Concrete dumper, mixidump etc etc

Giles

Giles

Well-known member
generator and a fleet of Belles :rolleyes: ... dumper the stuff in and buy plenty of 1RBs :giggle: ... sounds like a nightmare job ... how much have you got to make ?
Will depend on the ground when we dig it, we’ve got one of those big belle at350s so 350l and towable ferrying in 1m3 dry then adding water is an option do it over a few days
 
S

Smiffy

Well-known member
Will depend on the ground when we dig it, we’ve got one of those big belle at350s so 350l and towable ferrying in 1m3 dry then adding water is an option do it over a few days

Be like the indians. Tip the dry mix on the floor and just use a Rotavator to wet it upon bulk
 
F

fred

Well-known member
The valley it’s in is basically dead end valley with hell of a hill into it, bottom of kinder scout then there’s a 10 ton bridge then Ive a country track rutted to death along a river to an old gate with stone posts that i can careful just squeeze through mirrors almost touching with Amarok, about .7 mile to gate then through a stream then opens into a field up a grass slope. Fields that’s pretty dry and about 300 yards uphill
would a dumper make it from the road to where you need the muck ?
 
M

Maxus

Well-known member
I've been thinking about how I can utilise my micro to help mix up cement on landscaping projects (probably no feasible for me in reality). Seems to me you want to consider something similar as getting ready mix could be risky, potentially an expensive f**k up and at the very least highly stressful.

Could you not get all the ballast and bags of cement ready next to where you'll need to pour it with your 4x4 and tipper? If so, once all set up, you could load a mixer with a mini digger and have a couple of guys with those belle warrior wheel barrows? I'm sure it's possible to mix and pour 6m3 in a day. A pump to pull water from the stream would be handy too.
 
B

bobthebuilder

Well-known member
mate made a mixing trough ,mixs 1/2 cube at a time with 3 ton digger
 
Antony Holmes

Antony Holmes

Well-known member
1635887987195.jpeg

1/4 of m3 per mix
 
V8Druid

V8Druid

do it as well as you can,but learn to do it better
I'll let you know if it works, picked it up on Wednesday night :ROFLMAO: got a lot of work for it coming up!
was fancying that myself, but a loooong way from me
 
maz

maz

Well-known member
was fancying that myself, but a loooong way from me
Can always borrow it if you have a job for it ;) if I had your hydrema I would have skipped this and went straight to a Kilworth pan mixer...don't have anything that can manage 60lpm flow though sadly, or the weight even!
 
V8Druid

V8Druid

do it as well as you can,but learn to do it better
Can always borrow it if you have a job for it ;) if I had your hydrema I would have skipped this and went straight to a Kilworth pan mixer...don't have anything that can manage 60lpm flow though sadly, or the weight even!
very kind offer Boyo .... it's the 500 miles that killed my interest in it, in the first place ... not yer average palletfreight load :rolleyes: ... IIRC it wasn't dear when posted on FB MP .... and yeh the 'Drema's 90l/min. 'd handle a pan fine
didn't think that these were dear ....

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65 miles from me and pans seem to hold their money well for moving on, when finished with
 
V8Druid

V8Druid

do it as well as you can,but learn to do it better
I think the teagle spira mix is going to be a better option than the cheap pan mixers for mixing small quantities.
yeh they certainly look a good tool :cool: ... a 3 x 1.5 m sheet'd roll up into a 950 dia drum to knock one up, but can't think of anyone with an IP rolls, locally to bang a sheet through... only one I knew of, the bloke packed up and sold his :(:censored::rolleyes:
morgan IP 2500 x 10.JPG
 
maz

maz

Well-known member
yeh they certainly look a good tool :cool: ... a 3 x 1.5 m sheet'd roll up into a 950 dia drum to knock one up, but can't think of anyone with an IP rolls, locally to bang a sheet through... only one I knew of, the bloke packed up and sold his :(:censored::rolleyes:
View attachment 36215
“locally” - try the “country” now mate, either nobody can make anything or doesnt want to. I had a dream of buying some nissen huts for cheap storage on the farm, got the bases already poured since WW2 when POW’s used them, try finding an affordable place for rolled sheets in UK. We really are just becoming a useless service industry :cry:
 
V8Druid

V8Druid

do it as well as you can,but learn to do it better
How much for they go for can you remember ?
I had £8.5k for 'em Aiden ... dealer bought 'em ... were worth circa £10k to an end user .....
were a lovely set of rollers ...
put some plate through them in the time I had them ....
you should've bought 'em ;)... I put most of my gear up in the old CEF and quite a few ppl had stuff :cool:... even Tim (Trax) had a couple of machine tools off me :)
morgan IP rolls plate.jpg
 
V8Druid

V8Druid

do it as well as you can,but learn to do it better
“locally” - try the “country” now mate, either nobody can make anything or doesnt want to. I had a dream of buying some nissen huts for cheap storage on the farm, got the bases already poured since WW2 when POW’s used them, try finding an affordable place for rolled sheets in UK. We really are just becoming a useless service industry :cry:
nail on the head there Boyo .....
tried Cladco, up your way for rolled 'wriggly' sheet? ....
trouble is -- getting a decent thickness ... those nissens were 0.9mm (22swg) and self supporting, covered in pitch and most were framed too :rolleyes:
 
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