I lived in Germany for 14 years stationed in the military. It was amazing watching them work with cobblestones and stone blocks. They could tear up an entire road, install new lines of some kind, and put everything back into place with no waste. I hated to run on them and cobbles can be bad on a motorcycle but they are beautiful and 100% reusable.
You did a great job. Definitely did the repair as it should be done. It seems like a fairly simple job to most ? At least in this video people can see the effort it takes to do a Good job.
Me to although I am getting a little bored of the trade now plus by body has taken a lot of wear and tear in the last 16 years of it plus all the other jobs before and during that I have had have all been hard manual work.
Great now I know I got ripped off my the guys that laid my driveway, I wondered why they where so cheap compared to everyone else. Thanks for this video very insightful.
I am looking for similar videos to get ideas how to fix my yard, and I am amazed that none of you use any cement under those rocks. Of course it's easy to take out sth that is not glued to the ground!
This is why I only use 5/8 - 3/4 inch fractured rock and 1/2" sand bedding under pavers. 20 years and not one issue with sunken pavers. Base material more expensive, but savings in base installation labor more than makes up for it. Most of my work is in North Dakota and Minnesota so frost heave a very problem, hence the rock. Not as critical in southern regions of the country, but the labor savings still the same.
All of the finer material will settle into the big gaps (air spaces) between the hardcore block pieces. Also a plate compactor should be used not a hand tamp. This will basically sink again.
If you don’t connect the trench to a house drain which leads to weeping tiles, you will eventually have leakage into the house. The trench will collect a pool of water which has no place to go and will eventually leak into the basement. The limestone screening will slowly find its way into the voids between the broken bricks and it will loss material leading to sinking the interlocking bricks. A geo fabric between the two materials will prevent this from happening. My two cents.
Peter Chan this type of home has no basement and the job was done as per the clients wishes, if the client had agreed to a weeping drain then it would have been installed, when I quoted jobs I gave 3 options 1) The Right Way..2) The Wrong Way..3) The Cheap Way..and more often then not they chose option 3
Most houses in the UK have no basement and damp is avoided by having a damp course a few courses up the brickwork from ground level which is a membrane layer between the two courses in the mortar line. Air bricks are also used to allow air circulation within the buildings cavity to avoid damp.
Spirit level is old traditional name. I have never seen anyone use a level to push sand around 4:43. Levels used to be made of mahogany and they were much more expensive than the modern plastic. Mahogany can warp and twist depending on humidity,plastic will not change shape unless you use it for something other than its original purpose.
@@craig2539 I have a mahogany level that is well worn but obviously never suffered much abuse (4:42) It is stamped SARGENT Patent Oct 29,1912. If tools are treated with respect they will last for 110 years and counting.
Great work and fix. I am bit skeptical about the first layer of bricks you put. They have to be crushed and compacted really well before puting gravel and sand. If they are not, in time you will start to get small pockets of air and possibly another sinking. But since it's been 5 years already from the fix, perhaps you can telll us if I'm wrong.
Hi, nice video. A question Plzz. We just moved in to a new house. Concrete Slabs installed in the driveway. 30% are wobbly or not inline. What to do? 2x2 feet slabs installed,, numbers 33x17 slabs. It has hardcore underneath. Should I just get it repaired or do the bricks as shown in video. Which option is more suitable and importantly cheaper. Thanks
Very nice job!! I have a question, but not a critical one. Would it help if the first 2 courses next to the house were layed slightly higher than the other courses, to help with water run-off?
@@kencress1267 I am not sure why most interlock video;s show using sand as the last base for laying stones.. we only use Stone dust.. it packs much better then the sand. I get a very level finish using that and great for large areas. you walk on it with out ruining the the final grade.. I must admit I didn't watch the video all the way through the first time.. and can see that you did do a very good job on it .
So this is what your up to when your not making youtube videos, wish you had more time for minecraft and gaming or creative videos but I guess you gotta do what you gotta do
I suspect that ONLY in the UK and on some High Quality jobs in USA would tradesmen do the paving base (the part the customer rarely sees) to such a very high level of professionalism as explained in this video. It may be that some tradesmen who do paving were never trained to do it the totally professional way. OR it may be that they are aware of this but choose instead to cut corners to get the job. Or they may feel the customer will not be able to afford the more expensive option. That said it is WONDERFUL that very well trained and experienced tradesmen are able to inform the public of the truly BEST way to pave. Bet the ancient Romans knew the correct way.
