Keep your ears open and learn. That banter between Chris and Charlie has taught me more about this business than anything... hauling costs, expenses, load limits, and the reasons how, and why, they do what they do. I'd classify this as an educational opportunity! Thanks guys!
Why? You know all the concrete's components (gravel, sand, water, cement) originated FROM the earth, right? After using them for 50 or so years, why not return everything back to the earth? In fact, by using as a roadbed, you are essentially filling the land. This was an smart economic decision, not an ecological one.
@@kellerrobert80 does it offend you that it's ecologically sound as well. At least putting this back in the ground as base means you're not digging more rock out. On the cost side its marginal at best. When you add in the extra time/labour cost it works out about the same.
As others have said, it was great hearing Charlie tell the history of the machine and how it works. AND the money side hauling to dump vs crushing, etc.
when we tore out old concrete at the mulch yard we brought in a crusher and used the crushed concrete to build the base for the asphalt that got laid. it saves a ton of money to repurpose that concrete like this.
@@strokiinyourmom But he says he shares it with his best friend with his own screening machine. Scratch my back, I'll scratch yours ! A win/win situation here ! $$$ Brilliant !
This is so cool, I just started watching your channel a few weeks ago, and now you're using a piece of equipment that was built where I work. I started a new job with Terex (who build the Evoquip brand equipment) last year. That machine was built right here in Northern Ireland!
@@loskop100 no amego it's not built in the old car works that's long long long gone. Terex have plants all over Northern Ireland there's one where I live in Omagh.
Recycling concrete is as good as it gets in construction. A fantastic resource, does good, performs as good as or better than stone and the obvious environmental benefit. I only use stone when I cannot get RCP. I love the way the fines compact.
Gave you more abc than I thought it might. Saves having to pay to truck it in. Loved the camera angle on the dozer where you had the camera on the cage outside. Was able to see well.
That crusher was super cool! It ripped through all of that concrete with little effort. That really gives you an idea on how well the crusher was built. The manufacturer really knew what they were doing when they built this machine. That crushed concrete is a beautiful material and it will look really nice all spread out at the end of this job!! Great work Chris! 👍
Great Job Chris. Great Video, this answers some of my previous questions. Figure approx 250 ton of gravel @ $25.00 a ton ,probably 16 truckloads delivered. plus deducting in excess of 20 trucks of hauling out the bulk concrete + dumping charges then bringing in new rock.. Great business decision. love to see final breakdown of the reclamation project. Thanks again
@@jonschneck4559 they showed the amount of wire that came out after the first pass... I think they will use it to top stone where they are..but a shame really...
@@SBEARD12345 Chris said he is top coating it with clean rock. I use it for driveways and parking lots, some plants leave more wire some produce a very clean product
@@jonschneck4559 okay.. just thinking we have seen him get free sand, now free rock, free wood for a fire in his house... All he needs is a wood chipper and he would get free weed suppression too. Though cost might be prohibitive, unless pre used And I don't think I know somebody else that does a video a day. Thank you Chris
Chris, you should look at the severe duty root grapple for the skid steer. We used to load 8'x8' sections of floor slab into dumps with an RC-100. Also used it for moving brush and logs for the excavator, so you're not having to transfer multiple times. Awesome work brother, wish I was closer, I'd enjoy working with you.
That is one awesome machine that eats slabs of concrete like it is candy, the out put is even more amazing by the way it sorts out the different size materials you want and the stuff you don't want into other piles, even the way it sorts out the metal into another pile. WOW, what a machine.
That's pretty amazing, certainly went faster than I thought it would. Buddy of mine gets ground up asphalt on occasion. When he first started getting it, they had it completely crushed to ABC size, guess that was costing them too much time and money so now you get some ABC size, but the bulk of it is chunks ranging from 2-3" up to 18" chunks. Makes using it for roads way more difficult.
i thought he seed 11/2 bits rest goes back to hopper to be crushed again and if you look at it working this sounds right and looks right not sure where you got the 3 to 18 inch lumps from
This type of equipment is always fascinating. I moved self-propelled Komptech shredders, screens, and compost turners around New England and New York for a while, and, the most memorable part of the experience was in trying to get wound-up steel, rope, wire, etc, out of the things when they jammed. Hours and hours, on-site, while the guys that pitched the stuff in griped about what a "piece of crap" the machine was. It was a game to see if they could overwhelm or even break the equipment during demos, and you had to be able to identify and keep isolated those guys that thought it was funny to see a three-quarter million dollar machine sitting idle in a landfill. We also flew in a lot of very heavy parts, mostly big bearings and hydraulic motors, out of Austria at obscene costs just to keep these things running; maintenance and wear parts and the guys with the service trucks really added up, and could make a lot of really bad days. My time spent on those huge landfills and transfer stations out in New York state were not wasted, though. It was really an education.
