This Is The Easiest Type Of Concrete Slab To Do If You're A Beginner.

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  • Опубликовано: 3 янв 2023
  • #EverythingAboutConcrete #MikeDayConcrete
    This was an easy concrete slab we poured for a mobile home. The size was 68' x 14' x 6" thick.
    For us, this is a pretty easy pour. We just pour, screed, and bull float the concrete and that's it.
    Another thing that makes this so easy is the MBW ScreeDemon power screed.
    Watch how easy it is for us to screed the concrete flat, even in the freezing cold temperatures.
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Комментарии • 277

  • @leecrawford6393
    @leecrawford6393 3 дня назад

    Mike I’m in Mobile Alabama. My dad was a general contractor so I grew up pouring concrete (it didn’t look anything like what you do). If the temperature got under forty degrees the whole thing shut down! Then in August/September we were pouring at 95-100 and the concrete was trying to set coming out of the chute. I never thought I’d say this but watching you and your crew makes me want to go try it again. Great informative videos. Good job Boss.

  • @astef6872
    @astef6872 Год назад +5

    I found that taking foot warmers (they have a sticky side) and sticking them on the inside top side of the glove, so that they’re warming the top of the hand without getting in the way of grip has been helpful.

  • @La_Vi_
    @La_Vi_ Год назад +7

    In Perth Australia, a summer day is typically 95F+ and sometimes the concrete can start to set in the bowl if the truck takes a long time getting to site. On some major pours we put ice and chilled water in the mix to help slow things down.

  • @larrybibbey9651
    @larrybibbey9651 Год назад +2

    Hi Mike, as a old concrete truck driver….. I used to use a Thin cotton glove first on than a neoprene glove to keep my hands from getting wet and than a pair of Work boy gloves.

  • @mingthemerciless6855
    @mingthemerciless6855 Год назад +7

    Mike, my dad was a contractor back in the day and we used to work in the cold. As a teenager I used to hate the cold (fingers and toes) until I started moving the cement around. You and your guys (including your daughter) make it look so easy. Excellent workmanship.

  • @flick22601
    @flick22601 Год назад +4

    Always used what I learned in the Army while in Korea. Wool gloves with a leather shell over them. When it got really cold, wool mittens with a leather shell. Ours had the index finger separated in the mittens so we could pull the trigger if necessary. Hands still got cold but it is much better than any alternative I've tried. Wool will insulate your hands even if it gets wet so don't use any synthetic imitation.

  • @oby-1607
    @oby-1607 Год назад +3

    That power-screed sure worked great. I actually went out and bought one after watching one of your videos.

  • @kevinhauser613
    @kevinhauser613 Год назад +2

    The rake man makes the screed man look good, the chute man makes or breaks the rakers. Good crew!

  • @crazydavidsmith
    @crazydavidsmith Год назад +6

    Warm hands ain't easy, but it's worth the effort. I will share my method. 👏 I work outside all day in the freezing cold in Michigan. I have felt your pain. I have figured out how to keep my hands warm. I work with frozen things all day and my hands stay warm. This is the best way I've found.
    First, I keep my hands water proofed with two pairs of nitrile gloves with cornstarch powder to let them slide easily. The best I've found are the orange "heavy duty" ones from AutoZone; they last all day and are very high friction if you need to manipulate nuts and bolts. I wear two pairs of those orange gloves ALL DAY LONG, every single day. I have had no problems at all. It allows you to take off your leather glove momentarily to touch your phone or gear without instantly freezing your hands. It also insulates your hands extremely well.
    Second, I use three pairs of leather gloves and a heat source; swap gloves when they get water logged/cold. Do the swap as you feel the finger-cold starting, because if you lose feeling and your fingers are in pain things become very uncomfortable very quickly. You can use any heat source to heat the gloves; just leave them on there. (e.g. engine or furnace)
    I have found no better way.
    If I'm at home I keep a small pot of water on the heat source to put my hands in for instant heat while I'm swapping leather gloves (for when I waited too long and need to warm my fingers instantly). I just dip my hands in, with the two pairs of heavy duty orange nitriles gloves still on.

