I Built A Smokeless Fire Pit With Foam And Concrete That Actually Works

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • How to build a concrete smokeless fire pit the absolute easiest way possible. No woodworking or concrete skills required. I built the first DIY smokeless fire pit 3 years ago but I want a concrete version for my fire pit patio I'm about to pour. I'm building this fire pit with pink xps foam board to keep it simple so anyone can do it. I love the way this smokeless fire pit turned out and once I stain it and get the fire pit patio poured I'll love it even more! You can stop the smoke and have a fire pit that lasts forever.
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    I hope to inspire you to create your own projects at home. If I can do it so can you! I want you to know that you can accomplish anything you set your mind to. Learn how to become self-reliant and have fun doing it!
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @HAXMAN
    @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +63

    You can feed a HAXMAN child by purchasing merch here! thehaxman.com/

    • @onlinecheatersexposed8491
      @onlinecheatersexposed8491 29 дней назад +21

      best comedy/diy channel on YT

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +7

      @@onlinecheatersexposed8491 Thank you!

    • @amandaclark3430
      @amandaclark3430 29 дней назад

      You, too, can sponsor a needy HAXMAN child for only a few cents a day.

    • @JBulsa
      @JBulsa 23 дня назад +2

      Glue= plexiglass + acetone = awesome

    • @brandonbowerstx
      @brandonbowerstx 22 дня назад +3

      That steel fire ring? That is a consumable item in firepits. Might take 2-3 years but you eventually will have a nice rusty ring of burned iron. LOVE the video and this just gave me plenty of concrete ideas for my country home. Thanks.

  • @SkullsAndSugar
    @SkullsAndSugar 7 дней назад +23

    I LOVE when people don't edit out their mistakes. It gives me more confidence as a DIYer. It's great to know that can be a normal part of the process.

  • @Metalhead_D
    @Metalhead_D 29 дней назад +455

    Just showed this video to the wife. She just sighed and walked away. Still, I didn't hear an explicit "no", so looks like I've a project for the summer, boys!
    Thanks again, Haxman

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +29

      😂 Woohoo!

    • @yadaroni
      @yadaroni 24 дня назад +18

      Indifference sounds like a lady yes to me, lol It's not like they don't know how to say no, lol 😆

    • @Turrtlezzs
      @Turrtlezzs 23 дня назад +6

      It's definitely a yes. Also, it's better to ask for forgiveness than permission....

    • @TheHXCfrog
      @TheHXCfrog 23 дня назад +6

      Indifference is how I know my lady is happy. 😆 good luck on the project.

    • @harrismichael1789
      @harrismichael1789 23 дня назад +5

      So relatable haha

  • @zacandmillie
    @zacandmillie 28 дней назад +383

    I worked in construction in the 80s and I recall an on-site engineer that always watched as we poured concrete. I asked him why? He made sure the concrete workers vibrated the mix properly. There's not a lot of strength in bubbles was his reasoning. I've always remembered that.

    • @austinatkins408
      @austinatkins408 27 дней назад +37

      And at the same time you don’t want to vibrate too much. Separates the aggregate.

    • @veridico84
      @veridico84 26 дней назад +11

      ​@austinatkins408 true speaking, I have seen some bad segregation from over-vibrating the slurry. End up with severe honeycombing on the lower portion of the pour.

    • @shawnbaker3910
      @shawnbaker3910 23 дня назад +15

      You can also use a short piece of rebar to "rod" the concrete mixture and consolidate it to get the air bubbles up to the surface. Similar to "rodding" a test cylinder.

    • @jaws8817
      @jaws8817 22 дня назад +9

      Nowadays we just order it pre-vibrated from the batch plant. Problem solved!

    • @veridico84
      @veridico84 22 дня назад +5

      @jaws8817 that's been shown to not be as effective as in situ vibration, bit still better than not

  • @NatureLapse22
    @NatureLapse22 27 дней назад +42

    Your wife snorting at your mistake - GOLD! I oft hear that same snort from my wife. It encourages us to do better.

  • @kvernesdotten
    @kvernesdotten 28 дней назад +175

    Imagine the real estate agent if you guys ever sold your house. "Sir, why is there 13 smokeless fire pits on the property?"