Love the twisted-heavy-haul-logic lol... All joking aside, I enjoyed his quick walk-around on the crusher. I hauled plenty of screens and padding machines for the last job but only on six axles. Now that I do mostly wind and oilfield stuff, I don't get to play with the equipment these days, unless it's simply big pieces of a large machine. Always enjoy seeing what kind of projects you've gotten into from back east. By the way, I enjoyed the various views, from afar (showing how it sorted) and from the claw... The advantage of running all this through the crusher is obviously better than adding to the demo pile at a landfill. Very interesting stuff...
@letsdig18 Thanks for the videos im not an operator but do have some equipment on the farm. I have watched and listened to your helpful hints over the years and tried to put the instruction to use. today i needed to knock down some piles with the dozer when i got done and turned to look at it . it actually looked good . I am sure the farm will start looking better and better thanks for the helpful advice
You are getting some pretty good tonnage p/h yield, steady gets it done. Nice set up, the way you have it. Thanks for the update sir, enjoying the crushing series of videos.
it was quite relaxing to watch you crush concrete and to see charlie with another toy roll up into that jobsite. cant wait to see the progression of this job and all the stone that will have to be put down and spread. youll really get to break in your new to you dozer. looking forward to the next all new exciting video youll be putting out.
I was on a roller recently, with a crusher on site which ate through a pile of rocks the size of a country town school. It was primitive compared to this machine. It didn't screen, had no magnet and reduced the rocks to something the size of half house bricks. It left rebar in and cut star pickets into 3 pieces. This machine Chris and Charlie are using is very impressive.
Bought a property to build our camp on. It was a great deal but covered in trash. We raked everything up that was on top and hauled it to the dump. Dug a lot of the property up sorted through it. Once I was down to just about nothing left we leveled off the property with fill. Well worth it for the property we got though.
Chris, I appreciate all your videos and the time you spend editing them. A lot of individuals rush to post. You take the time to prepare them. Thank you again my friend. :-)
I'l turn 60 this summer. Used a lot of power tools in my youth without hearing protection and shot a lot of waterfowl on the Eastern shore of Maryland (ducks and geese) in the fall and winter, also without hearing protection. Have pretty significant hearing loss now. You all might want to be a bit more serious about wearing some hearing protection. Once it's gone, it's gone.
I think this will be one of your most watched videos. We all have watch the building pad you carved out of near solid rock. So after that we are all enjoying this. Thanks for sharing with us.
This video brought back memories. I worked in a rock quarry in the early eighties. Only our crusher was powered by a BIG supercharged V-12. In SE Kansas we called ours "road rock" and it was 1 1/4" down. I really enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work!
Loved the video..... I've been watching the channel for about two months now and this is about the time most viewers become "experts" at your craft. I will confine my suggestions to those I make to you while watching your videos. You will be happy to know you almost always follow my advice. :) Amazing machine, thanks for taking the time to show it. Not sure if this or the screen is my favorite though.
Charlie's screener was an impressive machine. This one's even more. Awesome ! Both Charlie and his buddy, sharing each's awesome money making machine is brilliant ! Thanks Chris for showing us this !
In our area of Ohio that’s called black jack wax your pushing. At times it’s so sticky it’s about impossible to move. Sets up like concrete until it’s wet then it turns into a mess. Never seen it mixed with so much other material. No wonder it’s about impossible to move. Driving over it when it’s damp like that sure does make it tough to move. Great 👍 content a pleasure to watch. Looks like Charlie was set up and ready for you 👍 🇺🇸🦅🌏⚓️🇺🇸
The one draw back on re-using the material is keeping it CLEAN! If a bunch of dirt and plastic gets in the product most municipalities won’t accept it except for sub-grade fill
Yeah, we got all the basic food groups in this video. Excavator, skid-steer, Dozer, wide load semi-truck and even a Bonus Guest Crusher - the only thing missin' was the big yellow dumptruck. btw, I have a life behind a desk so this is my 1 hour a day where I get to nerd out and get obsessive about heavy equipment. Let the dreamers dream, bud - geez.
