My old boss uses one of these to tie steel. I used to use one to tie bags of coal.No, it ties them with wire. Didn’t think zip ties on rebar was up to spec?
That’s my go to. Perforated pipe at the bottom and 4m clean right to the top. I’ve seen a lot of walls use that method but forget to connect the drain into anything and create an underground swimming pool behind the wallas said ..... plenty of drainage at base behind any retainer .... wall beside my drive fell over, 'fore my ownership .. virtually zero drainage ... when i replaced the wall there was plenty of drainage and clean 40 went in behind it
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@Giles has got a much fancier one than thatMy old boss uses one of these to tie steel. I used to use one to tie bags of coal.
Oh that's connected all over the place Jimbo .... couple of collection/attenuation sumps and out into the field drains below ...... takes some sort of water when it pees down hereThat’s my go to. Perforated pipe at the bottom and 4m clean right to the top. I’ve seen a lot of walls use that method but forget to connect the drain into anything and create an underground swimming pool behind the wall![]()

Where are you guys getting this spec?over 450mm
always used to be 450mm/18" was the reg. ...... maybe been updated since i was doing fencing/railings ... min1100 high on the horizontal, 900mm on the rake, no gap to pass a 100mm sphereWhere are you guys getting this spec?
HSE look for edge protection where ever there is a risk of falling from height. This can be as little as one step. I've seen railings going up along an 8" step in the ground![]()
That footing isn’t wide enough for a retaining wall the rule is 2/3 the height width of the footing for overturning too many builders and Brickies do them like strip footings for normal wallsas said ..... plenty of drainage at base behind any retainer .... wall beside my drive fell over, 'fore my ownership .. virtually zero drainage ... when i replaced the wall there was plenty of drainage and clean 40 went in behind it
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I didn’t see picture of found , I just replied to first post .That footing isn’t wide enough for a retaining wall the rule is 2/3 the height width of the footing for overturning too many builders and Brickies do them like strip footings for normal walls
You can go 4 times the width of the wall high without engineers drawing involvement as well (have had bc ok this) but the key with any retaining wall is the bond between the wall and the footing. Dense blocks laid flat make a surprisingly strong wall (stronger than a poorly built hollow block wall imho) but the join to the footing is the weak point.That footing isn’t wide enough for a retaining wall the rule is 2/3 the height width of the footing for overturning too many builders and Brickies do them like strip footings for normal walls
Was replying to graham vince why it fell over originallyI didn’t see picture of found , I just replied to first post .
my fault for skipping through the thread![]()
was working on a third plus Giles .. plenty of drainage and a lot of what is behind it is virgin undisturbed ground, plus the tallest part is a curved wall (in the right direction) ... none of it is taller than three times the footing width.That footing isn’t wide enough for a retaining wall the rule is 2/3 the height width of the footing for overturning too many builders and Brickies do them like strip footings for normal walls
it fell over originally Giles, 'cos it was single 6" block on a foot wide strip, 6" deep, with zero drainage at bottom and no porous (clean stone) backfill or weeps .... just filled up with water and got pushed over, the year before I bought it ... I found 99% of it buried in where I was digging out me patch .... and crushed most of the blocks for hardcore/blinding, once down to levelWas replying to graham vince why it fell over originally
I found that welding of reinforcement became decidedly risky when there was a mass dumping of Chinese "alloy" cold deformed on the marketI’ve got 3 now of the max rebar guns best thing since sliced bread, used to tie by hand don’t miss the sore wrist and infected fingers from all the wire cuts from rusty wire.
don’t tie it as tight as proper steel fixers but for slabs and walls fantastic bits of kit. 10 mins training anyone can use them, got small and big ones.
we were doing loads of 16mm meshes for foundations in factories so 400+ ties in each. Started off welding but hot works etc, got the guns 1 guy 1 in each hand knock out a 4mx4m in under an hour