    • @user-nj7lg4sy4d
      @user-nj7lg4sy4d 25 дней назад +14

      "i just don't think it was realistic that they could've cremated that many bodies in that much time, ig I'm a skeptic"

    • @slickgiraffe6650
      @slickgiraffe6650 23 дня назад +17

      Because 14 would be RIDICULOUS!

    • @simonpaine2347
      @simonpaine2347 23 дня назад +7

      Find another real estate agent, 13 isn't a logical basis for superstition.

    • @dubmob151
      @dubmob151 21 день назад +13

      a dog walks into a telegraph office to send a message. the person there asks the dog what they want their message to say. the dog goes "woof woof woof woof woof woof woof woof woof" the person working there says to the dog "that's only 9 words, did you want to include 1 more word? it would be free" the dog replies "no that wouldn't make any sense"

    • @ethanhall2715
      @ethanhall2715 19 дней назад +6

      Just turn them into raised garden beds

  • @JaiSheha
    @JaiSheha 27 дней назад +92

    I like how you do not edit out your mistakes. Humanizes you to the viewer. Great job on the pit!

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  27 дней назад +6

      I appreciate that!

    • @edmartian
      @edmartian 23 дня назад +6

      For real. I learn on my own and do my projects on my own. When I see someone successfully completing projects while breaking parts and buying tools which don't get used. I genuinely feel like less of a failure.

  • @kevinmiller5467
    @kevinmiller5467 29 дней назад +161

    The diy smokeless fire pit got me to subscribe 3 years ago. Still watching today. 😂

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +9

      That's awesome! Thank you! 😁

    • @matteoemiliani6859
      @matteoemiliani6859 29 дней назад +4

      same for me

    • @bignicnrg3856
      @bignicnrg3856 29 дней назад +3

      Yep....that was the hook 🪝

    • @neildoesstuff
      @neildoesstuff 29 дней назад +2

      same for me too! I built that one then, maybe I'll have to build this one too...

    • @RoborobsComputers
      @RoborobsComputers 29 дней назад +2

      Same here

  • @cbinder46
    @cbinder46 23 дня назад +45

    The perfect amount of humor to keep me engaged, the unedited mistakes, the narration explaining the process, and the logic behind decisions made all helped me thoroughly enjoy this video and subscribe for more in the future.

  • @chrisash7948
    @chrisash7948 26 дней назад +66

    I worked at a rehab facility that thought it would be awesome to take a commercial 6' concrete planter and turn it into a firepit for the residents to have bonfires around during their nightly check-ins. It was pretty awesome for the first few nights, but on the third or fourth night they used it, the damn thing exploded and sent cinders, sharp chunks of concrete, and burning wood flying everywhere. Turns out that, even with proper agitation, concrete is still a very porous substance. Air expands when heated, which could turn your fire pit into a time bomb. This becomes even more likely with repeated heating and cooling. It's why refractories tend to be built with ceramic substrates and not concrete.

    • @dustintravis8791
      @dustintravis8791 18 дней назад +8

      I probably wasn't supposed to laugh but the visualizations of the fire pit exploding got me good. Hopefully no one was injured!

    • @chrisash7948
      @chrisash7948 18 дней назад +6

      @@dustintravis8791 It was pretty hilarious, probably because no one was injured. Just singed clothes and a story to tell.

    • @andrewjc13
      @andrewjc13 17 дней назад +5

      This one will probably do okay because of the airflow between the metal and concrete keeping the concrete cool.
      But yeah, concrete also soaks up water, and when water turns to steam, you get ker-blewy.

    • @petercoates2882
      @petercoates2882 16 дней назад +9

      The bursting isn't primarily about the bubbles. When concrete hardens, much of the water you mixed it with is chemically bound into the new crystals that are formed. The concrete can be bone dry years later, but that water remains part of it. When it gets very hot, it changes chemically, and the water is freed up. The trouble is, it's inside concrete, so it cant expand, and thus it can get extremely hot without becoming steam. But when the solid matrix cracks, it suddenly releases all that pressure at once and bang.

  • @thanatos66613
    @thanatos66613 29 дней назад +52

    "Y'all better red-neckorize." Thank you, Uncle Hax, thank you.

