Building a 16x85 concrete stave silo

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 61

  • @gerrygeibel6735
    @gerrygeibel6735 11 месяцев назад +2

    We purchased silo scaffolding years back. Still own it. tore down and put up several silos it was a life experience

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  11 месяцев назад

      Where do you live?

    • @gerrygeibel6735
      @gerrygeibel6735 11 месяцев назад

      @@brentmcmillen8829 butler, pa

    • @ranc0r37
      @ranc0r37 2 месяца назад

      Can you give me a heads up. I been looking for silo scaffolding but every online search just returns regular scaffold, when I'm looking for the scaffold as used in this video that is erected inside the silo.

  • @larrykluckoutdoors8227
    @larrykluckoutdoors8227 11 месяцев назад +2

    Nice video, I remember as a kid watching them build our silos on our farm

  • @kylerayk
    @kylerayk Год назад +8

    Very cool video! Looks easy when you have the right equipment and helpers. I'm glad to see the old stave silos being reused and not just destroyed.

  • @shakes7333
    @shakes7333 Год назад +1

    You have the best men on the job!

  • @scottrayhons2537
    @scottrayhons2537 Год назад

    Great video to watch these hard working people! Thank you for posting this! In Iowa most silos are now tombstones standing not used. No sale barns or farm stores hardly left here. Fleet Farm has mostly peanut brittle and m&m's for farm supplies. My tractor dont run on either one.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      I think the silo that was tore down hasn't been used since the late 80's. Dairy buyout program. Sad to think when you drive down the road, all the empty silo used to store feed for dairy cows. Less farms more cows per farm. Glad to say that my valley is still predominantly agriculture though

  • @scottlabant8406
    @scottlabant8406 Год назад +2

    Great video, when younger spend every summer at a dairy farm in Loysville. One day I going to go back and check it out.

  • @paulpeters5199
    @paulpeters5199 2 года назад +9

    That’s probably the fastest winch I’ve ever seen

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  2 года назад +3

      Every 12 seconds they were pulling a block up 80 feet

  • @jeffdymarczyk4413
    @jeffdymarczyk4413 Год назад +1

    Great job 👏

  • @chrisdaniel1339
    @chrisdaniel1339 3 месяца назад +1

    How does the work platform rise to the next level? Hydraulics? Winch and tackle?

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  3 месяца назад

      They are moving platform up at 50 sec mark. Use the motor and rope to pull up and repin it

  • @greggergen9104
    @greggergen9104 Год назад +1

    Wow they even got the checkered stave colors right on the top.

  • @betheckert817
    @betheckert817 2 года назад +2

    Very cool, Dad will really like to see this!

  • @doncc6080
    @doncc6080 Год назад +1

    Great to see the old silo moved by of course the Amish. Wish video was longer,

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      This took place about 4 mile from me. Wish I could have gotten the whole process myself. Roof, chute etc.

  • @WindWalkerDrones
    @WindWalkerDrones Год назад +2

    Pretty cool. I was just watching the Mennonites here doing this and a barn raising. Rebuilding one there farms after a fire.

  • @dubuque1
    @dubuque1 Год назад +3

    Pretty impressive workers, but Amish/Mennonites always have been. That is one awesome winch :)

  • @ranc0r37
    @ranc0r37 2 месяца назад

    Can anyone give me a heads up. I been looking for silo scaffolding but every online search just returns regular scaffold, when I'm looking for the scaffold as used in this video that is erected inside the silo.

  • @macncheesejayden
    @macncheesejayden 2 года назад +2

    Nice video! This is Cleason's nephew, by the way.

  • @danmaggert7119
    @danmaggert7119 Год назад +1

    masters at there craft

  • @cementer7665
    @cementer7665 Год назад +2

    I would like to see how the dome was added.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      I would have liked to film the entire process but the farm is 4 miles from me and I have farming to do myself 😄

  • @kirkpennell3028
    @kirkpennell3028 11 месяцев назад

    Wish you would have showed the concrete pad construction. I'm splitting one of my silos in half and I'm looking for information about pad diamentions. Thanks any help or advice would be greatly appreciated.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  11 месяцев назад

      This was a farm 4 miles from our farm. These silos just have a footer under them that the concrete block set on top of. They are possibly three feet deep if I remember correctly from when we built one at our farm. About 2 ft wide with nothing in the center.