If you're putting in block paving, don't just go for the cheapest quote, or this is what you'll get. It's expensive because the preparation work is normally extensive; digging out to install a good subbase takes time and requires more materials. Buy cheap buy twice.
Rodger Quinn problem these days people don’t want a cowboy job, but are ok paying cowboy money £££ like you said, most time and money is spent in the prep that the customer will never see so they just don’t want to except the real cost
I find the hardest thing is knowing who to trust regardless of price. Many a builder will turn up, say all sorts of things, only when the job had been done can I tell if they knew what the were doing or not, too late by then. Sadly any complaints are usually met with abuse from the builder (as in f**k off just pay me), such is their way. Interestingly though, the builders I have as friends are always complaining they are being asked (to quote) to put jobs right, that is jobs done by other builders. Anyway, thanks for the vid, the groundworks looks good.
totaltwit I'm a builder and I would never treat a customer in the way you are talking about, nor do I know any other builders who would. It's not that difficult to find a good builder. Find out who they have done work for previously, go and have a look, speak to the people who they did the work for. You will soon realise who you can and cannot trust
Well that's something new for you! Indeed my last "builder" was a roofer, 2017 to re-roof 2 dormers. They didn't put the facia on proper and got the guttering misaligned so I now hear rain drips falling . I mentioned this to the roofer who phoned for a check up and basically he was ABUSIVE! Nothing was his fault, in fact he blamed me. I need to go up there to make good, and because the facia is not straight it annoys me everytime to see it. When they fitted the first facia I mentioned this so they didn't make the same mistake on the second. So yes, builders can be abusive if a homeowner complains, their idea is to BULLY people into paying even if their job is not 100% as they don't want the hassle of returning to the job to put things right. So maybe, they were "cowboys"? The roofer in question is supposed to be a relaible, he's all over my town and why I chose them, mistake. It is hard to find good builder, even looking at previous jobs is no guarentee. Because they will only point me to good jobs not bad ones they've done, obviously. One of the first jobs I had done was rendering, I phoned up all the references given, all gave glowing reports, had them do the job and it's clumsy work. It needs knocking off and redone by someone who knows what they are doing. There ARE many amateur "professional" builders, many ARE abusive/bullies, from what I notice it's usually the smaller outfits.
The compact technique is for short term, for a long term, need to use compactor or (my country 🇲🇾 we call) whacker machine, then can promise a long lasting result
OH wow, this won't fix my problem. I have 24"x24" 90 pound patio pavers. I can't do what you did, unfortunately. 😩 I know how, it's just getting up the courage and strength to do it. But you did make a very good and informative video. Thanks anyway.
could also be helpful to solve the drainage issue that may have caused the problem in the first place. maybe as simple as just installing a gutter, and redirect all that downpouring water from off the pavers
Thats sank due to water run off from the house..... Reason why the first 2 foot has sank ......the rubble will help but could have done with a good dusting of cement before re laying .
They sink because you used sand,sand fluidises with rain penetration or power steering on cars.Use 6mm Granolith on top of MOT. End of come-backs.This is good advice ,go one stage further with a Resi-gaurd saturation over kiln dried sand. This is the belt and braces way and better than tamped,screeded sharp sand!
There’s hundreds of good paving professionals in the Kent area but my advice is to look in your local neighbourhood magazine or go on your local council website to see which ones are approved before asking for quotes. Also in the past I’ve walked along my road and knocked on the door of neighbours who seem to have had a nice job done to get details of who they used....
Tidy job mate,nice to see that there are still some builders that take pride in their work.
I already fixed my front steps but then I still keep watching these videos. Having said that, nice job 😎👊
Nicely done. Good to see blue collar guys taking pride in their work and not taking short cuts.
Nice to see a professional at work & taking pride in doing a good job.
Remembering where to lay those bricks back would be my ultimate concern 😂 great job fella
Great job and clear for everyone….now I know what to do with my sinking pavement 😅
Thank you.