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +7

      😄

    • @trevorgreene5059
      @trevorgreene5059 29 дней назад +4

      In my neck of the woods, we call it Redneck Engineering. 😁

    • @SkullsAndSugar
      @SkullsAndSugar 7 дней назад

      I was NOT prepared for that part lmao

  • @michaelhurtt76
    @michaelhurtt76 2 дня назад +1

    You sir, are the man! I have been planning to build 3 gas fire pits in my backyard (yep, that is a long story) your instruction, expertise and ahem humor will turn my dream into a reality! Thank you. I have subscribed. Yours is the first you tube thing that I have ever subscribed to, only took me 63 years. (Hope I did it right). Iam a BIG FAN. Most respectfully, mike USN ret.

  • @timothybarrett3665
    @timothybarrett3665 12 дней назад +3

    The all thread not to be confused with the all spark because that makes a transformer come back to life is one of the reasons I watch this channel

    • @djdup3819
      @djdup3819 12 дней назад

      What other uses can all thread be used for?

  • @myvitiello
    @myvitiello 14 дней назад +13

    Thank for not editing your mistakes. It’s so much more educating. Great Video; a project I’d like to tackle one day. (Ironically I did edit this comment 😅)

    • @djdup3819
      @djdup3819 12 дней назад

      Yeah seriously

    • @ericdeschamps3826
      @ericdeschamps3826 12 дней назад

      0:Naw as if !!! U said Friday!!!! 0:17 17 0:17 ​@@djdup3819

  • @JetIgniter2k2
    @JetIgniter2k2 29 дней назад +15

    That mud mixer looks awesome! They really need to get them in every Home Depot rental location.

    • @originalname9999
      @originalname9999 19 дней назад +2

      I'll just wait for harbor freight (china) to knock one off and make it affordable for a homeowner with projects.

  • @euprem
    @euprem 19 дней назад +2

    Im 28 and its happening… these are the things i like to watch and do in my free time😭😭

  • @DrCarrico
    @DrCarrico 26 дней назад +9

    I did a smokeless fire pit conversion to an already existing pit at a house I bought a few years ago. Did almost the same exact thing you did, I just didn’t have to build the walls. Used a galvanized ring, drilled the holes and set it in the middle with a gap for the outer chamber. Then did the capstones using the same technique, just used melamine board for my form instead of foam board. I only made one form and used it for four pours to give me 4 capstones. Used a bit of old motor oil for my release agent, and added coloring to match the existing walls of the pit that had been already done with landscape blocks. Color matching was the toughest part of the project! It turned out great and works awesome. If I had done the whole thing from scratch, I would have just made the whole thing a bit smaller. Having a 3’ diameter inner ring means you need to make big fires (as you mentioned) and it takes a little while to heat up for the smokeless effect to occur. That’s probably why the commercial ones are fairly small as well.
    You earned a subscriber, as your rolling storage system has been on my list of stuff as well, just instead of strut channel and trolleys, I had planned to utilize barn door track and rollers instead. Like minds think alike, and I look forward to watching your other builds instead of filming any of my own, lol.

  • @BradyPatterson
    @BradyPatterson 23 дня назад +8

    Awesome for hotter climates. I like a firepit for warmth when it's cool and that's always been my issue with the smokeless pits because there's very little radiant heat if you're siting beside it. Cool none the less!

  • @spiralnapkin
    @spiralnapkin 20 дней назад +5

    I like how you didn't pretend this went super smoothly and flawlessly. Im more apt to follow and maybe try this with your honesty. Thank you!

  • @MrTarHeelUNC
    @MrTarHeelUNC 23 дня назад +14

    I’ve found a better way of vibrating the bubbles out. Attach a piece of pvc pipe on an oscillating tool. Screw it on an old blade. Stick it into the cement and turn the tool on high. Works better than the reciprocating saw.

    • @j8k3rzjackson57
      @j8k3rzjackson57 20 дней назад

      Rotary hammer drill on hammer mode works great too !

