How to Dig a Basement

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  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2023
  • In today's Down & Dirty, we're talking about how to dig a basement. I'm just going to say right now, there are a lot of ways to dig a basement. In this video, I'm showing you how I go about digging a basement.
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Комментарии • 135

  • @nerdking5345
    @nerdking5345 12 дней назад +1

    thanks so much dude ill be digging my first basement this Tuesday this really helped me mentally prep

  • @ramblinjamman
    @ramblinjamman 11 месяцев назад +7

    The "plan view" explanation coupled with the model size excavator is SO helpful. Excellent education you're providing the trades world. Your video & audio production details are first class as well. Keep up the great work!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching! Glad the videos are helpful!

  • @jayphillips4058
    @jayphillips4058 Год назад +9

    The scale of your model excavator brings up a point - the size of your machine relative to the job makes a difference in dig pattern, as does the type/stability of the material being dug. How much room you have to pile spoil, whether the concrete work is truck-poured or pumped, and how many corners you have to deal with. Lots to think about before taking that first scratch along the offset.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +2

      Great point Jay! Thanks for the comment!

  • @mostlydiggers
    @mostlydiggers Год назад +9

    Top quality information as usual. You are a great resource on here. Well done.

  • @Cody_Buck
    @Cody_Buck 5 месяцев назад +1

    I really enjoyed this video, brother. I've got about 2.5 years of excavator experience and I'm starting to watch different videos about different things I can do with that experience. I feel fairly confident that I could do a basement dig after watching this video. Thanks for the great content.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  4 месяца назад +1

      Absolutely! Thanks for watching and thanks for the comment!

  • @topnotchexcavatingllc5193
    @topnotchexcavatingllc5193 Год назад +7

    Very good explanation. We do a lot of walkout basements here in Missouri basically the same approach but normally some of the material has to be moved farther than I can reach on the walk out portion. We use and excavator and track loader in tandem most of the time depending on how far it is to daylight with the walkout. Occasionally we will throw it in the truck and move it. Thanks for the video!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      I love track loaders but unfortunately we just don't see them enough around here. They are really popular in the central states.

  • @galatanradu791
    @galatanradu791 Год назад +4

    Very useful lesson. Keep them coming.

  • @gomoe_2416
    @gomoe_2416 Год назад +2

    This is the content we need

  • @3000gtalex
    @3000gtalex Год назад +1

    I used to dig 5000sqf basements with a 349 and that scale was about correct haha makes stoning the inside easy.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      I would imagine that would only take 20 minutes to dig with a 349😂😂

  • @firedtradesman
    @firedtradesman Год назад +4

    Excellent explanation. Tremendous value here. Thank you sir.

  • @kingpin3385
    @kingpin3385 Год назад +2

    Good job 👏 👍

  • @1henex11
    @1henex11 5 месяцев назад

    The video I needed. That excavator is massive... More paper layouts and models that shits cool.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  4 месяца назад

      I appreciate the feedback! I've been trying to do more die cast model videos since it let's you see things from a unique angle you don't get on the job.

  • @freestylette
    @freestylette Месяц назад

    Exactly what I needed. Thank you!!

  • @ambitiousdirtwork
    @ambitiousdirtwork Год назад +2

    Good video & giving a good presentation with your diecast model & overhead view, hope you can do more down & dirty topics in the the future 🦾

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      Thanks Jay! I'm working through some of the topics that make sense to do with the diecast models since it is wintertime here.

  • @kincetown
    @kincetown Год назад

    Happy New Year Brother!! Great video and very helpful!! Entertaining as well!! Thanks!!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      Happy New Year my man! I appreciate you commenting all the time!

  • @dirtdayz2313
    @dirtdayz2313 10 месяцев назад +1

    This was a very nice way to explain the process! Very helpful! Thanks!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  10 месяцев назад

      I'm glad it was helpful, thanks for watching!

  • @MichaelMiller-by8io
    @MichaelMiller-by8io Год назад +1

    Thank you for a great basement dig video. I’ve been wondering how to prepare for it. I hope to do one in the future. I’ve been operating for two years. I love it.

  • @HaiLoc-zi3mq
    @HaiLoc-zi3mq 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great explanation. I am a complete noob but that helped

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  6 месяцев назад +1

      Glad it was helpful, thanks for watching brother!