Here in Southern California there are several aggregate/material yards that have crushers. People pay to to dump their waste concrete and the yard crushes it into Crushed Misc. Base and sells it buy the ton. They get paid for their raw material and for their finished product. It's an amazing money machine.
Hey also as a test and start for screening. Put your blade rake on! Push it out in a long run, to rake out the bigger stuff. The push into pile and screen!
a good crusher screen combo actually makes you money once you are using it in the right place... this is the reason why most demolition jobs over here in my area in Austria are in place recycling ones and the material most of the time does not even get moved to a storage site but often lands on a different construction project for reuse... (and sometimes is the base for the new building being built in place) you just gotta know what you need to use and where to get stuff done... and it makes a difference if you only see the money at the moment you spend it or if you plan ahead and see the money later on as well in the same moment you invest
Nice work Chris. Friend loaned me a compact excavator couple weeks ago, watching you payed off digging stumps and trees up. Had to dig 180 feet for new water line.😉
Leave the pile of trash for long enough, and the wood will rot. Then it's not a problem! In the meantime, keep moving it 'back into the woods', until there's no more woods to move it to. Then just pile it up, dump enough decent soil over the top to make it look pretty, and call it a landscape feature.
on a state highway they were busting up the concrete the truck had a ram the width of the truck 6 inches to a foot thick maybe 6 feet tall ,, they would lift it in a track and drop it over and over move the truck a foot or so and repeat then go in remove the wire and rod .then use what was left for the new road shoulders ..around the drain pipes .. hard to say what way is faster both did a great job ,,
@@katschs3965 He might be using ear plugs. The Detroits at work were so loud that at times (after about a month of 12 hour days ) we often had both ear plugs and ear muffs on at the same time.
So, I'm going to send chris a video of the shaking table and the throat of the crusher. You will then understand it would not be easy to "fall in" unless you are concrete.
10 views, 6 comments and 110 likes. RUclips again. 😁😂 Helloooo! 😎 A lot of work, Chris. Top video! 👍 Have a great weekend. 😊🌅 22:30 Chris: "Grandma here!" 😂
Beautiful thing... much less waste for a landfill that's for sure. Makes you almost want to see what that would do on that other site you're working on with that sandstone... won't help with the automobile sized boulders... but the smaller ones this would make hauling and landfill spaces much less rocky with crap that can't be usefull for anything..almost..
Yay ive been waiting to see the crusher. I looked up a crusher video last night and watched one crush all kinds of stuff like big rocks and metal containers. It was badas
cement powder here (Australia) has 15% flyash in it, so any sort of crushing of concrete on site like that would require keeping it all wet and good dust control because of the silica content, or workplace health and safety would give us a hefty fine and close us down. Mostly concrete has to go back to specialist yards to be crushed where they have all the controls in place. Still cheaper than dumping it though.
Keep your ears open and learn. That banter between Chris and Charlie has taught me more about this business than anything... hauling costs, expenses, load limits, and the reasons how, and why, they do what they do.
I'd classify this as an educational opportunity!
Thanks guys!
Yep, little bit of effort and knowing the right things saves you a crapton of money.
way better than learning from 1puglife
Also known as a Master Class...
I TOTALLY ENJOYED WATCHING THE VIDEO CHR I S 😊
It’s good to see Charlie again. I miss seeing him and hearing his stories.
He does have a way of phrasing a sentence.
He does have great stories
He comments on ever video.
I like that you're keeping the concrete out of the landfill and it's making usable material for the job.
Why? You know all the concrete's components (gravel, sand, water, cement) originated FROM the earth, right? After using them for 50 or so years, why not return everything back to the earth? In fact, by using as a roadbed, you are essentially filling the land. This was an smart economic decision, not an ecological one.
@@kellerrobert80 does it offend you that it's ecologically sound as well. At least putting this back in the ground as base means you're not digging more rock out. On the cost side its marginal at best. When you add in the extra time/labour cost it works out about the same.
As others have said, it was great hearing Charlie tell the history of the machine and how it works. AND the money side hauling to dump vs crushing, etc.
when we tore out old concrete at the mulch yard we brought in a crusher and used the crushed concrete to build the base for the asphalt that got laid. it saves a ton of money to repurpose that concrete like this.