    • @OgFurious1
      @OgFurious1 19 дней назад

      Or better yet just use your wife’s dido 😂

    • @stevemango7019
      @stevemango7019 17 дней назад +1

      Palm Sander

  • @bensconcretecreations
    @bensconcretecreations 17 дней назад +8

    Sonatubes work great too man. Get a 3' and 4' sonatube and cut whatever height you want. We use them all the time on firepits. We actually take fire brick and ratchet strap them to the inside piece and the concrete locks it all in once concrete is poured.

    • @jellman101
      @jellman101 14 дней назад

      Way more expensive than foam

    • @bensconcretecreations
      @bensconcretecreations 14 дней назад

      @jellman101 not if you do a bunch of them and cut them to whatever height you want. We do quite a few custom firepits and as with most companies labor is our biggest expense. You can't really mess up sonatubes they are done, kick it off, strap your fire brick to inside, pour and you're done other than carving or rock work. Every company is different. If you don't have many employees and don't do many of these in a year then you're 100% right

  • @calidrummin1760
    @calidrummin1760 20 дней назад +16

    Anyone else blown away that Edddie Vedder is so handy? Haha, that's a compliment. Great entertainment factor and great work!

  • @etpe4830
    @etpe4830 29 дней назад +12

    i've been following you for 3 years. wow! already!

  • @chapativsmcd
    @chapativsmcd 29 дней назад +6

    I was here for your first smokeless fire pit and here I am today for your second fire pit

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +1

      Thanks!

  • @patkonelectric
    @patkonelectric 29 дней назад +38

    Concrete does not hold up well to high heat. If you don't believe me. Take a torch to it and I hope you have your PPE on. With that said this might work because it doesn't let the concrete to get that hot (unlike standard fire pit). I will stay tuned for the results.

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  28 дней назад +25

      I made a video about this actually on the first pit. The sides are protected by the fire ring. The top doesn’t get hot enough to be affected. As long as you don’t light a fire right after a huge rainfall there are no issues. I deliberately tried to crack the original pit I built with heat and couldn’t do it. You are correct about heat and concrete. If you made a fire directly on concrete that would be a problem.

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 25 дней назад +3

      @@HAXMAN Hey mate, I've seen concrete explode, The fire was actually lit on the slab, it really does go off...!! I'm pretty sure you can get concrete that's better suited to heat...

    • @chascapwell2041
      @chascapwell2041 25 дней назад +5

      ​@@HAXMAN Why not just get castable refractory cement and avoid the problem altogether?

    • @codycampbell2607
      @codycampbell2607 21 день назад

      Heat rises

    • @CanadianMason85
      @CanadianMason85 19 дней назад

      ​@codycampbell2607 in high-school yeah it does but in the real world it conducts and convects w surfaces.

  • @kettlebellskettlebells7147
    @kettlebellskettlebells7147 21 день назад +6

    Quote " Probably one of my favourite tools I've gotten Over the past serval years" Seconds early, haxman wife was helping. Honestly thought he meant his wife. haha She is trooper for being that support hats off!

  • @user-ey8kr9ry3d
    @user-ey8kr9ry3d 10 дней назад +1

    Love that you don't edit out your mistakes, definitely subscribing. Wife made the mistake of giving me the clear to do whatever I wanted to the backyard...so this is definitely in the cards haha

  • @jamie.777
    @jamie.777 3 дня назад

    Awesomeness. I am a former concrete worker, and this is great idea

  • @matthewpeterson3329
    @matthewpeterson3329 29 дней назад +16

    Not sure if it was mentioned, but rock salt is a great way to add texture. Just sprinkle a little in the form sparingly, and it dissolves later. It can also be added when finishing a sidewalk, just sprinkle some on the concrete before it sets up too hard, and trowel it into the surface. Great video.

    • @benholler1389
      @benholler1389 18 дней назад +2

      It's also absolutely horrible for the durability of the concrete

    • @matthewpeterson3329
      @matthewpeterson3329 18 дней назад

      @@benholler1389 It's only bad for the concrete if you constantly let salt into the the pores through freeze and thaw cycles. So your comment is partially correct. The salt used for this texture technique is rinsed out as soon as the concrete is hard enough to handle a spray nozzle, and is used sparingly for a random texture. My parents have 40 year old walk ways that I helped my dad pour as a little kid, using the rock salt method, that still look like new to this day. Granted, I'm not a fan of textured concrete... I prefer a broom pass so light that you can hardly tell it was done.