    • @safffff1000
      @safffff1000 Год назад +2

      Much easier wearing waterproof leather mittens over wool or down liners. I work hours without all the complex system you had. Worked 4 straight hours at -15f and hands stayed warmed to the touch. Do eskomo's wear gloves? I also worked on my cars at 15 bare handed, that trick was over dressing so the heat just radiated out of hands, can't be real physical or I would over heat but working on cars is basically standing over it

    • @crazydavidsmith
      @crazydavidsmith Год назад +1

      @@safffff1000 TL;DR 🔥 hands: 2 sets of "heavy duty" orange nitrile gloves from AutoZone; keep these on. 2 sets of leather gloves. Leave one set of leathers in the heat. Rotate when your current set gets cold. ✅

    • @safffff1000
      @safffff1000 Год назад

      @@crazydavidsmith Too complex, slip on leather covered gortex mittens in a second

  • @ronaldpigeon4713
    @ronaldpigeon4713 Год назад +22

    I used to work in very cold weather, much colder sometimes. Difference was I had a rucksack on my back and a "real" AR in my hands for days along with my platoon! If I was lucky I got to haul the m60 tripod or even a base plate for a mortar. We also did not really get warm till we redeployed. Dont miss the cold at all anymore 20 years was enough. Go Army!! 🇺🇸😊👍

  • @friendlybill6109
    @friendlybill6109 Год назад +6

    Mike, this is perhaps a dumb question, but how do you and your guys (and everyone else that does outside work up north) make it thru the winter? Do you have to make enough money in the spring, summer and fall to make it thru each winter season or do you have to try and find other inside work during the winter?
    Stay warm and thanks for posting your videos.

  • @robbaggett1127
    @robbaggett1127 Год назад +1

    I was working in a similar situation many years ago and I was complaining of the same thing! I felt warm but my fingers were freezing. The guy I was working with asked if I had my thermals on. I told him I had my shirt thermal on but not my legs and he said that's why. Evidently, its just not about keeping our core warm, but also the legs. I never work outside in the freezing cold temps without a good set of thermals on and it works for me.

  • @refixed
    @refixed Год назад +3

    Hey Mike, best tip I ever got to warm my hands up is to swing your arms around at your side vertically like a windmill, fast enough to force blood back to your fingers. Works every time. Also keep a second and maybe third pair of gloves on you close to your body, and rotate them as needed.

  • @tombarnes1871
    @tombarnes1871 Год назад +3

    It takes a true craftsman to work in cold and still turn out a quality product….

  • @realrayra
    @realrayra Год назад +2

    'HotHands' hand warmer packets work great. Especially between two layers of gloves. They work for 10hrs. I've used them on either side of my hand, they're almost too hot. They're pretty inexpensive in bulk.
    Really enjoy the videos, you do a great job of explaining and showing. And you're doing quality work

  • @MrBrewsk
    @MrBrewsk Год назад +1

    I used to work out in the cold like this at night for 7-8 hours at a time. Knocking brake drums free on trucks. I know that's cold especially with no wind break. You guys be safe.

  • @kpinson3478
    @kpinson3478 3 месяца назад +1

    We do about 75/100 of those a year, lot down south, Louisiana Texas area….Normally run a edge and Fresno no power trowel. But that looks awesome man. Keep it up..

  • @aarongrabowski3775
    @aarongrabowski3775 Год назад +1

    We do lots of these, but we haunch the whole outside so it’s about 18”x18”. We also edge it and hit it one time with a fresno. Nice job guys. I know the feeling of cold hands all to well. I usually carry those hand warmers in my pockets to give my hans a quick warm up when the feeling is totally gone. Nice job guys.