  • @kenneycontracting7814
    @kenneycontracting7814 Год назад

    Excellent comprehensive video!

  • @chipperchip1938
    @chipperchip1938 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent explanation. Thank you

  • @tanyalaw4805
    @tanyalaw4805 3 месяца назад

    That’s a great way to teach it

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад

      Thank you! It's easier than trying to fly a drone over the same spot for 6 hours

  • @nickjames7704
    @nickjames7704 3 месяца назад

    Really enjoyed the video also. Thanks for the explanation. Very helpful.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад

      Thanks for watching and thanks for the comment!

  • @reganmorben9248
    @reganmorben9248 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for taking that one on Brian. if Rick had done that presentation, half way in, he'd have been making engine noises with tire squealing sounds and forgot what he was trying to explain. All joking aside, that was very insightful, if only you had some tape.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  4 месяца назад +1

      This is very true. Rick also agrees that it would have been a train wreck....

  • @lukaszsiadkowski8532
    @lukaszsiadkowski8532 Год назад +2

    Very useful video, more content like this,please
    👍

  • @serguei5000
    @serguei5000 Год назад

    Thank you very much for putting this together !
    I’m planning to dog a crawl space foundation for my house, and this is priceless!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching, glad the videos are helpful!

  • @Filzkiiz
    @Filzkiiz Год назад +1

    Yehh Buddy!! Lol!! Merry New Years to you & your family mate. Loving the Beard brother!! Suits yah! Lol!! 2021-22 was really challenging and definately tuff..but recovering really well and really Looking forward to 2023 and all its shenanigans!! Lol!! Feels good to be back.. ne.ways..you Take it easy and Stay Safe out there big FellA! Catch you on the next video!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      I've been wondering what happened to you my man! Just the other night I was curious where you had been. Hope all is well with you and good to hear from you again Phil!

  • @Big.Ron1
    @Big.Ron1 11 месяцев назад

    Very cool. Thank you.

  • @ColtonRMagby
    @ColtonRMagby Год назад +2

    Now I know what I need to do if I dig the basement myself when building a house. Then again, I might use shovels.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      Shovels will work but it will take time!

  • @orlandomcintosh5325
    @orlandomcintosh5325 Год назад

    Good evening bro very nice I've learned something awesome 👍😊. Happy new year

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      Thanks for watching my man and thanks for the comment!

  • @paramotorfun9649
    @paramotorfun9649 Год назад

    Great job

  • @jimmycardinale7382
    @jimmycardinale7382 Год назад

    Love the vid....Thank you!!!!

  • @centerbuilder7677
    @centerbuilder7677 Год назад

    Excellent video. I’ve got to dig a basement as well.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      Good luck and feel free to reach out with questions!

    • @centerbuilder7677
      @centerbuilder7677 Год назад

      @@DieselandIron I will. Do you have a email, I can send you my plans.

  • @user-ty5ru2vt9b
    @user-ty5ru2vt9b Месяц назад

    Nice tutorial

  • @diggingo
    @diggingo Год назад

    Thank you👏👏

  • @stoparret
    @stoparret Год назад

    Speaking of winter, would be interested in a video on how to open up a tight pile of dirt with a loaded. Am having to load my own truck, but the material is so dense I am having trouble getting full buckets. Also interested in how to tidy up a muddy lot in preparation for it to freeze over when I am done; not too good at back dragging mud smoothly so it's not a corduroy road when it freezes.
    Thanks!

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      Let me see what I can put together. For getting into your pile I would recommend a couple things. First, take the time to actually work the pile with your bucket. Instead of getting focused on getting a bucket to put into the truck, work the pile and soften up the material so you can make your time count. The added weight in your bucket will give you increased traction to get further into the pile. The second tip is to work the pile with the corners of your bucket. The less surface area you have pushing into the pile, the more force you will have to penetrate the hard pack.
      As for back dragging muddy lots, this is a horseshoes and hand grenades scenario. Get it as close as you can while realizing close is good enough. You can only do so much with soup.

