I had to stop at 4:20 for an OCD break. Great to see guys learning. That said, don't ever do anything you see these guys doing. Don't try to use a squarepoint to rake in front of the screed, they belong on edges during the pour. Don't mag an edge until you have cleaned the top of the form, don't stop a roller tamp short of the edgeform and be sure to cock it at a slight angle going onto and coming off of the CLEAN edgeform. Same rules apply for all long tools except fresno and jointer. Took another break and had a smoke then went back and re-watched the guy with the walkbehind diligently plowing troughs that the poor bastard with the bumpcutter just didn't know what to do with. Alright. The F numbers on this are gonna be rejects. If these guys want a real world education they should have to rip it out and re-pour it on their own dime, ahem. Not that that ever happened to me...I will say the finish is stunning for a fibermesh mix but what do you expect with a couple 1500 pound riders on a tiny pour. Thanks to clewinclewin for the upload.
Extra proccesses? They didnt water the soil! I never say that concrete wont crack, but when the soil does not absorb the water and portland it makes for a stronger slab.
It's a class for crying out loud people...Those are students, thats why there are so many people there, training to use different equipment for an industrial floor with high F numbers. Relax!
Dustin Brennan thats cool their teaching new tools but ill have to stick to rodding the old school way like i was taught and i dont know about the riders on something small like that tho
+shawn P lol! They brought the trucks, but since the state workers were all in the break room, this class drove by and decided to use the opportunity to their advantage.
5 or 6 experienced finishers,could have done that pour,without all of those useless machines,and tools.Fibremesh has been around since the 80,s, did not do well then,no comparison to a steel reinforcement system.
Steel corrodes and rusts overtime the chemicals in the concrete cause it. Eventually it causes delamination. I work on repairing it. Steel is NOT the best.
Clearly your not properly educated in this industry. The pour was a small pour at a concrete convention in las Vegas. It show cases new technology in the industry.
Pete Smith, I’ve never worked with concrete before but I agree. The Empire State Building is still standing and Im pretty sure it doesn’t have any fiber mesh in it’s foundation.
we all had to start somewhere atleast these guys had some classes ...when i started they handed me a bullfloat and said CLOSE IT UP i was scared to death ..what the fuck the close it up mean???
Awesome work guys 👍
Hahaha you know your taking the piss 😂 im from nz
I had to stop at 4:20 for an OCD break. Great to see guys learning. That said, don't ever do anything you see these guys doing. Don't try to use a squarepoint to rake in front of the screed, they belong on edges during the pour. Don't mag an edge until you have cleaned the top of the form, don't stop a roller tamp short of the edgeform and be sure to cock it at a slight angle going onto and coming off of the CLEAN edgeform. Same rules apply for all long tools except fresno and jointer. Took another break and had a smoke then went back and re-watched the guy with the walkbehind diligently plowing troughs that the poor bastard with the bumpcutter just didn't know what to do with. Alright. The F numbers on this are gonna be rejects. If these guys want a real world education they should have to rip it out and re-pour it on their own dime, ahem. Not that that ever happened to me...I will say the finish is stunning for a fibermesh mix but what do you expect with a couple 1500 pound riders on a tiny pour.
Thanks to clewinclewin for the upload.
Another fucking expert.
A few extra processes that weren’t required but I guess it was a training exercise. Nice burnt finish too 👍🏽
Extra proccesses? They didnt water the soil! I never say that concrete wont crack, but when the soil does not absorb the water and portland it makes for a stronger slab.
I should cry on site before pouring to wet the dirt. Or something.
Very nice👍👍
buenos videos
construccion
A bump cutter, if they were any good at there work they would not have need one.. a 4 man job took 20 boys to do
where is his blue hard hat?
ultra flat love it
It's a class for crying out loud people...Those are students, thats why there are so many people there, training to use different equipment for an industrial floor with high F numbers. Relax!
Dustin Brennan thats cool their teaching new tools but ill have to stick to rodding the old school way like i was taught and i dont know about the riders on something small like that tho
Dustin Brennan danm,I thought it was state workers
+shawn P
lol!
They brought the trucks, but since the state workers were all in the break room, this class drove by and decided to use the opportunity to their advantage.
I can teach CRYING OUT LOUD....if ya get hard up
The ACI Commercial/Industrial Finishing Certification class and exam, led by Bob Simonelli and Jerry Holland of Structural Services Inc.
Türkiye'de biz bu alanın iki katını 3 kişiyle yapıyoruz
I wish i could use that many finishers and 2 doubles on a small slab like that.
5 or 6 experienced finishers,could have done that pour,without all of those useless machines,and tools.Fibremesh has been around since the 80,s, did not do well then,no comparison to a steel reinforcement system.
Steel corrodes and rusts overtime the chemicals in the concrete cause it. Eventually it causes delamination. I work on repairing it. Steel is NOT the best.
Clearly your not properly educated in this industry. The pour was a small pour at a concrete convention in las Vegas. It show cases new technology in the industry.
Pete Smith, I’ve never worked with concrete before but I agree. The Empire State Building is still standing and Im pretty sure it doesn’t have any fiber mesh in it’s foundation.
5 or 6? we would do that size pour with 3 of us and only 1 or 2 being finishers haha.
@@samfranzese8507 me too! Lol everyday ordeal for us. Short handed always. I pour 2 and 3 stall garages with 3 guys daily
Too many men for that little pour😂😂😂
They got like 9 finishers lmao
Never too many men for an institution it's exam day not a work day
we all had to start somewhere atleast these guys had some classes ...when i started they handed me a bullfloat and said CLOSE IT UP i was scared to death ..what the fuck the close it up mean???
LOL
el ranchero
construction
pisos concreto
bueno
wow!!!
My company would have done that in one day beginning to finish an wreck foams
My company would have done it in 4 hrs. Including lunch break, this is a demonstration not a project dummy
I could do this whole thing myself without a company wassup mofos
1 man job 2 man to get the chopper out the car. Even if it’s for training should just get one good concretor to show them how it’s done
I would put my crew against anyone any day even on Monday!!!!!
Jeremy Howard deal
Deal come to south Dakota and let's do it.
Canstruction video channel Farhad kpk
Haha ive ran bump cutter for 17 hours straight paving highways this is amateur
This was an ACI Certification Class and they were taking the exam.
Brand new float lol
The Float is not new; however, the vibrator to make it vibrate was at the time it was filmed.
Way to burn it out! Too bad it gets ripped up the next day.
🤜🤛
Jajajajajaj como 20 vatos en un pedaso de cemento como un 12×20
Es entrenamiento relajate
lol., wtf
why so many guys ? and why a helicopter float LMAO
Manuel Ferreira why didn't you watch the video ? Or even read the description
My company is way better 😂😂
It's not a company it's an institution ya weeaboo