  • @NM-kl9ws
    @NM-kl9ws 29 дней назад +12

    I knew it - when you didn’t show the application of your release agent, you forgot it 😂 God bless you and your wife! What a trip. Gonna show this to my husband. We move from the burbs to 3 acres in a few months. Smokeless fire pit is gonna be ideal this holiday season! 😁

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +1

      Congratulations on the move!

  • @chefgiovanni
    @chefgiovanni День назад

    Nice project. I love all the smoke it makes.
    Also it was fun to watch you as you virtually have no idea what you are doing.

  • @deanstephens5940
    @deanstephens5940 11 дней назад +1

    I like mixing my cement a bit wet when I pour. It's a lot easier to work the voids out of the concrete when doing something like this. Great video man! Thanks.

  • @C-M-E
    @C-M-E 29 дней назад +8

    One of the easiest and stupidly brilliant pseudo concrete vibrators I'd ever seen whipped together was an oscillating cutter with a pipe strapped to it. Sink the pipe with it on, goes in like hot butter. I wish I'd come up with that one! I've also picked up an industrial vibrating head for various projects that can be had for like $35 and use metal worm clamps to put all kinds of things under Serious vibrational power. I have one mounted to a stainless thermos with 1,000 5/8ths ball bearings in it for grinding hard media into powder.
    Murphy's Soap in the huge jugs also works great as a release agent for molding, and you can let it dry and build up layers if you want, or just slather it on and pour. Last time I bought it I believe was 2022 and it was $6 at the hardware store.
    The only thing I'd address would be drainage, particularly in areas with more clay in the soil than average. You can use PEX tubing and cast them directly into the concrete and run them wherever convenient or pull it after the concrete cures and shrinks off the surface some. It helps a lot with premature rusting of the inner ring so runoff doesn't pool up in the bottom.
    I'm definitely going to borrow that all-thread trick next time though. So we're even. 😉

    • @javaguru7141
      @javaguru7141 24 дня назад

      Can you explain a bit more about exactly how you'd attach the pipe to the sawzall to use it as a concrete vibrator? I can't seem to figure out what you mean 😅

    • @kullindouglas
      @kullindouglas 24 дня назад

      @@javaguru7141 Screw a piece of PVC to an old oscillating tool blade

  • @BlairAir
    @BlairAir 23 дня назад +4

    I appreciate your SUCCESS/FAILURE, your SORROW/JOY, and that you are showing this along the way to the really sharp projects that you do. It has a better feel than the slick productions that have the viewers feeling unworthy! I am working on my smoosh technique - to be gentle.

  • @58DamagedGoods
    @58DamagedGoods 19 дней назад +1

    I had to chuckle. A true DIY’er! Stuff happens, but the goal doesn’t change. I’m sure there will never be those who critique the build, but I’m one to applaud the perseverance. This is a short but sweet vid and I’m going to add this to my list of what I need to do this year. My original fire pit was made from those big box pavers, and while it took a couple hours to build, it looks like…well, let’s just say it looks like a big box build. Many have them. I want different. I need to remember to keep that seed oil handy for my release agent! Very good job.

  • @isabelladavis1363
    @isabelladavis1363 27 дней назад +1

    I love that you show screw ups and all… all in all quite impressive!!! Stay blessed love the end results !

  • @chrazyman77
    @chrazyman77 16 дней назад +10

    "Y'all better redneckorize!" I don't watch enough of your videos, but I'm going to fix that, haha. Great video man. Very inspiring.

  • @EvrttGrn
    @EvrttGrn 29 дней назад +13

    I love it. Can't believe it's been 3 years already. I've always called those tape measures as sewing tapes', but I think they are actually called "Tailors tape" because if you google search that name a butt-ton of results come up.

  • @davidrl41
    @davidrl41 6 дней назад

    Translation: "whenever" = "when" for 95% of it uses. Thats for us northerners. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk. Love you HAXMAN!

  • @AlexeiTetenov
    @AlexeiTetenov 28 дней назад +1

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @fowyb
    @fowyb 21 день назад +3

    I've never before seen a calculator display fractions, only decimals. Fascinating.