  • @jamescole3152
    @jamescole3152 7 месяцев назад

    You are the expert. I poured my shop slab when it was that cold. I covered it with 2 inch pink foam board. But I was still nervous so I put a heater under a tent I built lol.

  • @markfrye9178
    @markfrye9178 Год назад

    floating that is like poetry in motion.

  • @themilkman271
    @themilkman271 Год назад +2

    I wish there were a couple of concrete guys like you down where I’m from, Mike. I’m a tile setter and you should see the slabs we have to try to set tile on. We basically have to re-pour over the entire area we’re setting tile on. It’s a shame.

  • @cleanpowerelectric
    @cleanpowerelectric Год назад +6

    I love all your videos Mike. I’m an amateur but have mixed and placed plenty of concrete over the decades and sure wish you were around back then to stop me from so many silly mistakes. I’m pouring slabs in my out buildings this spring so this vid is especially valuable for me. Thanks!

  • @maximummarklee
    @maximummarklee Год назад +1

    Hi Mike, Mark from Portland here. As far as keeping your hands from freezing I would suggest this:
    Bring a small portable cooler with you - empty. Fill it with hot water from the truck and keep it covered until you or anyone in your crew needs to thaw-out your hands and you can dip your frozen bits in their until you are ready to resume work - just remember to bring lots of microfiber rags/towels to dry off. Lanolin helps reduce chapping.
    Good luck I hope this works for you and happy new year to you and your crew!🎉

  • @Rockhead75
    @Rockhead75 Год назад +5

    Definitely just the fingers up in Montana! Thanks for the videos I'm doing a slab in a pole building I've only helped on a couple years ago but after listening and watching my confidence is much higher!! Thanks

  • @andrewcrawford5601
    @andrewcrawford5601 Год назад

    Awesome awesome job u and ur guys did Mike be safe and always be careful doing what y'all do each and every day and stay warm buddy

  • @johnfitzpatrick3416
    @johnfitzpatrick3416 Год назад +2

    Lived in N.E. my whole life, I’d rather play it safe & pour it in the Spring for it to cure all through warmer months but you are the Expert👍 If possible I’d use a mitten with a hand warmer inside, what I went to skiing in winter👍

  • @gavinturnbull2882
    @gavinturnbull2882 Год назад +1

    I enjoy watching your videos you guys do excellent work! Going to be setting forms up for a 24x24’ garage 1’ honch and double row of rebar in 4000psi with fiber mesh. What do you guys typically charge per sq ft this time of season?

  • @williamtobias8948
    @williamtobias8948 Год назад +2

    Hay mike,I have worked outside all my life and one trick I use mostly when fishing Is I will take a disposable hand wormer and put it in the glove on top of the back side of your hand. Amazing how Well this works. Lots of surface veins and the hot hands don't move all around .can cast and flip with very little inconvenience from the pocket heatet.thanks for your viedos and props to you and your crew.

    • @workingman9745
      @workingman9745 9 месяцев назад

      Great idea about the hand warmer.
      I'll give it a try.

  • @kn1gh7hawk
    @kn1gh7hawk Год назад

    Hey Mike, Did my first (tiny) bit of concrete work recently (replaced the sewer in my 1950's house). You guys make it look easy, but concrete really is a wet and heavy mud. The only source of heat in the house is a 1,500watt space heater, and once I started mixing and spreading it was too warm (even with our 19F outdoor temps). Thanks for sharing, and keep up the good work!

  • @brocklanders6011
    @brocklanders6011 Год назад +1

    Always nice watching your videos

  • @mudbunny6388
    @mudbunny6388 Год назад +1

    We always wore rubber gloves with knit glove liners. When our hands got cold, we would dip our hands in a wash bucket of hot water. Also wore 5 buckle boots over our winter boots instead of the slip on boots. Later switched to insulated rubber chore boots. Cold weather pours were always a pita. They were pretty intermittent when winter set in.

