[AT] Concrete slab
carl gogol
cgogol at twcny.rr.com
Thu Nov 25 16:48:05 PST 2004
Nice story Cecil- Happy Thanksgiving
I was talking to a pole barn contractor a few years ago about how he
backfilled the poles. He told me that they have been back-filling with
Sackrete as it comes from the bag for as long as he has been in business and
he claims to have built around 1200 barns at the time. I was incredulous
that they wouldn't take the time to mix the concrete and do a real job. He
contended that it just didn't make any difference - in a practical sense.
He claimed that that is what has been done for pole barns forever and if you
ever pull out a pole it will be hard to tell that the concrete wasn't mixed.
[Who would know anyway?]
I don't know if I believe that it doesn't make a difference, but when we
moved here and time came to install a mailbox, I decided to try the dry
technique. I dug the holes ( two mailboxes) and leveled them with dry
Sackrete. Set the posts in and poured about half of the remaining bag in
the hole which filled the hole about half way. I was amazed at how easy it
was to square and position the posts compared to putting the freshly dug
material back in the hole. Once that was done, I poured a bit of water on
top and checked the level again. Satisfied, I poured the rest of the
Sackrete in to the top of the hole and poured a little more water on top and
tamped it flat with my shoe. Expensive backfill? Perhaps, but it is a lot
easier to find a few bags of Sackrete around here than 1A stone or fine
gravel in small quantities to do the job. Most of the time the dirt that
comes out of the holes is full of fist sized stones and just doesn't make
good fill.. I like the fact that the concrete eventually does harden and
effectively makes it a much larger post in the ground that will better
resist any upsetting forces that might be applied to the post. This makes
it act like a larger post with greater holding strength. I can't help but
to believe that it also protects the post from a lot of boring and chewing
insects that would otherwise thank you for putting that post in such a
convenient place for their meal.
When we set the 6X6 corner and gate posts for the garden a few years later,
I did the same thing. I have found it to be a easy and reliable way to set
posts and am glad that I have learned the trick.
YMMV
Carl Gogol
Manlius, NY
(2) AC D-14, AC 914H
Simplicity 3112 & 7116
Kubota F-2400
----- Original Message -----
From: "Cecil E Monson" <cmonson at hvc.rr.com>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2004 6:33 AM
Subject: Re: [AT] Concrete slab
> My father bought a 230 acre farm in 1943 with buildings that
> were almost worthless for a mixed dairy/grain farm such as ours. We took
> 3 years to rebuild the whole thing. We moved the house a hundred fifty
> feet closer to the road, tore down most of the old barn and all the old
> sheds. We dug the new basement for the house with a horse drawn scoop
> pulled by the 9N Ford and mixed all the concrete by hand for the footings,
> cast walls and basement floor. We also mixed all the concrete by hand
> for new concrete floors for the barn, milk house, 2 1/2 car garage and
> the chicken house. We build a big machine shed too but never put a
> concrete floor in it for some reason.
>
> I did 90% of the mixing for the whole thing. I started out as
> a 14 year old boy and was about 60 years old when I finished. grins.
> Actually, it was good exercise and was not a big problem for me. Our
> mix was almost always one scoop of Portland cement, 5 scoops of sand
> mixed with any gravel we had, and a small pail of water. I forget now
> how many scoops of sand and cement it took to make a batch in the
> mixer. We had the sand on our own property at several bends in the creek
> which ran north of the barn across the property and all the sand was
> hauled up from the creek with the 9N Ford. The farm had two old gravel
> pits on it and we found enough good sharp gravel in them to add to the
> mix with the sand from the creek. Any rocks we found on the property
> went into footings and some into the walls of the basement of the house.
> My father said that any rocks that go into the foundation would only
> strengthen the mix and not hurt it. He was right.
>
> My father was one for starting early and had my uncle there as
> a rule to help wheel cement from the mixer where I was working to the
> pour. He did not allow any cold joints and we worked until we got to
> where he wanted an expansion joint even if it meant a very long day.
> The mixer was powered by one of those little IHC engines that looks like
> a red block. I can say this, you can pour an awful lot of concrete with
> a mixer fed by hand if you start early and keep going. Mixers have a
> sort of growl to them as the gears go around and I can almost still hear
> ours running.
>
> I would say that mixing by hand with a gas engine powered mixer
> is not for everyone. People nowadays don't seem to be programmed to work
> like we did back then and want to take too many breaks. Pouring concrete
> should go without interruption as much as possible so you don't get bad
> spots in your pour. As to savings, I don't think we saved much money, it
> was just that there was no other way to make concrete where we lived back
> then. Sounds like Ralph had the same situation where he was in
> Saskatchewan
> and did things the same way. I'll bet his father started early in the day
> too......
>
> I agree with Bear about the use of Sakrete these days. I bought
> a sack of it a couple years ago to make a good base for a bird feeder
> post near the house. The salesman at the lumber yard told me to just dig
> the hole, pour the Sakrete in dry and set the pole. He said that ground
> moisture would do the rest without adding water. I don't know about this.
> I tried it and it took several years for the bird feeder pole to stop
> moving with the wind. I'd say I could have done just as well tamping the
> ground around the pole as I did with that Sakrete. It might be set up by
> now but I'd not bet on it.
>
> Cecil
> --
> The nicest thing about telling the truth is you never have to wonder
> what you said.
>
> Cecil E Monson
> Lucille Hand-Monson
> Mountainville, New York Just a little east of the North Pole
>
> Allis Chalmers tractors and equipment
>
> Free advice
>
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