How we pour medium size pole barns
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
- In this video we were hired to pour a medium size pole barn floor. Most the time we pour the smaller garages and barns just like this. Let men know what you think of our technique in the comments.
Bondo you got a great crew for sure. That is key to your company’s success. You treat people right and they appreciate it. Have a nice Labor Day weekend. Have a drink on me. But no Bud Light. 😂
great floor bondo !!!!!! ty for posting !!
Nice job I like your work going to have to get a hold of you. I have a ICF pour that I would like to get done.
Classy move tipping the drivers. It always appreciated.
How about using 2 powerbuggies.
Weld a hook on the backside of your come along to pick up the wire , probably won’t poke as many holes in the vapor barrier 👍
The 5 1/2" interior perimeter ( thickness of the pole/post ) is not covered with vapor barrier and wire.
Is it not necessary ?
Is it left uncovered for expansion ?
Is it left uncovered for a moisture escape path ?
ever hear how long disturbed soil becomes undisturbed as such?? or will tamping give the equilivent
## 👀👀## 👍
🐶👍
Why did you not dig in a 2 foot rat wall ?
Customers don't want to pay .
Bondo, you may have to invest in another compactor and have two going at the same time.
You go the extra mile for customers shows your honesty and integrity. Tamping around the outside also protects your slab dropping later on. Very good work. Love your attitude and also shows to your staff and big biscuit how to do things the right way. Love your channel cheers from the great south land. Australia 🇦🇺
Your equipment naming is top notch mmmmmm
Great job brother. And of course my man ROW .👍🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
I would love to have one of those big Barnes, but I don’t like the beams going into the ground like that, I see it done this way a lot on RUclips, but I would rather have it on concrete peers out of the ground. do they do it that way too? Good job by the way.
Wood in the ground always rots.
Hey guys, experience pays. We're watching in real time. Earn you're dough... Thank Bondo...
10 min early of course it’s the boss !
Q: steel reinforcement in Australia has to be 50mm (2 inch) concrete coverage top + bottom, resting on 'chairs' - spacers; to stop corrosion and spread stress.. Your steel in at bottom.... no shrink cracking on surface??? 🤔👍🙏
It’s really good to see you do it right to build and maintain a good reputation instead of cut corners for a few extra dollars and a ruined reputation. I wish more people could see the benefits of doing business the way you do so the business will last and keep making money instead of ruining their reputation for short term quick money that comes to an end quickly.
Bondo, what do you do up in Redfield?! Thems my old stomping grounds, if you ain't hunting or fishing you might be....no can't think of anything else to do there.
I remember as a kid doing my dad's driveway and it went fairly easy. Then 20 years later he had hired a company to tear out the old concrete and then did the whole thing all the way to the street. My pole building in Illinois I'm pretty sure they didn't tamp the ground and never put any metal in. Because I say that I seen pictures of the inside of the building now and it is cracked all over and heaved up in places
i see that 2x8 rotting out in a few years .if your going to have a concrete floor you may aswell build on top of it.any way thats just one mans opinion.
Nice job I like your work going to have to get a hold of you. I have a ICF pour that I would like to get done.
No part of video did they pull wire. Amish built and Polish floor
Crowbar fibre-reinforced mix.
A lot off hard back breaking work. Good job
I have yet to compact around poles very much, we dont have the equipment for compacting. Ideally a few good rainstorms will help alot, or if its dry, water them with the hose. Also, for us theres usually a grade mark somewhere that we go off of for setting the planned concrete height. In my opinion, having the barn set higher from the start is better for the fact that its only going to settle in the future.
Also, for our builds we leave 3 inch of the splash board exposed
Looks like the builders screwed up the grade of that steel on the front by the doors. If they ever pour an apron, that metal is going to be below grade lol.