  • @billyraub8197
    @billyraub8197 Год назад +2

    That breaks the rules of 1 foot across to 3 feet up by a whole lot.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      yes it does! I'm not why he decided on this size. Our farm has had 2 16x70's for years

  • @alamjahangir1043
    @alamjahangir1043 Год назад +1

    Nice

  • @karlherzog3979
    @karlherzog3979 Год назад +3

    We have a 16 by 70 and I thought that was pretty tall for how narrow it is.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад +1

      We have 2 16x70's.

    • @billyraub8197
      @billyraub8197 Год назад

      It is the rule of thumb is 1 foot across to 3 feet up. So 48 feet was the standard size you probably could go up 12 more feet in my opinion making it 60 feet

    • @don66hotrod94
      @don66hotrod94 11 месяцев назад

      There were quite a few 14 x 70 silos for High Moisture Ear Corn here in WI.

  • @verdigrishunts6165
    @verdigrishunts6165 Год назад +2

    At 3:24 they placed the 2nd half of a broken piece up.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      I guess they figured it wouldn't hurt anything at the top of the silo. If it wasn't painted white, they probably would not have used it.

  • @namarhodge568
    @namarhodge568 Год назад +2

    I really enjoyed this video. The crane system is a very fascinating setup. I would love to see how you moved the platform up each level and how it was secured. No doubt, probably trade secretes. Will the platform base stay as part of the upper structure?

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад +1

      They keep adding a center pole as they move up the silo. Once at the top, they plaster the inside with concrete and move back down. A lot of steps that I did not film.

    • @namarhodge568
      @namarhodge568 Год назад +3

      ​@@brentmcmillen8829 Thanks for the reply Mr. Brent. In growing up dad owned a welding shop. He did the same types of work as Mr. Issac on his IC WELD channel. We were in big farming country and I learned a lot working with him and working on the many farms. I developed a life long curiosity of how things work and how things are put together. Near Chattanooga TN, there is a civil war memorial built with a round tower. The deric crane was in the center similar to what you use, but the lifting line was mule drawn by being threaded down the center post and out the bottom. In my studying the deric crane has been the most useful construction tool throught history. You have a very interesting setup. Thanks, somutch for the video.

    • @namarhodge568
      @namarhodge568 Год назад

      ​@@brentmcmillen8829 I watched the video again and see the center post being added at near the beginning, and lifting the platform. I missed this part the first two times I watched.

    • @jeffreymartin9558
      @jeffreymartin9558 Год назад

      Those workers are Pike Mennonites. Is that John Sensenig's crew?

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      I don't know@@jeffreymartin9558

  • @Dan-o1d6v
    @Dan-o1d6v Год назад +1

    I did think 16 × 85 was engineering possibly how much concrete is in foundation???

  • @shakey2634
    @shakey2634 9 месяцев назад

    And now RUclips is full of videos of these being knocked down.

  • @snydedon9636
    @snydedon9636 Год назад +1

    Too bad we weren’t shown the finished product.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад +1

      This silo was built Oct. 2022. The amish crew wanted the silo staves(blocks) powerwashed before the silo was rebuilt. The owner of the farm was short on help at the time. The builders brought in a hi lift in November and powerwashed it after it was built.. The owner also talked them into washing his other two concrete silos. I was going to film that and I crashed my drone that morning flying at home!

    • @snydedon9636
      @snydedon9636 Год назад

      @@brentmcmillen8829 thanks for the additional info.

  • @billyebensberger9109
    @billyebensberger9109 2 года назад +1

    Where was this built?

  • @sharonfieber6458
    @sharonfieber6458 Год назад +1

    Amish fall protection harness!

  • @randymagnum143
    @randymagnum143 Год назад

    If you had to have ironworers erect it, it still wouldn't be up. Probably they'd still be drunk and asleep.

    • @larrywarolin7215
      @larrywarolin7215 11 месяцев назад +1

      They would be fighting each other over various things at different stages. Things like who's a better boss, pickles, sisters, flags and Christmas trees. Then they would pick up all the spare pieces that looked important and head back to the bar.

  • @ronblack7870
    @ronblack7870 Год назад +1

    these guys are mennonites so not as strict as amish so can use power tools like the winch and an air hammer.

    • @brentmcmillen8829
      @brentmcmillen8829  Год назад

      I think these guys are Amish. There are many different sects in this area. There are some mennonites that don't drive cars and run tractors on steel wheels. The Amish in this area use power tools.

  • @redgreen6505
    @redgreen6505 Год назад +1

    I built rib stone silos in the early 70s.things haven't much.