    • @Paladin7845
      @Paladin7845 20 дней назад

      Google "Construction Master". I've had them for over 15 years. Now they have an app too.

    • @gregcale5388
      @gregcale5388 18 дней назад

      Construction master pro. Honestly, if you use it well on a job once, it will have paid for itself. They have an app too.

  • @patriciatharp9646
    @patriciatharp9646 27 дней назад +6

    My son is 59 years old. You remind me of him. I love your sense of humor.😊

  • @ckweigand5574
    @ckweigand5574 2 дня назад

    If you type in your diameter in inches on the construction master calculator and hit the circle button it will give you the circumference as well. Built in short cuts. Invaluable tool that keeps me efficient on the job site. Love your work.

  • @theartofconcrete
    @theartofconcrete День назад

    Concrete teaches you lessons. Great effort

  • @jackk4332
    @jackk4332 22 дня назад +5

    I like how you routinely mix your concrete too dry, despite knowing better.
    I too enjoy underfilling my tractor tires, waiting too long to mow the lawn, and under-buying lumber for my next project.

  • @timc8913
    @timc8913 29 дней назад +4

    Great build. The end cracked me up with you trying to find a place to store those 'disposable' molds!!! The struggle is real. 😄😄😄

    • @timc8913
      @timc8913 29 дней назад +2

      Also...THANKS for leaving the bloopers in...they are what make your channel so relatable. Most you tubers would have easily edited out the bloopers and disguised the real world challenges.

  • @JB-mf1zc
    @JB-mf1zc 27 дней назад

    Mighty fine!!! God Bless!!!

  • @trevorgreene5059
    @trevorgreene5059 29 дней назад

    I like this method. Even though it's a lot of work using concrete to make the form, the end result speaks for itself.

  • @virgil3241
    @virgil3241 29 дней назад +4

    Ok, Ill admit it, I laughed out loud with the "then it hit me joke"

  • @thefrankperspective4247
    @thefrankperspective4247 29 дней назад +3

    7:45 - I call those schneider’s tape (Schneider is Yiddish for tailor, so tailor’s tape if you prefer English)

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад +2

      I figured it had something to do with sewing.

  • @demetriusgallitzin8859
    @demetriusgallitzin8859 22 дня назад

    This is an awesome upgrade.

  • @robburke8867
    @robburke8867 9 дней назад

    Great idea. Looks Awesome!

  • @alexrawlings6885
    @alexrawlings6885 29 дней назад +3

    Yet again haxmeister , fantastic video my wife and I love watching and I think the baby liked it too 😀. Looks like you need a storage shed 😉 new vid!! ❤

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  29 дней назад

      Thanks Alex! I need a whole new shop. 😂

  • @ecko1882
    @ecko1882 28 дней назад +4

    The legend returns. That video put you on the map bro. Once I get this dern garden running itself I can focus on these projects
    I know my 5 little girls would love this. Looks simple enough and my wife will think I am the superman. Nice work man.

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  28 дней назад

      Thanks Jacob!

  • @eastrockaway3358
    @eastrockaway3358 25 дней назад

    A thing of Beauty !!

  • @oscarfarley4104
    @oscarfarley4104 17 дней назад

    GREAT video! Thanks for taking the time to provide so much detail.

  • @sparkysmalarkey
    @sparkysmalarkey 29 дней назад +3

    Live, learn, and then get duct tape.

  • @funtimestuff
    @funtimestuff 12 дней назад +41

    After watching this video I will spend $200 and pick up a smokeless fire pit on Amazon. Take it out of the box and done.

    • @kraigholdren8106
      @kraigholdren8106 9 дней назад +17

      Thats why no one will remember your name

    • @madmartigin1464
      @madmartigin1464 9 дней назад +8

      And that pretty much sums up the problems in the world today

    • @dancingnature
      @dancingnature 9 дней назад

      🤣

    • @mickym.6711
      @mickym.6711 9 дней назад +5

      The 200 dollar ones on Amazon are like 25 inches. You and a buddy gonna have a blast burning the sticks from the back yard I guess...

    • @funtimestuff
      @funtimestuff 9 дней назад +1

      @mickym.6711 I cut all my firewood to 20 inches... all the big stuff I burn in an open fire pit.