  • @frankp215
    @frankp215 11 месяцев назад +1

    You explained this perfectly! Might i suggest you use different colored markers for different positions, it makes it easier for people like me to understand. Lol😊

  • @littlefinkle7757
    @littlefinkle7757 Год назад

    Solid information! Planning your work properly is half the battle, at least that is what G.I. Joe said 😁.

  • @owencomps
    @owencomps 20 дней назад

    I have done some haul trucking years ago, but wanted to learn some more as I'm going to make a career change. Your videos are very well done friend. Keep up the great work bud, and Thank you from Central Texas .

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  15 дней назад

      Thanks for the comment! I truly appreciate the feedback! Where are you from? I'm originally from Dripping Springs

    • @owencomps
      @owencomps 15 дней назад

      @@DieselandIronI'm from the big city f Fredericksburg LOL. I went through DS a couple of weeks ago on my way to Austin.

  • @ExiledDbl
    @ExiledDbl Год назад +1

    Also keep in mind with over dig that depending on the depth of the basement dig you may have to account for slope and working room if its over 4 feet of a basement dig or shitty material.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      Yes, 100%. I didn't get into benching in this video but if the dig goes over 4 feet deep then you will need to bench the hole back accordingly.

  • @tszymk77
    @tszymk77 Год назад

    I'm planning to dig my walkout basement with a Takeuchi TB135. It will probably take a week or more. I'm planning to put tarps on the ground to protect from rain washing out the basement bottom - do you think this is overkill or how should I handle it? Thanks.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      Unless you are expecting some pretty torrential rains I wouldn't worry about covering the dig with tarps. The rest of your plan is solid, it will just take a hot minute!

  • @aaronfitz5057
    @aaronfitz5057 7 месяцев назад

    Great vedio, how do you dig a straight line.? I always loose my line even my trenches are wobbly 😢

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  7 месяцев назад

      As much as I would love to give you a good trick, the real answer here is practice. Before I start a basement dig I get out and paint lines on the ground. As you setup to dig make sure your track is lined up along the line so you can continue to track back using your line on the ground as a guide.

  • @banovak611
    @banovak611 Год назад

    Thanks for the video,. I have a question though, how big of a basement can you dig in one day??

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      If you want to get technical I would respond it depends on the size of machine you have. I would say for a standard 15 ton machine you could dig around a 3500 square foot basement in a day

  • @pleb3171
    @pleb3171 Год назад

    Would I get paid more if I had a degree in diesel tech as well as an operating certificate, I'm currently finishing out my cert and people keep telling me to add on a diesel tech degree now because it will be much easier than going back later in life. Is it actually useful to have?

  • @tomcat3949
    @tomcat3949 11 месяцев назад

    Do you first separate and pile the topsoil from the subsoil?

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  8 месяцев назад

      If your site has a fair amount of topsoil, yes. But if your sit has an inch or so of topsoil and you're bringing more in anyway, I don't mess with it.

  • @Rprecision
    @Rprecision Год назад

    Good information. My question is when do you bench back your over dig. Let's assume it's a standard basement your what 9'10" or closer to 10' deep depending on Benchmark and plans. How do you mitigate that caving in on the concrete crew. It's technically it falls under trench safety osha?

    • @3000gtalex
      @3000gtalex Год назад

      Give it a good slope depending on the material just keep the overdig correct on the bottom.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +2

      If you start going over 4 feet deep then yes, I would bench the hole back. Don't start your bench until you are deep enough that you can keep your line. If you bench down too early you lose your slot that keeps your bucket exactly where it needs to be. Treat the bench the same way you treat the main area of the dig.

    • @Rprecision
      @Rprecision Год назад

      @@DieselandIron That was my approach, thanks for sharing

    • @chrisclark2017
      @chrisclark2017 Год назад

      if it’s an 8’ foundation, dig should be less than that so you have 12-18” of concrete above grade. So if footing is 10” you would only dig between 7-8 feet?

  • @user-ye2hg3uu5f
    @user-ye2hg3uu5f 7 месяцев назад

    رائع

  • @tlent55
    @tlent55 3 месяца назад

    What's a good size machine for most residential basements?

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  2 месяца назад

      15 ton excavator. It's a good size for most work in that space while still being light enough you don't need a lowboy.

  • @chacal5844
    @chacal5844 Год назад

    Finally a simple answer to a simple question many times asked but never answered. If I may suggest, next time use a bigger paper so your excavator is to scale.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      The challenge was fitting it within the camera viewing area!