Really good job and explained simply so you can understand without over complicating things
Nice to see someone taking pride in their work
Wow you did a really good job. My back hurts just watching you.
I lived in Germany for 14 years stationed in the military. It was amazing watching them work with cobblestones and stone blocks. They could tear up an entire road, install new lines of some kind, and put everything back into place with no waste. I hated to run on them and cobbles can be bad on a motorcycle but they are beautiful and 100% reusable.
I enjoyed this, I clean driveways every day and learned a lot with this vid. Thanks
You did a great job.
Definitely did the repair as it should be done.
It seems like a fairly simple job to most ?
At least in this video people can see the effort it takes to do a Good job.
Great vid and excellent presentation - Easy to follow, real world and accurate - Thank you
Nice. Finishing a job like that is good for your soul.
So much work went into that small repair!
Yes that’s what separates the quality jobs from the rubbish. You get what you pay for I guess...
These lads ARE experts
I have adhd to and I install patios and driveways to its a great way to burn off all that excess energy good video buddy
Me to although I am getting a little bored of the trade now plus by body has taken a lot of wear and tear in the last 16 years of it plus all the other jobs before and during that I have had have all been hard manual work.
Fantastic work.
Honest tradesmen
Solid honest work mate. Top job.
Top job I'll try this
Great to see a proper job being done! Well done
No wonder us builders suffer from bad backs good job mate
Great job lads, not as straightforward as you’d think. Good to see the other lad cleaning the blocks as first fella lay them, good team work
This is not like your other videos buts its done really well mike
Its not and it has thanks for watching
5 star job mate
Wow almost half a million views Mike will done I am shocked how well you did with this one.
Perfect Video. No one talking your ear off and its too the point.
Great now I know I got ripped off my the guys that laid my driveway, I wondered why they where so cheap compared to everyone else. Thanks for this video very insightful.
Buy cheap pay twice. You get what you pay for
Don't worry some of the most expensive quotes also cut corners.
How much will a job like this cost?
@@luciensmith9958 that’s exactly what I was going to say. In my experience it’s always been the case
I am looking for similar videos to get ideas how to fix my yard, and I am amazed that none of you use any cement under those rocks. Of course it's easy to take out sth that is not glued to the ground!
Nice job 👍🏼
Hmm, easyer sead than done.
This guy knows what he is doing though...👍
Great video!
This is why I only use 5/8 - 3/4 inch fractured rock and 1/2" sand bedding under pavers. 20 years and not one issue with sunken pavers. Base material more expensive, but savings in base installation labor more than makes up for it. Most of my work is in North Dakota and Minnesota so frost heave a very problem, hence the rock. Not as critical in southern regions of the country, but the labor savings still the same.
Sweet
Nice job and it was a lot of work, thanks for sharing your thoughts and great ideas
All of the finer material will settle into the big gaps (air spaces) between the hardcore block pieces. Also a plate compactor should be used not a hand tamp. This will basically sink again.
@@daviddou1408 yes thats what it says repair.
Wow dude ive not watched your channel for some time then this video pops up on the home page and im like wow almost 1m views
Great job guys,,,
Clean and tidy workers.
Shocking what builders get away with 😧good job on putting it right 👍
Amazing job. Thanks for sharing
If you don’t connect the trench to a house drain which leads to weeping tiles, you will eventually have leakage into the house. The trench will collect a pool of water which has no place to go and will eventually leak into the basement. The limestone screening will slowly find its way into the voids between the broken bricks and it will loss material leading to sinking the interlocking bricks. A geo fabric between the two materials will prevent this from happening. My two cents.
Peter Chan this type of home has no basement and the job was done as per the clients wishes, if the client had agreed to a weeping drain then it would have been installed, when I quoted jobs I gave 3 options 1) The Right Way..2) The Wrong Way..3) The Cheap Way..and more often then not they chose option 3
@@TheAudiostud don't do a half arsed job. Just to be the right quote for the right job
That was my concern as well. Here in Uganda all the buildings have creeping damp problems so I was interested to see how it was handled in the UK.
Most houses in the UK have no basement and damp is avoided by having a damp course a few courses up the brickwork from ground level which is a membrane layer between the two courses in the mortar line. Air bricks are also used to allow air circulation within the buildings cavity to avoid damp.
