Yooper Rocketman Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 So, today, I was the last man (for the fourth time in five work sessions) finishing up number 5 of five concrete pours on our chapter hangar. A 75’ x 70’ EAA Chapter hangar, broken down into 5 manageable pours for a total of 125 yards of cement, I actually finished the day in under 14 hours of time (pour #4 was an 18 hour day). Thank god my wife is understanding, as her honey do list was pushed off for this late fall project. Dedicated old men shouldn’t be messed with!!! Tom 8 Quote
MooneyMitch Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 One cannot [or should not] argue with experience ! Excellent job gentlemen !!! 1 Quote
RLCarter Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 lol, I did a 3’x5’ slab on the side of my hangar for the man door and it took 4hrs....in my defense or excuse that did include loading the material, forming and hand mixing the concrete 1 1 Quote
Skates97 Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 I remember when we moved to AZ when I was 18. My grandparents came to visit, my grandpa would have been 81, and had worked hard his whole life. (Was still driving to the farm up in the mountains at age 90 to take his water turn with the irrigation) Anyway, we had to dig huge holes for the citrus trees going in (mature trees in boxes). I was worn out, taking a break, and there was grandpa still digging away. One of the greatest men I've ever known, along with the sons he raised, one of whom I'm lucky to call my dad. 5 Quote
tigers2007 Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 Tom that is some epic work. Is that a special concrete mix for the cold weather? How thick is it? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Yooper Rocketman Posted November 2, 2019 Author Report Posted November 2, 2019 6 hours ago, tigers2007 said: Tom that is some epic work. Is that a special concrete mix for the cold weather? How thick is it? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk The first 4 pours were 6 bag mix with ash and fiber, warm water for number 4. But, the temps were dropping for every pour and number 4 was a bitch. It was 8 hours before I could get the power trowel on it and the temps were dropping fast. I ended up hand troweling the entire slab so I could get Styrofoam on it before it cooled down too much. The slab was in the 50's the next morning, despite outside temp of 22 degrees. The one we did yesterday had 1% chloride added to it (I cried uncle). That helped a ton as I was done troweling be 6 PM and had it insulated, tools clean, and was driving home by 7 PM. Tom Quote
tigers2007 Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 Are you sure you’re not Italian? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Quote
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