  • @nickjames7704
    @nickjames7704 3 месяца назад

    How much does it cost roughly to have a 40x60 basement dug out? 8’-10’ how do you calculate it?

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад

      Call a dirt company in your area. There are a lot of factors that play into that number. Is the dirt staying onsite or being trucked off? Is there a possibility of water infiltration? What kind of material?

    • @nickjames7704
      @nickjames7704 3 месяца назад

      @@DieselandIron right, I do know there are factors at play. I’m speaking just the hole itself. Let’s exclude factors such as hauling or spread backfill things like that. I’m just trying to figure out more so is it best to be figured on a per cubic yard bid or is it likely better let’s say to do a estimated one/two day trackhoe hourly charge. Then anything on top of that and the other outside factors can be implemented. I’m a framing contractor and most of my jobs are GC related for the full scope of project and I have discussed it a couple times but it seems the bid process gets wonky when I ask the simple basic question to get that answer. Let’s just say for argument sake how does one guy price it 10k per the plans on a flat piece of land and the next is 3k. My understanding is one priced it per sf or cubic yard high and the other priced according to a 1 or 2 day dig with basement footing also dugout and porch footing. Main question here is example project 36x60 w 36x30 garage at end of it. Without holding you to your charging rate. What would you figure something like that to be. I’m in NE Ohio. Pretty fair soil. Middle of a corn field. Nothing likely to obstruct. Most digs I’ve seen first hand maybe a shale rock layer. Pretty solid not much soft soils falling in or hard rock layers. Just simple basic hole dig. Prime time kinda easy cake job with no necessary requirement where to slap the piles at for a final grade and backfill. I’d like to know what range you’d price something like that. If you’re willing to explain the way I can bid such said project along with all of my sf or per scope jobs. Most always in the country and minimal extra and always stays on site.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад +1

      @@nickjames7704 I plan on sitting down a recording some Down & Dirties this afternoon. I'll go over my logic when bidding a basement dig and how I throw together pricing. By showing you my process you should be able to calculate this out for your own setup (aka - factoring in machine rental etc)

    • @nickjames7704
      @nickjames7704 3 месяца назад

      @@DieselandIron awesome. Thank you!

  • @Artholos
    @Artholos Год назад +2

    What if you need to dig a two story basement? I’d really like to learn that!

    • @littlefinkle7757
      @littlefinkle7757 Год назад +1

      Make sure your excavator has a full tank! 😁

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      Dig the first basement, climb your machine down in the hole and dig the second basement! Who is digging multilevel basements?

    • @littlefinkle7757
      @littlefinkle7757 Год назад +1

      @@DieselandIron must be a border crossing job 😁

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      @@littlefinkle7757 🤣🤣

  • @austinharris7895
    @austinharris7895 4 месяца назад

    Just a question from someone who hasn’t dug a basement, why wouldn’t you dig it in a L shape coming from the camera right side throwing it behind eventually to where to need it, you could essentially grab all your material in one shot also.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад

      A large part of a basement dig is planning on where the material will need to end up for the backfill. You could dig the majority of this basement and throw the material to one side out of convenience. When it comes to the backfill you are now forced to push all of that dirt around the house to backfill the other 2 or 3 sides (depending on where you left the dirt). Dozers drink fuel and are expensive to run so you wan the dirt as close to home as you can get it when you do the initial dig. Hope that answers your questions!

  • @stevencolbert2304
    @stevencolbert2304 Год назад

    Great video and explanation. But, tell me that you don't dig in rock without.... Meh. That theory of of shear straight wall goes out the window in our soil conditions. You get +- 2' accuracy on a trench out here with the rock we have.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +2

      Obviously you have to take into account soil conditions and what you are working with. The key is to be as accurate as the conditions allow. If you dig your initial slot first and keep it deeper than the soil around it, that will help with the push you get as you encounter rocks. Instead of keeping the slot a foot or so deeper than the surrounding area, in rocky conditions I might keep it 2 or 3 feet deeper so my bucket stays wedged in place as I hit rocks. Now instead of getting a 2 foot wide push you can keep it closer to 10 inches. Again, it all depends on your conditions.