Its good to see a job done right, well done
The narration was excellent!
Good satisfying watch. Proper repair job better than the original job.
Good vid, nice work
Never heard of a spirit level in my life. Always just leveler
I think that's what it's called in Europe.
Spirit level is old traditional name. I have never seen anyone use a level to push sand around 4:43. Levels used to be made of mahogany and they were much more expensive than the modern plastic. Mahogany can warp and twist depending on humidity,plastic will not change shape unless you use it for something other than its original purpose.
@@jeffhallel8211 decent long spirit levels are metal, were not talking about small screwfix plastic boat levels
@@craig2539 I have a mahogany level that is well worn but obviously never suffered much abuse (4:42) It is stamped SARGENT Patent Oct 29,1912. If tools are treated with respect they will last for 110 years and counting.
Nice job :-). Thanks for sharing.
Good video man👍🏻
Nice job boys
Good work!
Thanks, hope it helped and thanks for watching.
Good video and block laying, very professional.
excellence!😮😮😮
That was awesome man brought it back to normal in no time 👍🏼
Yea, whole job in 6 minutes.
Backbreaking work fellas
It is...
You went from minecraft to real craft video. good idea. Kudos
Spot on 👍
Great work and fix. I am bit skeptical about the first layer of bricks you put. They have to be crushed and compacted really well before puting gravel and sand. If they are not, in time you will start to get small pockets of air and possibly another sinking. But since it's been 5 years already from the fix, perhaps you can telll us if I'm wrong.
Great video
I am knackered just watching this.
Hi, nice video. A question Plzz. We just moved in to a new house. Concrete Slabs installed in the driveway. 30% are wobbly or not inline. What to do? 2x2 feet slabs installed,, numbers 33x17 slabs.
It has hardcore underneath. Should I just get it repaired or do the bricks as shown in video. Which option is more suitable and importantly cheaper. Thanks
Very nice job!!
I have a question, but not a critical one.
Would it help if the first 2 courses next to the house were layed slightly higher than the other courses, to help with water run-off?
Handy to know when I finally get round to doing up my garden
Glad to have helped
Nice job.
I love the fact that they’ve put measurement in inches and then in mm
I can't sleep so watching
Nice job
Nice repair and I assume that the more costly "right way" would have been to rip the whole lot up in order to put in a complete hardcore and sub base?
Good job . Got to root of problem.
Solid job
Great video and tips.
Good job
Good video, you should do more like this its worked well for you
Good job very clear and helpful thanks
Thanks man liked and subbed
Wow.. I would never do it that way.. And yes I am a pro landscaper..
you cut grass.
And how would you do it. Put more sand underneath and have the problem come back.
@@kencress1267 I am not sure why most interlock video;s show using sand as the last base for laying stones.. we only use Stone dust.. it packs much better then the sand. I get a very level finish using that and great for large areas. you walk on it with out ruining the the final grade.. I must admit I didn't watch the video all the way through the first time.. and can see that you did do a very good job on it .
Great job and well made video!
Great job!
This video has done remarkably well who would of though a Mike?
Looking to DIY this at my home, but not looking to do such a big renovation, just a few bricks.
So this is what your up to when your not making youtube videos, wish you had more time for minecraft and gaming or creative videos but I guess you gotta do what you gotta do
One mistake you made. Always photograph the blocks first so you can get the order and the pattern right.
Well done. I have this problem, now no excuse not to fix it except I am lazy.
your clearly a good builder in real life to se lets see some more epic minecraft tutorials please
Maybe we shall see
Time to grow out of the pc gaming phase & keep on building tutorials. So u can show boys on how to be man in fixing around.
Dear god... Video could have been 15 seconds "Call someone, the end" OR titled "Why is fixing driveway pavers so expensive, it's worth it"
Yes, really instructive video and it has certainly given me more confidence to have a go!
"Use a spirit level to find the offending areas"...you could see that offending area from outer space...!!
Great job, though, very informative. :)
I suspect that ONLY in the UK and on some High Quality jobs in USA would tradesmen do the paving base (the part the customer rarely sees) to such a very high level of professionalism as explained in this video. It may be that some tradesmen who do paving were never trained to do it the totally professional way. OR it may be that they are aware of this but choose instead to cut corners to get the job. Or they may feel the customer will not be able to afford the more expensive option. That said it is WONDERFUL that very well trained and experienced tradesmen are able to inform the public of the truly BEST way to pave. Bet the ancient Romans knew the correct way.
