love your videos Vern! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. As soon as I get a notification for a new video of yours, I always watch it right away. keep it up!
Oh... and we have the same thing with engineers here too. Varies greatly from one job to the next and from engineer to engineer. Some of the ideas they come up with certainly leave you scratching your head but we always seem to somehow make it work. All part of the job 👍
Hi Vern and hello from New Zealand!! Love the videos mate. Awesome to see how you guys do things. A lot of similarities. Quick question, do you guys stabilize all your subgrade or just the problem areas? Keep up with the vids mate, they're awesome!!
To answer your question: Here in Edmonton Alberta, we stabilize all the subgrade. The city of Calgary to the south of us, very rarely use stabilization, because their subgrade is more like shale, due to the close proximity to the Rocky Mountains. It's possible to work in street construction all your life, and never see the process of stabilizing, depending on your location. Nice to hear from New Zealand.
Please keep the videos coming! I've learned and re-learned alot from you sharing your experiences!
Thanks for the comment.
love your videos Vern! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. As soon as I get a notification for a new video of yours, I always watch it right away. keep it up!
"Sharing my knowledge" that's a good way of putting it.
Oh... and we have the same thing with engineers here too. Varies greatly from one job to the next and from engineer to engineer. Some of the ideas they come up with certainly leave you scratching your head but we always seem to somehow make it work. All part of the job 👍
Hi Vern and hello from New Zealand!! Love the videos mate. Awesome to see how you guys do things. A lot of similarities. Quick question, do you guys stabilize all your subgrade or just the problem areas? Keep up with the vids mate, they're awesome!!
To answer your question: Here in Edmonton Alberta, we stabilize all the subgrade. The city of Calgary to the south of us, very rarely use stabilization, because their subgrade is more like shale, due to the close proximity to the Rocky Mountains. It's possible to work in street construction all your life, and never see the process of stabilizing, depending on your location.
Nice to hear from New Zealand.
Hie sir im looking for grader job will you connect me or help me