  • @johnmattu7262
    @johnmattu7262 Год назад

    While I agree with the theory and appreciate the example...let's say the garage is 16', by the time we're at the first corner, ima going to need to sling the dirt ~30'+ to keep from double handling it on my close- out. My Ho ain't that big! Informative to a guy that's never dug a foundation, thanks.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      There are certainly times where you will have no other option but to double touch material. The key is to think ahead so you do this as little as possible.

  • @jakethegreeneyedsnake1497
    @jakethegreeneyedsnake1497 Год назад +1

    I expect that diagram to be framed and on display ole son

  • @i4ni2th4a2th13
    @i4ni2th4a2th13 Год назад +4

    Sooo.... You don't put the house on the land and then dig a basement under it? Who knew

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +2

      You can but it gets a lot more expensive!

  • @jakethegreeneyedsnake1497
    @jakethegreeneyedsnake1497 Год назад

    Speaking of basements…. How about a video on footings?? Like a burger king or something

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад

      We don't do a ton of footing digs. Let me see what I can come up with.

  • @lissaleggs4136
    @lissaleggs4136 3 месяца назад

    What city are you based out of ?
    Do you work in Oakland Cnty ?

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  2 месяца назад

      We are based out of Howell. Where is Oakland City located?

    • @lissaleggs4136
      @lissaleggs4136 2 месяца назад

      Oakland county, guess not..
      Probably too far away to Pontiac/Waterford area.

  • @angkriekouki
    @angkriekouki Год назад

    So at the edges you went deeper why?

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  Год назад +1

      This technique is common in michigan. Our footer is about 6 to 8 in deeper than the middle of the dig or what we call the crown. This saves on concrete when you go to pour the main slab of the basement

  • @ernieforrest7218
    @ernieforrest7218 4 месяца назад

    First off you mention where the dirt will be needed on that particular lot.
    I would like to see how you throw the dirt with an excavator.
    Fact is you will no doubt have a second machine on the job for moving the dirt.
    You use an excavator because thats what you have.
    But that dosent mean that its the best machine for digging a basement.
    As a retired builder with hundreds of basements on homes i built, we never used an excavator on any of them.
    An excavator is very good for digging holes, as in holes for large gas tanks for gas stations.
    0

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад

      The dirt is thrown beside the hole and there is no need for a second machine onsite until you go to perform the backfill. If you've planned your dig correctly then you should have very little balancing to do with the dozer when you go to backfill. Excavators are the most efficient and cost effective tool for digging basements, hands down. There is a decent swath of the country that thinks track loaders are the go to machine for digging a basement and I can tell you factually, they have never done a operations cost calculation to compare the two. It's not a competition. Track loaders are 3 times more expensive to run per hour than an excavator. Your dirt guys were leaving a shitload of money on the table and you were overpaying to get your basements dug.

    • @ernieforrest7218
      @ernieforrest7218 3 месяца назад

      @@DieselandIron Thats simply bs.
      We built hundreds of houses and a track loader dug all of them in one day or less.

    • @DieselandIron
      @DieselandIron  3 месяца назад

      @ernieforrest7218 go re-read my comment. I'm confident you were able to dig them in a day with a track loader. I don't dispute that at all. What I dispute is the cost and that is factual and can be easily calculated.

    • @ernieforrest7218
      @ernieforrest7218 3 месяца назад

      @@DieselandIron Fact is that you can only reach so far with an excavator, and thats where you pile the dirt.
      Unless you have a second machine. and operator for moving it. And thats a big problem for other phases of the job.
      We put crushed stone in all our basements under the concrete floor, and that was just backed down the ramp and dumped right in the basement. Sitto for the block delivery for the basement as well as the concrete for the footing. We never back filled untill the framing was at least partiapa on rtiaally complete and weight was placed on the walls. So it should be easy to see why the dirt from the excavation should be piled well awway from the foundaation so that the job can progress. Im very much aware that especially today with the smaller excavators being so popular thaat that some builders enjoy pretending they are an operator. And thats BS as well.

    • @ernieforrest7218
      @ernieforrest7218 3 месяца назад

      m

  • @ibrahimkouri
    @ibrahimkouri 9 месяцев назад

    Work smart not hard