  • @timlecount8690
    @timlecount8690 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the great video! On the topic of cold hands: I live in Alaska, so we deal with cold hands a LOT. I like "polar penguin" work gloves. They have enough dexterity to work with them, but they are lined inside with fuzz and the outside is lined with latex. They are available on amazon but I see some knockoffs on there now that might work well, they run about $8 for a pair.

  • @georgewashington938
    @georgewashington938 Год назад

    the cold weather enables you to go full blast without overheating. good work guys, and thanks for the video

  • @DoiThoXayVlog
    @DoiThoXayVlog Год назад

    You guys are so professional, it's amazing. Wishing you all good health

  • @mattbba8451
    @mattbba8451 Год назад

    Thanks a lot. I have been around for some pours but this was a good watch. This is the best way to prep before you get deeper into it.

  • @Rocco1994
    @Rocco1994 11 месяцев назад

    Mike, I live in Canada! We poured a 146 meter slab in -38 degree weather, it got wild. keep up the great vids

  • @mikeRadamz
    @mikeRadamz 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Mike, nice job, thanks for sharing.
    In winter... what works for me is a pair of those snug tiny gloves that you buy at the dollar store, then a pair of latex gloves; and then latex or rubber palmed work gloves (fleeced winter ones when it's really cold). These layers keep my fingers warm for quite awhile until I have to warm them up in front of a heater. I have at least three sets to dry out in between glove changes. Let me know if this works for you too.

  • @bondobuilt386
    @bondobuilt386 Год назад

    Hats off to you Mike for pouring concrete in that cold weather. We hang it up in November here in central New York. Start back up when the frost leaves the ground. We also have a 48" frost line. Nice job 👊
    Bondo

    • @jeremyhall7951
      @jeremyhall7951 Год назад +1

      Why 48inches?

    • @bondobuilt386
      @bondobuilt386 Год назад

      @@jeremyhall7951 The frost line in certain ares is measured by how deep the frost will penetrate the ground in certain areas of the world. The colder it is and longer your winters the deeper the frost line will be. The warmer areas do not need to build so deep in the ground. Hope that makes sense. 😀

  • @doncrist2012
    @doncrist2012 Год назад +1

    Happy new years and stay warm

  • @edwardmcguire3801
    @edwardmcguire3801 Год назад

    New appreciation of concrete workers

  • @JCLawn51
    @JCLawn51 5 месяцев назад

    Glove recommendation. Seirus has thin glove lines that reflect your heat back to your hands you can put in any gloves. I will actually use them inside nitrile gloves when working on machinery in the winter. High dexterity, waterproof, and insulates your hands from freezing metal. Seirus has some nice waterproof winter gloves with high dexterity. One of my favorite gloves is wells Lamont extreme dexterity. The liners will never pull out and they are very warm. I do snow removal. So I am used to working in the wet and cold.

  • @Peter-V_00
    @Peter-V_00 Год назад +1

    In years gone by back in my finishing days in the 70's during winter pours along with the hot water many times we also asked for liquid calcium chloride in the mix from the batch plant and depending whether we had to pour over a vapor barrier we would often add bagged calcium chloride to help resist freezing but to also help generate some heat to get the slab to set well enough to get on with knee boards to hand finish, as you know Mike if you're not careful you can have the slab freeze or be so wet you may as well plan on coming back the next day to finish the job.

  • @charlesvitanza8867
    @charlesvitanza8867 3 месяца назад

    I recently started working with concrete and I have to say that you and your guys have beautiful technique with the come alongs. I get so frustrated with them that I end up using them as a get out of here

  • @paulbrouyere1735
    @paulbrouyere1735 Год назад +1

    Nice work. I also worked in wintertime conditions, and indeed hands are quickly cooling. The rest can be better protected. In my case I did airtightening for low energy and passive wooden houses. In freezing cold and wind blowing it was sometimes nearly impossible to strip the bearer from the tape that had to be applied.