Those concrete crushers are beasts!
We use the crushed concrete as base for our concrete😂. Its the best base material out there. Absolutely perfect in muddy areas
Recycling at its very best. Turning something that costs money into something worth money!
If only we could do this with plastic...
Something therapeutic about seeing concrete being crushed, thanks for sharing all your great work Chris! 👍
I think it's unanimous... everyone loves to see Charlie.
What an amazing friend, Chris you are so very lucky, and blessed.
Certainly eats it up Chris, great to have friends like Charlie with all his oddball toys that he has nice job.
Charlie said it wasn’t his crusher.
@@strokiinyourmom
But he says he shares it with his best friend with his own screening machine. Scratch my back, I'll scratch yours !
A win/win situation here ! $$$ Brilliant !
Good friends like that r hard to come by theses days
@@stephencarlson1160 so true.
@@marcryvon ok? I never said he didn’t or that it wasn’t a good investment so your comment isn’t necessary.
Love to see things cleaned up and looking good. Thanks CHris
I was looking forward to seeing how this machine removed the rebar and wire. That's cool!
That thing is awesome! Road base made right on the site automatically, the things they make nowadays!
This is so cool, I just started watching your channel a few weeks ago, and now you're using a piece of equipment that was built where I work. I started a new job with Terex (who build the Evoquip brand equipment) last year. That machine was built right here in Northern Ireland!
Just curious, was it built in the old Delorean plant?
@@loskop100 no amego it's not built in the old car works that's long long long gone.
Terex have plants all over Northern Ireland there's one where I live in Omagh.
Recycling concrete is as good as it gets in construction. A fantastic resource, does good, performs as good as or better than stone and the obvious environmental benefit. I only use stone when I cannot get RCP. I love the way the fines compact.
Gave you more abc than I thought it might. Saves having to pay to truck it in. Loved the camera angle on the dozer where you had the camera on the cage outside. Was able to see well.
That crusher was super cool! It ripped through all of that concrete with little effort. That really gives you an idea on how well the crusher was built. The manufacturer really knew what they were doing when they built this machine. That crushed concrete is a beautiful material and it will look really nice all spread out at the end of this job!! Great work Chris! 👍
Great Job Chris. Great Video, this answers some of my previous questions. Figure approx 250 ton of gravel @ $25.00 a ton ,probably 16 truckloads delivered. plus deducting in excess of 20 trucks of hauling out the bulk concrete + dumping charges then bringing in new rock.. Great business decision. love to see final breakdown of the reclamation project. Thanks again
I couldn't stop thinking about that ball of keys wearing the switch with all the vibrations, great to see Charlie with his skills working with you
Some free gravel for top dressing on driveways... Lovely..
Always love watching a crusher..
Rocks, tree, cars..
I wouldn’t have it on my driveway, we’ve used it for pipe begging and construction entrances and it is full of wire normally.
@@Nunyabusiness007 there are a lot of parking lots mmade from this stuff, just need to pick out a few pieces of wire for the first week
@@jonschneck4559 they showed the amount of wire that came out after the first pass... I think they will use it to top stone where they are..but a shame really...
@@SBEARD12345 Chris said he is top coating it with clean rock. I use it for driveways and parking lots, some plants leave more wire some produce a very clean product
@@jonschneck4559 okay.. just thinking we have seen him get free sand, now free rock, free wood for a fire in his house...
All he needs is a wood chipper and he would get free weed suppression too. Though cost might be prohibitive, unless pre used
And I don't think I know somebody else that does a video a day.
Thank you Chris
Its always awesome when Charlie shows up with another piece of equipment to entertain us. Thanks Chris
WOW!! Can you imagine how much more you'd have if you hadn't buried the rest of it? That machine is awesome!! Great video Chris!
Wow, that went quickly! Nice looking end product.
Glad you had the wind in your favor that day. That crusher is amazing. Awesome being able to see it operate up close and personal.
A moment of silence for pins and bushings please!
If the animal hospital job didn’t hurt the pins and bushings nothing would
Charlie is always full of information and he’s funny. Thought I had seen it all. Absolutely awesome
Chris, you should look at the severe duty root grapple for the skid steer. We used to load 8'x8' sections of floor slab into dumps with an RC-100. Also used it for moving brush and logs for the excavator, so you're not having to transfer multiple times.