  • @CepheusDesignBuild
    @CepheusDesignBuild День назад

    amazing work!!!!

  • @kevinthemayor
    @kevinthemayor 5 дней назад

    Thanks Love it, my mental handicap brother loves fire pits, with supervision of course, and I love smokeless wood gasification stuff

  • @m73m95
    @m73m95 25 дней назад +11

    PLEASE wear a respirator when you play with concrete!!! Concrete dust is silica...which is glass...which means you're breathing tiny shards of glass. Silicosis is a very real thing!! It's a great project, and you've inspired me to build something similar...but please be safe when dealing with concrete. It will kill you, slowly and painfully!

    • @barretisaacs7718
      @barretisaacs7718 14 дней назад +1

      This is about the dumbest thing I have read. The basic kn95 mask doesn’t protect you from silicosis. Silica itself is used to make glass, concrete and similar products and that’s what you don’t want to breathe in.

    • @m73m95
      @m73m95 14 дней назад +2

      @@barretisaacs7718 that's why I said a respirator, not a mask.

    • @shakyleg5929
      @shakyleg5929 12 дней назад +1

      I've been mixing mortar for 10 years now. I've been breathing it in nearly every day. I've always wondered if it's damaged my lungs and also if that's why running is so hard to breathe after a while. What do you think?

    • @mikep4391
      @mikep4391 10 дней назад

      If the silica doesn't kill you, the poisonous gas from heating the galvanized metal will.

  • @topfeedcoco
    @topfeedcoco 23 дня назад +4

    You're using the word "whenever" incorrectly sir. Whenever refers to at least a plural, you keep using it in the singular with specific instances.

  • @TomCat-tz1ui
    @TomCat-tz1ui 12 дней назад

    Cool video, thanks for posting

  • @GhettoDVD.
    @GhettoDVD. 24 дня назад +1

    Dope project

  • @jamesbonser9667
    @jamesbonser9667 24 дня назад

    Great video! Thanks!

  • @GhSt-nm9hs
    @GhSt-nm9hs 13 дней назад

    Great job, looks fantastic!

  • @claudenobles779
    @claudenobles779 20 дней назад

    Creativity gets me up in the morning, once you get in your unique creative flow ... sweet

  • @TheTravelerMan
    @TheTravelerMan 18 дней назад

    Thanks, I learned so much.

  • @marcodp4322
    @marcodp4322 19 дней назад

    Thanks. Some real good ideas.

  • @paulglass3076
    @paulglass3076 2 дня назад

    This came up on my feed. Randomly seemingly. Good job HAXMAN, very satisfying and I may want to give this a try!

  • @inflewence
    @inflewence 2 дня назад

    "Probably one of my favorite tools I've got in the last couple of years" I was waiting for "The mixer was great too" 😂😂😅

  • @psdaengr911
    @psdaengr911 29 дней назад

    A nice use of a technique used for constructing insulated foundations.

  • @leekinder1016
    @leekinder1016 27 дней назад

    Kids purchased their first homes this year and this would be perfect for our short but sweet Alaskan summers! Now to track down a workable solution for the inner ring, without having to fully fabricate it. Enjoyed the vid HAXMAN! :)

  • @Big88Country
    @Big88Country 10 дней назад

    HAXMAN, this is AWESOME!!! I'm retiring at the end of the month, and this seems like the logical first project I should get done before fall, thanks!!! Yup, I'm taking 2 months off and I AIN'T DOING NUTHIN!!!

  • @Banner18MindTrip
    @Banner18MindTrip 23 дня назад

    that's admirable

  • @YMH420s
    @YMH420s 25 дней назад +1

    No gloves, masks, or glasses. I love it 🤘

  • @fortablet2933
    @fortablet2933 14 дней назад

    love this type of video

  • @Robinjuneable
    @Robinjuneable 6 дней назад

    There's not a better feeling that you make this and enjoy it! I love that feeling of accomplishment!

  • @TravisMarker-xr3nj
    @TravisMarker-xr3nj 20 дней назад

    That is sweet! Well done!

  • @jbocaneg17611
    @jbocaneg17611 9 дней назад

    I can always count on your amuzing informative genius, to entertain and teach at the same time. Thank you for that!