  • @pacoteotonio7529
    @pacoteotonio7529 Год назад +1

    Love your videos!! I've been pouring concrete for 25 years in Canada and we pour all year round, up to -25C. The thing that keeps my hands the warmest is push ups. Makes the blood flow and keeps my hands toasty.

  • @TONYJENKS-wg6zg
    @TONYJENKS-wg6zg Год назад

    As a concrete driver/plant manager I hate pouring concrete under 27 degrees. Water freezes in the hoses, concrete freezes in the truck, brakes freeze up, just a pain. I was glad to hear you kept the sub grade covered with blankets. Too many times we have poured concrete on top of frozen ground and it ends up cracking. Guess who the concrete guys blame? You sold us bad concrete, they say! If that water in the concrete freezes before the concrete reaches 500 psi you have a problem. The concrete looks like broken glass when it finally sets up.

  • @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975

    coming of age in northern Montana, best parties of my life were in double wide dwellings. great vid as always.

  • @parkwest11
    @parkwest11 Год назад +1

    I picked up a pair of gloves made for ice fishing last winter and they kept my hands warm without being too bulky.
    Memphis Ninja Ice.

  • @GetGood5
    @GetGood5 Год назад

    That was really cool

  • @thinkfirst6431
    @thinkfirst6431 Год назад +2

    Question about the power screed. Can you size the forms so that you can run the power screed down the forms to get your level at the same time?

  • @creature_of_the_undergroun261
    @creature_of_the_undergroun261 11 месяцев назад

    That's some great work. Looks so good. Guys are so dialed in.

  • @jamescole3152
    @jamescole3152 7 месяцев назад

    I was wondering when you were going to screed the concrete. That power screed is nice. I guess I was expecting a screed board first but you are the expert.

  • @boringsoaring
    @boringsoaring Год назад

    Very informative

  • @Apexjasonmorganllc
    @Apexjasonmorganllc Год назад

    We would always dig a small trench around the perimeter at the forms, then drive in rebar pins and tie rebar around the perimeter on the inside. Also even with fibers we put in wire mesh.

  • @Freddie2598
    @Freddie2598 Год назад +3

    Mike wear latex or nitrile gloves under your gloves to retain your natural body heat .. This works for me here in Michigan

  • @freebird7284
    @freebird7284 Год назад

    you sure made that look easy! i would try the battery powered heated gloves, i've seen some pretty thin ones, anything would help, i couldn't imagine Maine in the winter, not for me!

  • @danfettig9438
    @danfettig9438 Год назад

    Have you ever tried neoprene gloves? I use the for ice fishing and they work great with keeping my hands dry and warm. They are not bulky and fairly cheap for winter gloves. I lived in western Montana for many years and they are a game changer.

  • @larrywigmore1243
    @larrywigmore1243 Год назад +1

    Hey Mike, Larry here again. Always enjoy your videos. Was wondering about the stone you have in your Crete. Do you use the same stone in every pour?

  • @BenBNC
    @BenBNC Год назад

    That new intro is the best yet

  • @EricHaskins71
    @EricHaskins71 Год назад +1

    Born and raised in Maine but down in FL now LMAO. Thx for your insight Mike. Got quotes for 15K for a 24x30 garage foundation 12 in footers all around .... getting up the nerve to do it myself.

  • @chipmiller9074
    @chipmiller9074 Год назад

    Looking good

  • @haviland586
    @haviland586 Год назад

    I love your channel. You certainly do quality concrete work and videography, and it's obvious you care about your helpers. Please, Sir, use trench boxes.

  • @Cmoredebris
    @Cmoredebris Год назад

    Excellent job. I kept worrying that your dog would come back. My border collie would have run across the fresh pad to say "hi".