That’s the way most pole barns are
Watsup Bondo
I made it to the video so fast the sound hadn't uploaded yet 😂
Sound works fine it happens when you click a video when its first uploaded
8/31/24..pole barn floor hand finished & dog Roe barking approval!😊 Always enjoy your e tra efforts which teach we viewers what we should look for..tamping mixed gravel/fines around column supports Both inside & out preventing subsidence/collapse =major fatigue cracks in slab..not with Bondo!💪✅️ ..hope you put color pics of your big machine Tamping b4 plastic & wire in your bid proposal with little statement..gotta Pound before slurry= Bondo Built!😊👍💪👨🔧🍺😊
17:59 We pull the wire mesh because that’s what we do. Straight to finishing is really what they do, Crack Kills
Just watching here from the living room chair 😅 love what you guy do but the building co mabe should have tamped pad before building 😢hope metal is not going to move 😮 good luck and I now it's not your fault if that happens ❤
The more I watch your videos the more I remember how much I didn't like concrete work how bad my hamstrings would burn and my lower back but I didn't do very much had a concrete guy Don with A-1 concrete he could do cheaper than me and my crew I did pay more for concrete than he did id just bend nails all day and be covered in sawdust and I liked just that way y'all do a really good work you would have poured all of my work no doubt thanks again
When I did my addition on my shop, I used brackets to attach the supports to the piers, I’m surprised they got that to pass inspection without having that if the posts weren’t imbedded in the piers. You saved them a ton of headaches by going the extra mile for them, hopefully they compensated you for doing it the right way. 👍 I was on Co. Rt. 7 today, and spotted a Circle T mixer, said to my wife, I wonder if it’s Ron, but nope, it wasn’t! LOL ☹️
That's a nice iron workers connecting bar! Especially for free!! You guys do good work always going the extra mile and taking pride in your work
Bondo Hope you and the Crew r Doing Good. Great Job as Always 🤙🔥🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Customer grades project: "We're gonna fit it......... like we always do". 🤣
Like how row has to take his morning laps before he gets in the truck. So funny
I love it when the garage is bigger than the double wide
It's only mud, until the bull float. Then it looks amazing. Good job.
Nice work, as usual! Looks like Gopher is beefing up.
Nice to see you guys moving that lumber and making it right outside, 👍😊
Ron don't call Biscuit a dingo, he's your little baby!
big biscuit lost some weight he must have a kid on the way
No heat strip that's 1st in a wile but thick pad too $$
lol,, circle t mixing concrete with rebar in it !!!
Why not just to pour little lower than top of plank?
Not es wing E wing ...!You Funnyman!! ! 😅
I had thought was thicker then 5.5 but that tv
Circle T a prize in every load like Cracker Jacks😉
I see the pit a little air and ( iron )in the mix, lol
2 👍's up BB thank you for sharing 🤗
Another great job by the Bondo Team.
You guys always go that extra mile s
Kixtass boysz❤!!
Nice job but of course!
Great job done by a great crew
Another great job Bondo.
You are the Man for taking care of your customers the way we should.
Thank you
👍
Awesome job
😅
So you're not actually embedding the wire reinforcement in the middle of the slab, it sits at the bottom touching plastic? If it's not suspended in the middle of the pour, it's not really adding strength, so why include it at all?
@@TrogdorBurnin8or the wire should be in the bottom 1/3rd of the slab on the tension side. It is not on the plastic. We pull it up and the stones get under it and our concrete is stiff so it stays up. I have demonstrated this in other videos. Thanks for the comment
@@bondobuilt386 I'm watching your fast forwarded pour montage in this video and I don't see where you're pulling it up, which is what confused me. What tool at what timestamp is used?
@@TUGG75 Went back in slow-mo, I think I see where I went wrong. The grid certainly doesn't look like it moves all that much, visually. If that brief hooking action is enough to reliably elevate it an inch and a half, I stand corrected.
@@TUGG75 With that said, reading discussions afterwards on Reddit from different concrete crews, including some who have done demolition? It sounds like poor results are very common with this technique, and on my own project I would do a thicker-than-normal pour and either stick to rebar and chairs or leave reinforcement out entirely.
He literally shows it around the 31:00 mark. You sound like a typical homeowner that reads Reddit threads to learn how to do something. Do yourself a favor and stay off Reddit. Most of those people don’t know what they are talking about. Also, ask an engineer where your reinforcement needs to go in your slab, not someone on the internet.
How many yards was this?
32x48 half a foot thick 27 cf to the yard = close to 28 yards. I could be wrong. 😮
No Perma-columns. I never did see anybody lift the wire? No rebar in the door openings. I wouldn’t let the amish build a dog house. Whatever its not mine. Finished job looks nice
I like your attitude regarding tipping the drivers of the concrete trucks. Your crew works well together.
Thumbs up on moving that lumber and fixing the back side 👍