Respect brother
If you're putting in block paving, don't just go for the cheapest quote, or this is what you'll get. It's expensive because the preparation work is normally extensive; digging out to install a good subbase takes time and requires more materials. Buy cheap buy twice.
Rodger Quinn problem these days people don’t want a cowboy job, but are ok paying cowboy money £££ like you said, most time and money is spent in the prep that the customer will never see so they just don’t want to except the real cost
I find the hardest thing is knowing who to trust regardless of price. Many a builder will turn up, say all sorts of things, only when the job had been done can I tell if they knew what the were doing or not, too late by then. Sadly any complaints are usually met with abuse from the builder (as in f**k off just pay me), such is their way. Interestingly though, the builders I have as friends are always complaining they are being asked (to quote) to put jobs right, that is jobs done by other builders. Anyway, thanks for the vid, the groundworks looks good.
Who u on about this lad did a great job or do u mean the cowboy who did it first
totaltwit I'm a builder and I would never treat a customer in the way you are talking about, nor do I know any other builders who would. It's not that difficult to find a good builder. Find out who they have done work for previously, go and have a look, speak to the people who they did the work for. You will soon realise who you can and cannot trust
Well that's something new for you! Indeed my last "builder" was a roofer, 2017 to re-roof 2 dormers. They didn't put the facia on proper and got the guttering misaligned so I now hear rain drips falling . I mentioned this to the roofer who phoned for a check up and basically he was ABUSIVE! Nothing was his fault, in fact he blamed me. I need to go up there to make good, and because the facia is not straight it annoys me everytime to see it. When they fitted the first facia I mentioned this so they didn't make the same mistake on the second. So yes, builders can be abusive if a homeowner complains, their idea is to BULLY people into paying even if their job is not 100% as they don't want the hassle of returning to the job to put things right. So maybe, they were "cowboys"? The roofer in question is supposed to be a relaible, he's all over my town and why I chose them, mistake.
It is hard to find good builder, even looking at previous jobs is no guarentee. Because they will only point me to good jobs not bad ones they've done, obviously.
One of the first jobs I had done was rendering, I phoned up all the references given, all gave glowing reports, had them do the job and it's clumsy work. It needs knocking off and redone by someone who knows what they are doing. There ARE many amateur "professional" builders, many ARE abusive/bullies, from what I notice it's usually the smaller outfits.
How the heck did you get all those different sized wedges back in the right place.
The compact technique is for short term, for a long term, need to use compactor or (my country 🇲🇾 we call) whacker machine, then can promise a long lasting result
OH wow, this won't fix my problem. I have 24"x24" 90 pound patio pavers. I can't do what you did, unfortunately. 😩 I know how, it's just getting up the courage and strength to do it. But you did make a very good and informative video. Thanks anyway.
Excellent video. Thank you.
could also be helpful to solve the drainage issue that may have caused the problem in the first place. maybe as simple as just installing a gutter, and redirect all that downpouring water from off the pavers
I followed the instructions and ended up in Madagascar
Now the other half will sink....
😂😂😂😂
Congrats on another awesome video and 10k subs, Its gone from minecraft to real craft, nice one
Do you have a video on how to lay these bricks?
Thats sank due to water run off from the house.....
Reason why the first 2 foot has sank ......the rubble will help but could have done with a good dusting of cement before re laying .
Liked and subbed
Thank you very helpful and insightful covered everything I need to know
They sink because you used sand,sand fluidises with rain penetration or power steering on cars.Use 6mm Granolith on top of MOT. End of come-backs.This is good advice ,go one stage further with a Resi-gaurd saturation over kiln dried sand. This is the belt and braces way and better than tamped,screeded sharp sand!
Looks great. Do you know who specialises doing this in Kent?
There’s hundreds of good paving professionals in the Kent area but my advice is to look in your local neighbourhood magazine or go on your local council website to see which ones are approved before asking for quotes. Also in the past I’ve walked along my road and knocked on the door of neighbours who seem to have had a nice job done to get details of who they used....