  • @retiredperson4054
    @retiredperson4054 Год назад

    I live in KY now -- it is my 11th state I have lived and worked in! Worked in ALL kinds of weather! But the cold is the worst -- especially when you OLD like ME! LOL Love your videos Mike Day!

    • @elbuggo
      @elbuggo Год назад

      I have worked in Saudi Arabia. Heat is definitely even worse!

    • @retiredperson4054
      @retiredperson4054 Год назад

      @@elbuggo I worked in Arizona on a pumping plant for the Central Arizona Project -- As a federal construction representative -- we had a weather station on site -- the hottest day recorded was 140 degrees Fahrenheit -- The one day in two years I got heat prostration and was off sick for 3 days.

  • @mikewelch3903
    @mikewelch3903 Год назад

    Mike Day, in answering your question, no, it isn’t too cold. You just have to do the right things like you mentioned.

  • @mauricerichard3611
    @mauricerichard3611 Год назад +1

    To keep your hands warm working in the cold, light pair of gloves in a good pair of mitts - just great for the kind of work your doing - Tip From the Great White North !!

    • @MikeDayConcrete
      @MikeDayConcrete  Год назад +1

      You got to have free working fingers, gloves can't be too thick.

  • @GRUBB-MUDD
    @GRUBB-MUDD Год назад +3

    def not to cold to pour. you actually dont even need to cover it if you use freeze guard mix. but of course the subgrade needs covered b4 hand.

  • @transmitterguy478
    @transmitterguy478 Год назад +1

    Mike I have had good luck by wearing the black thick Harbor Freight, I think 9 mil, Nitril gloves, then I put one of the "hot Hands" packets under the glove on top of my hand to heat the blood vessels of my hand, then I wear appropriate gloves over that. I have different gloves for different applications. Good lick, great videos.🙃

  • @Elnu01
    @Elnu01 Год назад

    I am a do it your self type guy. I am planning to take your course so that I can pour a concrete floor in my 30 by 40 pole barn. You make it look so easy but I am sure that it is not. thanks for your help.

  • @tima7763
    @tima7763 Год назад

    I feel for ya in the cold. I leave the north and come back when it warms up😊😊

  • @davidbrightman6987
    @davidbrightman6987 Год назад +1

    I use latex or thin rubber gloves underneath the regular gloves to get the fingers moving then take them off if they get too clammy!

  • @peters6850
    @peters6850 Год назад +1

    Try putting on one more nice warm layer. Like a fleece sweater and fleece pajama pants under your jeans. Your body may feel too warm but for some reason it helps keep your hands from feeling as cold

  • @cmleoj
    @cmleoj Год назад

    I used to live in Colorado and I’d use the Hot Hands hand warmers. They work for an hour or so; stick them in your gloves and you’ll be glad you did.

  • @srmcontracting
    @srmcontracting Год назад

    When I climbed cell towers in these temps I would wear a pair of latex/mechanic gloves and put a hand warming pack in the glove. Then I would have a pair of heavier gloves to go over the mechanic glove. Nice work!

  • @pierredelecto7069
    @pierredelecto7069 Год назад

    It's amazing how much of the labor that goes into concrete is just about making it smooth and not strong.

  • @CW1116
    @CW1116 Год назад

    19 degrees. I live in Minnesota so 19 degrees is a normal HIGH for January. We get used to it gradually during the fall hunting season when the low in Nov. is in the teens many days. It appears that you're wearing rubber gloves that are pretty large. Hopefully you are wearing1 or 2 pair of Jersey gloves under the rubber. Holding onto that aluminum pole certainly sucks the heat away from your hands. I'm one of those lucky folks with - evidently - great circulation. I'm in my mid-70's and can generally stay out much longer in below zero temps than my younger counterpart. Looks like the excavator did a great job of site prep followed by a quick, efficient and "done-right" job but you & your crew.