  • @user-cq2so7uo6i
    @user-cq2so7uo6i 24 дня назад

    Educational, entertaining video, thanks for the tips and tricks

  • @Davidg1t1
    @Davidg1t1 28 дней назад

    Awesome project! Thanks brother!

    • @HAXMAN
      @HAXMAN  28 дней назад +1

      Thanks!

  • @sunnysweetspot6499
    @sunnysweetspot6499 10 дней назад

    This is sooooo awesome!!!!

  • @Grunt-tl3on
    @Grunt-tl3on 20 дней назад

    Awesome. I’m not great at a lot of things but I may be able to get this done. Can’t wait.

  • @mjfw10
    @mjfw10 12 дней назад +1

    Machinist tip. Use WD-40 on your drill bits to make it easier to drill and extend the life of your bits. Especially the step bits. Thanks for the 2 videos. I wanted to build your last pit ,but I like this one better.

    • @577buttfan
      @577buttfan 11 дней назад

      Wd is too thin of a lube use a light weight motor oil

  • @hendrand
    @hendrand 19 дней назад

    Great job brother!

  • @mapandcallsheet
    @mapandcallsheet 22 дня назад

    Great job.

  • @mipakr
    @mipakr 29 дней назад +1

    Three years ago!? Time flies as a haxmaniac!

  • @dyrrelmock3700
    @dyrrelmock3700 День назад

    Thats awsome... im amazing at showing what not to do... actually its one of my strongest points...

  • @86FxBdyCpe
    @86FxBdyCpe 18 дней назад

    Dude, that was impressive.

  • @hassanbazzi3545
    @hassanbazzi3545 21 день назад

    One fantastic project. I have seen a video where the man cut a 2 foot 1/2 inch pvc pipe and duct taped to the reciprocated saw and stocked into the concrete form for smother finish. Well done

  • @TOMRYANLUKE
    @TOMRYANLUKE 20 дней назад

    love your stuff, thank you!

  • @ericdoss1293
    @ericdoss1293 8 часов назад

    I am around concrete for my job. A super cheap and easy way (not the best way, but works on a budget and in a pinch) is to rod it with a dowel (you want to do this anyway) and if you can find something along the same lines that he did to vibrate the dowel, that way it gets vibrated all of the way through the middle and to the bottom. Make several passes a few inches apart. This will help a lot with holes and voids.

  • @Miv51miv51
    @Miv51miv51 19 дней назад

    HAXMAN you're a natural!

  • @codysmith7086
    @codysmith7086 17 дней назад

    You got my like and sub as soon as you said you're "showing" us what not to do. Thanks

  • @phil6844
    @phil6844 9 дней назад

    It’s nice to see that even if you have seemingly no clue what you’re doing, you can still put up a nice fire pit.

  • @NathanHarrison7
    @NathanHarrison7 27 дней назад

    Dude is definitely keeping it real. Subscribed.

  • @user-lx2dc4mp6q
    @user-lx2dc4mp6q 11 дней назад

    Okay a couple of comments. I built one just like the video three years ago. It worked exactly as you indicated it would in your video. So very good! Now, the cap plates on ours broke the first time we fired up the pit. This was three days after they were poured. The water still trapped in the hardened, but uncured concrete, caused them to forcefully pop and break. So let that concrete fully cure before applying the heat. Secondly, As I said, it worked exactly as you said it would. What you didn't mention was that it consumes copious amount of fuel. In my estimation 3 to 4 times as much fuel. I had to take it out simply because I could not afford to feed it. It is a proven method for getting a hot fire that consumes its own smoke. The problem is I am not using this fire to forge metal. I'm not even using it for heat. A little fire and some friends; that's all that's needed. So you might mention the fuel consumption issues when you promote these smokeless fire pits.

  • @nickmax7578
    @nickmax7578 26 дней назад

    glad to have found your channel. thanks for the insight, going to do this at my home. !

  • @maryh4656
    @maryh4656 11 дней назад

    I saw you were doing it backwards..... glad you caught it before it dried. This is pretty cool. I will probably make one myself. Also, as a math teacher, glad you are using all that math my kids whine they will NEVER use! lol