that fire pit looks 🔥🔥🔥
I love the way you start off my man! Bowl of Krispies and Bourbon!
This has to be the most complicated concreted tire fire-pit i have ever witnessed being constructed
The exact same thing I was thinking, but I watched the whole video. Lol
And maybe the most expensive lol
My first thought was, keep it simple, make it square. I placed 4x8x16 solid concrete blocks (most of which I had leftover from a previous project) on end in a square and covered with surface bond cement from Quikcrete.
@@wtfdan817 Oh, good idea with the concrete blocks. I was thinking 200 empty aluminum soda cans would eat up some volume nicely ...if ya have 'em laying around.
That was an amazing watch! You're so much fun and so talented.
Looks fantastic! I would suggest putting in a small foundation lined with concrete, or a plinth. Between seasons, that ground is gonna shift, and that ring may end up wonky.
There's no way that's moving, it's one solid piece. Even if there's an earthquake, the insert would be flush.
look really good ! great job on that pit
the rebar you put in extended into the ground. over time moisture will climb that bar and rust it out. always make sure your rebar is completely encased in the concrete.
All the real credit for this goes to the foreman, what a guy, kept that lazy beardy dude on track, brilliant. :]
Sick man! Love it.
Those "Kerf" cuts were so satisfying! btw thats how the concrete guys on the job do it when they need to form curb radii or what have you....only they use Echo Cut-Off Saws
We're a pretty large company but its always fun to watch these DIYs that anyone can do without a large scale crew or heavy equipment !
That's Big.
That's big.
I’m a certified cement mason, and I gotta say. You did a good job. A tip to separate the wood from the cement, you can use diesel gas. Works fine.
Can confirm diesel works beautifully and would use plastic form boards for bending its way easier
I was just going to form oil or diesel
Not an expert....but, built a very hot fire in a cement box. Turns out, the cement exploded. Finished cement contains water...expands and explodes. Just sharing.
@@patandsandytrierweiler2440 I've heard that before too! Scary.
@@patandsandytrierweiler2440
Watch at 20:21
ESTWING hatchet …My Man!
I'm inspired to try making my own fire pit after watching this video. I really enjoyed your humor!! I laughed the whole way through. 😁
Thanks for the video! I followed your lead but connected to gas instead. I’m really happy how it turned out thanks for this content!
Great build, been working with forms 25 years, yours was excellent. For future reference there is a product, wiggle board that is made for forming curves.
He could have just used hardboard also, cheap and comes in 4 x 8' sheets.
Holy crap -- @27:25 Wow that turned out great, man! How satisfying is that!
My first view of the channel and that was one of the best video intros possible. 👏
I worked in concrete, asphalt, sand & gravel for my career (the college engineering diploma sits in a box in the closet) and I have to say that was a very nice looking job when finished. The only thing I would have suggested was making the foreman do more work 🤣
Love the pebbles you used. When you were creating a mini-gabion wall inside the concrete structure I was hoping you'd make a fire pit that was ONLY gabion wall. That would have looked really cool!
that pit is amazing
From someone who's done concrete for over 30 years, you did pretty well. The only thing I might've done differently would've been the inside form. I would have angled them so they slid right out.
or just light a fire and burn it for a few years!!
Nah just burn it. I agree though . :)
@@SVW1976 burn fresh concrete? It hasn't set yet. It takes at least 3 weeks but the thickness of this will take a lot longer. Burning the forms out can damage the concrete.
When doing a inside form, I cut angles 45-Degrees so the inside round form can spiral right out. But you did a good job!
I loved these forms. He did such a stellar job, especially on the first try, and you can't stop concrete from shrinking but your idea is awesome.
Great looking pit, I poured concrete countertops on my outdoor kitchen a few years back at the ripe age of 58, I thought I would drop dead mixing that concrete by hand and then pouring. It’s a good thing you’re a young stud. But I’d still would’ve rented a mixer. Keep the great videos coming.
looks fabulous!
one of the best DIY videos ever!
“If you like it you better put a ring on it.” - that’s funny. 😂🤣😂🤣😂
Great job. Just wanted to mention, when looking for filler material for concrete, a good option is gravel. One or two shuvels per bag. Mix together, works great. Diesel is used the most often for keeping the concrete off the forms. Concrete work is unique in the way we have to consider wrecking the forms conveniently. City water drains is a good example.
This is a beautiful fire pit
Very Impressed, You Kept Me Intrigued With Your Work & Your Personality Makes The Tube Worth Watching. I Absolutely Love Your Firepit. Thanx 4 Sharing.....
Your voice is supper soothing!
I’ve spent lots of days covered in diesel while putting together foundation forms… because that used to be a thing! you can put most anything on it that’s slippery.
Also if you ever plan to try this again you can probably tack together the inside part with just brads because all the pressure is focused inwards.
I have cheated many times using little tiny bread nails on two by fours that all get compressed by concrete. Then you just whack them out, it’s pretty awesome.
I love your video and the fire pit is amazing good job.
Imagine if masons poured foundations this way? We need basement walls, so first we will build a house out of wood, then build a smaller house inside of it. Then fill it with concrete and then throw away the house :) Instead of just hammering some pins in the ground lining it with plywood and fixing the final product with a finish coat of cement/stucco.
This was so zen to watch, and totally the way I would do it if i could afford to do it that way.
What an awesome project! It turned out incredible. I need one of those in my backyard.
I was really unsure about that wood texture, but seeing it now, it really looks awesome. Nice job!
Looks amazing.
I bought some column tubes from a specialty hardware store, they laughed when I said I needed two feet of the different diameters! I was like, it's for a fire pit, and they were like, that's genius. The tubes are typically used for pouring freeway bridges or something.
How did that end up working?
They actually sold short Pieces?
This is the correct way to pour a firepit! no need to trace a circle
When making the inner form, use three pieces (as you did) and use wedges of at least 60 degrees in the joints. That way, when you pull out the wedges (from the inside), the three pieces will easily pull straight out from the concrete and can be lifted out. And, they will be re-usable! 🤓👍
Thought the same thing. Would have saved a lot of pain and aggravation.
Or coulda started the bon fire early
Should just burn the inner Ring
Love it!!! Family has wanted some sort of fire pit for some time. Yours is the first that I can get excited about. Already have the mixer for other small projects so I may add this to the list.Thanks
Shoot, if you lived in my area and needed a hand, I actually secretly love working concrete. Just not for fences. I hate setting posts and the like. Though that's mainly with a wishy-washy type contractor.
really awesome work
Looks so good! It really did turn out nice!
Damn, that lawn looks like a tank rolled over it.
😂😂😂😂😂
Thank you to the algorithm for bringing you to my viewing eyeballs 👀 !!
Love your narration and sense of humor!!!
I'm looking forward to viewing all your other vids, as well as the fire next month 🔘 🔥 🔘
Looks good..... they look like river rocks. River rocks explode and crack when reaching a certain temp.
I’m very happy I stumbled across your channel, your videos are absolutely entertaining and fun to watch, that turned out amazing
me 2 this is golden content