  • @Zack7228
    @Zack7228 Год назад +1

    Hi Mike….very helpful video. Thank you…
    I am building a 60 x 38 shop this summer…I am in Durango, Co, and frost line is 32”. I got a bid for the flatwork and foundation as a monolithic pour…at about 22.00 a foot! The bid totaled 47k. I am doing all excavation work…gravel…etc. The bid was for concrete, rebar…and forms.
    Having watched all your videos made me very quickly come to the conclusion I would be taking this on myself.
    My question is…I have no issue buying a power screed for this job…and then selling it. Unfortunately, none of the rental places carry it. Do you think it would be helpful for a first time DIYer to use a power screed?
    For a shop floor….if I can get close to what you did on this video…I think I would be very happy. I can rent a power float locally….am I taking too much risk in screwing it up if I use a power float?
    Thanks again….Steve.

  • @HassanSalehabadi
    @HassanSalehabadi Год назад

    is it possible use chiken wire instead of concreat mesh in racewaypound?thanks

  • @dppmm6567
    @dppmm6567 Год назад

    Hamilton Marine has a good selection of cold weather water proof work gloves. I can't remember where you are located but look them up online. They have a store in Portland. They are pretty reasonable in price to.

  • @johngarvey6752
    @johngarvey6752 Год назад

    From Massachusetts. Haven’t used a reared dump in 20 years.

  • @chrisgreen177
    @chrisgreen177 Год назад

    A Thinsulate or Gortex, nice and LIGHTWEIGHT ski glove will keep an insulated air layer between your fingers and the outside temperature. You still have waterproof protection and full finger movement. Hell, the fingers even work on your touchscreen cellphone. Here in Wisconsin, we don't break out the gloves until 8 degrees or colder.

  • @GrumpyandCricket
    @GrumpyandCricket Год назад

    Sounds like it's time to go Ice Fishin! Great job guys!

  • @evolutionCEO
    @evolutionCEO Год назад +2

    best way to stay warm is drink plenty of water and don't over insulate your boiler (bodily core). a central heating system needs water to move the heat around and if the boiler is too hot, it switches off, same as the bodies boiler. may sound counter-intuitive, but that is because of double-think. heat is a waste product to a healthy body.
    don't drink tea or coffee, otherwise you'll be peeing every 2 mins and will end up de-hydrated again. (cold extremities)

  • @geronimotudor3386
    @geronimotudor3386 5 месяцев назад

    Mike, great vids. Most snowblowers now have heated handgrips which can run off of a Briggs and Stratton magneto. Your screed could use a pair? good luck Greg

  • @flat6fever680
    @flat6fever680 Год назад

    Great stuff. I'll look for the brand of my heated gloves with Lithium Ion rechargeable batteries. They are good for several hours on max and more on low. You can move your fingers and they do not get stuck on the inside liner like some. I would try to keep them as clean as possible though but at the end of the day you need to function and you can't function long like that. Even one job that you make money on pays for damage to something like that. No more expense than filling up the truck on the way to the job site.

  • @ernestmorales1023
    @ernestmorales1023 Год назад +1

    North Texas . We poured 400 yards today . 60 degrees sunny 🌞 🤣

  • @Anonymous-vr9hp
    @Anonymous-vr9hp Год назад

    I'm north of you. I don't use the insulated work glove. I use a pair of summer leather gloves over a pair of brown cotton jerseys. If you have something like a running truck, two, three pairs of jerseys, rotate them onto the heater. A warm pair every 20 30 minutes makes a difference. No heater then get a metal something, barrel, sheet metal over a little fire.

  • @GRUBB-MUDD
    @GRUBB-MUDD Год назад +1

    much support from indy

  • @91rss
    @91rss 10 месяцев назад

    Dumping a couple cans of Moxy in the mix ight be a useful use for the stuff. For your hands get hand cream with Urea in it, and take hemp seed oil my friend said , keeps them from cracking . Maine south (florida) is what most do to deal with cold hands..