Awesome work brother, wish I was closer, I'd enjoy working with you.
That is one awesome machine that eats slabs of concrete like it is candy, the out put is even more amazing by the way it sorts out the different size materials you want and the stuff you don't want into other piles, even the way it sorts out the metal into another pile. WOW, what a machine.
That's pretty amazing, certainly went faster than I thought it would. Buddy of mine gets ground up asphalt on occasion. When he first started getting it, they had it completely crushed to ABC size, guess that was costing them too much time and money so now you get some ABC size, but the bulk of it is chunks ranging from 2-3" up to 18" chunks. Makes using it for roads way more difficult.
i thought he seed 11/2 bits rest goes back to hopper to be crushed again and if you look at it working this sounds right and looks right not sure where you got the 3 to 18 inch lumps from
This type of equipment is always fascinating. I moved self-propelled Komptech shredders, screens, and compost turners around New England and New York for a while, and, the most memorable part of the experience was in trying to get wound-up steel, rope, wire, etc, out of the things when they jammed. Hours and hours, on-site, while the guys that pitched the stuff in griped about what a "piece of crap" the machine was. It was a game to see if they could overwhelm or even break the equipment during demos, and you had to be able to identify and keep isolated those guys that thought it was funny to see a three-quarter million dollar machine sitting idle in a landfill. We also flew in a lot of very heavy parts, mostly big bearings and hydraulic motors, out of Austria at obscene costs just to keep these things running; maintenance and wear parts and the guys with the service trucks really added up, and could make a lot of really bad days. My time spent on those huge landfills and transfer stations out in New York state were not wasted, though. It was really an education.
Love the twisted-heavy-haul-logic lol... All joking aside, I enjoyed his quick walk-around on the crusher. I hauled plenty of screens and padding machines for the last job but only on six axles. Now that I do mostly wind and oilfield stuff, I don't get to play with the equipment these days, unless it's simply big pieces of a large machine. Always enjoy seeing what kind of projects you've gotten into from back east.
By the way, I enjoyed the various views, from afar (showing how it sorted) and from the claw... The advantage of running all this through the crusher is obviously better than adding to the demo pile at a landfill. Very interesting stuff...
Ending up with alot of processed concrete! Didn't think it would be even close to that. Good seeing charlie again. Great friend to have
More recyleing is what we need more of . Great video .
@letsdig18 Thanks for the videos im not an operator but do have some equipment on the farm. I have watched and listened to your helpful hints over the years and tried to put the instruction to use. today i needed to knock down some piles with the dozer when i got done and turned to look at it . it actually looked good . I am sure the farm will start looking better and better thanks for the helpful advice
Beating up those pins on bucket pretty good
That bucket view was legit
"Thumb-view"...
You are getting some pretty good tonnage p/h yield, steady gets it done. Nice set up, the way you have it. Thanks for the update sir, enjoying the crushing series of videos.
I was thinking that Charlie should have ear plugs, but then I remembered he's married. lol
it was quite relaxing to watch you crush concrete and to see charlie with another toy roll up into that jobsite. cant wait to see the progression of this job and all the stone that will have to be put down and spread. youll really get to break in your new to you dozer. looking forward to the next all new exciting video youll be putting out.
Always good to see ole Charlie.
Wow, that rig is a money maker. Makes for a nice new toy for Chris and Charlie to play with. Thanks for Sharing!!!
I was on a roller recently, with a crusher on site which ate through a pile of rocks the size of a country town school. It was primitive compared to this machine. It didn't screen, had no magnet and reduced the rocks to something the size of half house bricks. It left rebar in and cut star pickets into 3 pieces. This machine Chris and Charlie are using is very impressive.
That black soil's definitely worth screening, even if it's just to use on the farm.
Can't believe how fast that processed that concrete..
Bought a property to build our camp on. It was a great deal but covered in trash. We raked everything up that was on top and hauled it to the dump. Dug a lot of the property up sorted through it. Once I was down to just about nothing left we leveled off the property with fill. Well worth it for the property we got though.
Chris, I appreciate all your videos and the time you spend editing them. A lot of individuals rush to post. You take the time to prepare them. Thank you again my friend. :-)
That is really cool. I heard of those. Never seen one work before. Sweet machine
Some LARGE machines in his episode for sure. That bucket is enormous! lol Solid stuff bud! Great work!