  • @giovannifiorentino8947
    @giovannifiorentino8947 Год назад

    I’m in the tropics and I prefer prepare the formwork and steel during the daytime and pour at night. Depending on the mix I need to add ice at noon.

  • @iBleedStarsAndBars
    @iBleedStarsAndBars Год назад

    Merino wool glove liners under your work gloves. Helps alot

  • @jerrysmith3517
    @jerrysmith3517 Год назад +1

    Found your channel while learning how to do a slab for a job Im doing. I have a 30,000 lbs Generator on a 3-axle trailer i need to do a slab on grade for. Can you please recommend how deep I should do the gravel subbase and how thick I should make the slab . Its a 10 x 20 foot slab and I was going to do 8 inches of 3/4 stone with 6" 2500 psi concrete with 24 inch grid 1/2 inch rebar Thank you!

    • @als8518
      @als8518 Год назад

      Gravel thickness really depends on local soil conditions. Gravel is really cheap for a pad that small compared to having issues later though.

    • @MikeDayConcrete
      @MikeDayConcrete  Год назад

      Soil conditions and climate really dictate how much gravel you need. I'd go at least a foot, then 4000 psi concrete 8" thick with a mat of rebar.

  • @jonhaynes1577
    @jonhaynes1577 Год назад

    Been working with concrete for 37 years I found the older I am the harder it is to keep my hands warm never had to worry about my feet just my hands pouring in the cold is aways a pain

  • @camperjack2620
    @camperjack2620 Год назад +1

    I have problems with my fingers, too. My hands are cold sitting in church in the winter. Rumor is old timer Maine lobstermen used to have hand knit wool. Mobile home prices have been inflated by the salesmen. The manufacturers had really poor quality on some homes in the past There's problems with pipes freezing, zoning laws, prices of land, installing utilities. No wonder there's not so many.

  • @joshuataylor9224
    @joshuataylor9224 Год назад

    How do you feel about putting ( calcium chloride ) accelerator in the concrete?

  • @jeanmas4197
    @jeanmas4197 Год назад

    15 years biking all seasons, best I found against the cold was silk under gloves. Don't get them wet though.

  • @Dave-dg4ob
    @Dave-dg4ob 9 месяцев назад

    Hi Mike, apologies if this has been asked before. Can you pull the Power Screed along with it sitting on top of your wooden form, does it have to sit within the form, on the concrete. My DIY Hire shop only has 5m screed bars and my width is 4m. Hope that makes sense. Thanks Dave in the UK

  • @Rusty_Raine
    @Rusty_Raine Год назад +1

    For gloves, get a box of Venom latex gloves. and put a pair on under your work gloves. Venom gloves are a thicker material and they are 2 layers. The other thing that I will do overall is take my dad's old wetsuits (or buy used ones from a serf shop) and cut them in half so they are a shirt and pants. I put on an under-armor long sleeve shirt and pants, then put on the 2 mil wetsuit. I cut them in half so it makes it easer to get in and out of them, especially when you go to the bathroom. I usually have a spare set of under-armor to change out if I have been sweating. If it is between 0-20 deg F, I put on a cotton shirt between the under-armor and the wetsuit to help wick the sweat off my skin. I usually wear a light, long sleeve flannel on the outside. It sounds like a lot and it is a lot of layers but very little bulk. The gloves, socks, and head-cap are great additions also. For all the military out there, the skin-suit and wetsuit is all hidden under your uniform w/mock turtleneck. Loading torpedoes on the pier at -10 deg F, I had to take my jacket off because I was too hot.

  • @Irideonandon
    @Irideonandon 7 месяцев назад

    I need to pour a 5.5 inch garage floor over the original floor to bring it up to grade and make it usable again. The original very old floor is rock solid and in great shape. No cracks. Do I need rebar?

  • @cmleoj
    @cmleoj Год назад

    Too cold for me? Yes! But you guys have it down pat.👍🏻