The crusher moved more material than I thought it would.
I'l turn 60 this summer. Used a lot of power tools in my youth without hearing protection and shot a lot of waterfowl on the Eastern shore of Maryland (ducks and geese) in the fall and winter, also without hearing protection. Have pretty significant hearing loss now. You all might want to be a bit more serious about wearing some hearing protection. Once it's gone, it's gone.
I think this will be one of your most watched videos. We all have watch the building pad you carved out of near solid rock. So after that we are all enjoying this. Thanks for sharing with us.
This video brought back memories. I worked in a rock quarry in the early eighties. Only our crusher was powered by a BIG supercharged V-12. In SE Kansas we called ours "road rock" and it was 1 1/4" down. I really enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work!
Loved the video..... I've been watching the channel for about two months now and this is about the time most viewers become "experts" at your craft. I will confine my suggestions to those I make to you while watching your videos. You will be happy to know you almost always follow my advice. :) Amazing machine, thanks for taking the time to show it. Not sure if this or the screen is my favorite though.
Charlie's screener was an impressive machine. This one's even more. Awesome !
Both Charlie and his buddy, sharing each's awesome money making machine is brilliant !
Thanks Chris for showing us this !
Loved this video. So well put together with valuable time taken for different camera angles etc. One of the best so far.
seeing this again 3 yrs later, because I love watching you working..
Chris you done a great job with the placement of the camara's It took a lot of for thought, EXCELLENT JOB Thanks!!
In our area of Ohio that’s called black jack wax your pushing. At times it’s so sticky it’s about impossible to move. Sets up like concrete until it’s wet then it turns into a mess. Never seen it mixed with so much other material. No wonder it’s about impossible to move. Driving over it when it’s damp like that sure does make it tough to move. Great 👍 content a pleasure to watch. Looks like Charlie was set up and ready for you 👍
🇺🇸🦅🌏⚓️🇺🇸
Black Jack Wax is what? Mix of clay and organic?
The one draw back on re-using the material is keeping it CLEAN! If a bunch of dirt and plastic gets in the product most municipalities won’t accept it except for sub-grade fill
Spits out the metal. That's cool. Made a lot more concrete than I was expecting.
Love watching you working
I'am amazed at how fast the machine chews through the material , it looks like you can feed it a lot faster than the Charlie's screener
That crusher was shakin so hard that my eye drops on the table fell over.
I've been waiting what feels like forever for this
Yeah, we got all the basic food groups in this video. Excavator, skid-steer, Dozer, wide load semi-truck and even a Bonus Guest Crusher - the only thing missin' was the big yellow dumptruck. btw, I have a life behind a desk so this is my 1 hour a day where I get to nerd out and get obsessive about heavy equipment. Let the dreamers dream, bud - geez.
Here in Southern California there are several aggregate/material yards that have crushers. People pay to to dump their waste concrete and the yard crushes it into Crushed Misc. Base and sells it buy the ton. They get paid for their raw material and for their finished product. It's an amazing money machine.
That concrete crusher is awesome! I've seen them but never had the chance to watch one work. Definitely a savings on having crush and run trucked in.
Wow the difference between the two buckets the small one gets covered up by the thumb but Chris as usual looking amazing
Enjoyed all of the different camera angles and periodic walk-arounds.
Hey also as a test and start for screening. Put your blade rake on! Push it out in a long run, to rake out the bigger stuff. The push into pile and screen!
a good crusher screen combo actually makes you money once you are using it in the right place... this is the reason why most demolition jobs over here in my area in Austria are in place recycling ones and the material most of the time does not even get moved to a storage site but often lands on a different construction project for reuse... (and sometimes is the base for the new building being built in place)
you just gotta know what you need to use and where to get stuff done... and it makes a difference if you only see the money at the moment you spend it or if you plan ahead and see the money later on as well in the same moment you invest
Wow!! That machine is a beast!!! Great video...I've been waiting. Hopefully next video you will show it again
I enjoy how you finish a project as you say "pretty".
Would enjoy watching Chris,Charlie and Justin work a large job together.
most relaxing and calming sounds and your voice make a natural music i really enjoy. Thanks for sharing. I'd like to add informative too :)
I was surprised how quick and how much you processed in a few hours. Great camera angle under the stick Chris
Cool to see the crusher in action. Made short work of that. Was surprised how quick it reduced into size.
Nice work Chris. Friend loaned me a compact excavator couple weeks ago, watching you payed off digging stumps and trees up. Had to dig 180 feet for new water line.😉
Chris lately it’s been all about Rocks, no matter what the finished product turn to profit. Great video. Thanks for sharing. Kevin
I was looking forward to the crusher. You didn't disappoint. Thanks!
Leave the pile of trash for long enough, and the wood will rot. Then it's not a problem!
In the meantime, keep moving it 'back into the woods', until there's no more woods to move it to. Then just pile it up, dump enough decent soil over the top to make it look pretty, and call it a landscape feature.
That exterior-mounted bulldozer footage was viscerally satisfying.
on a state highway they were busting up the concrete the truck had a ram the width of the truck 6 inches to a foot thick maybe 6 feet tall ,, they would lift it in a track and drop it over and over move the truck a foot or so and repeat then go in remove the wire and rod .then use what was left for the new road shoulders ..around the drain pipes .. hard to say what way is faster both did a great job ,,
Charlie if your going to stand up there at the mouth of that thing I think I would invest in a hand rail of some sort...
And a respirator. It can't be good breathing all that silica dust.
@@assassinlexx1993 prolonged exposure to concrete dust does cause Cancer.
And some ear protection!
@@katschs3965 He might be using ear plugs. The Detroits at work were so loud that at times (after about a month of 12 hour days ) we often had both ear plugs and ear muffs on at the same time.
So, I'm going to send chris a video of the shaking table and the throat of the crusher. You will then understand it would not be easy to "fall in" unless you are concrete.
You can always tell an old rock crusher operator, but you can't tell them much. They can't hear you.
Welcome to NC. If it isn't raining the wind is blowing like crazy!!
10 views, 6 comments and 110 likes. RUclips again. 😁😂
Helloooo! 😎
A lot of work, Chris. Top video! 👍 Have a great weekend. 😊🌅
22:30 Chris: "Grandma here!" 😂
That's "grandma gear."
That machine really gets the job done like you said Chris made some good time nice job 😎👍👍
Bashing the concrete slabs with the bucket like that looks so satisfying.
Beautiful thing... much less waste for a landfill that's for sure. Makes you almost want to see what that would do on that other site you're working on with that sandstone... won't help with the automobile sized boulders... but the smaller ones this would make hauling and landfill spaces much less rocky with crap that can't be usefull for anything..almost..
I'll have to say Chris this is one about the best videos you made keep us right where the action is seeing everything that was going on
Lippmann out of Milwaukee, WI builds some crazy rock crushers. I love watch them work!!
Of you can go through life and find a good friend. Make sure he has all the toys and willing to share. Be safe guys.
Haha I wouldn’t want to stand up on the crusher while it’s running like that. Pretty sketchy.
He did have the emergency stop cord in his hand, but I totally agree not the sharpest knife in the box.👍🏻
INDUSTRIAL LIBERATOR a? BATTIERS NOT REQUIRED..
@@donaldtriumph1682 we had an 18 year old kid fall in one and die at a topsoil yard a few years back. It was terrible.
@@DauminiqueTheDumpTruckDriver if. He fell in a crusher and went through he was dead when he hit the shaking table
Yay ive been waiting to see the crusher. I looked up a crusher video last night and watched one crush all kinds of stuff like big rocks and metal containers. It was badas
Today I Learned about this amazing machine. Thank you!
Awesome camera placement in front of the dozer and bucket view!!
It's great to have friends like Charlie, who in turn have friends with big machines.
Great to see Charlie.... he's very knowledgeable
18 your lucky to have a friend like Mr Charlie tough guy to beat!!
Those shots from the thumb were awesome!
Your backup buzzer seems to have quit. Need to get right on the repair of that. Heh get
Some can be switched on & off, depending if you're on a "public"
job or not. Or if you're a rebel.
🤟🏽🐻
cement powder here (Australia) has 15% flyash in it, so any sort of crushing of concrete on site like that would require keeping it all wet and good dust control because of the silica content, or workplace health and safety would give us a hefty fine and close us down. Mostly concrete has to go back to specialist yards to be crushed where they have all the controls in place. Still cheaper than dumping it though.
Fly ash is coal ash in case you didn't know. Your so socialized it's a wonder you piss without permission .
well thats a nice friendly comment...