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Commercial construction work pictures

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
I put about 6" of this black 5/8" looks like grindings. A very ginger touch on the hoe pack, then I shot the inverts in the 3 T's to see how much it moved. Sitting in a 1:1 slope of pea gravel, I expected it to move a little.
The middle T was 0, the near end was -0.15" and the far tee was -0.50" as referenced from a 1% slope. With a foot of fall over the 100' run I'm good with that. My guess is I lifted the middle a bit. :)
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That 8" has to wait for the form and pour and strip, that's looking like 2-3 weeks. I picked the perfect month to start my pension. It is so slow, I just left it all there, dump truck and all.
I will need shoring for the next dig there. It is barely 5' deep but it is all soft import that will play heck keeping out of the bottom. I will see if I can rent a 4x15 steel box that I can drag along. The shortest side runs are 15' so that will be workable.
No inspection needed so I will trunk in the main run and just bury combos in pea gravel, hammer it, then dig the side branches.
It is a wierd setup with formed and poured CB's that capture trench drains, and the sides of the CB's are in tensioned pours so no traditional CB would work. The pipe pops in the bottom vertically.
 

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
I wanted 30" spreaders but settled for 36".
It's a 4x16 and weighs 4600, which is doable with the 120.
I have a single set of speed shoring and two jacks to do the cleanout outside of the footings.
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skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
We got the outside done without the shoring. The site guys have used a bunch of this black non-spec material and dolled it all up just for me to tear it to shreds.
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They screwed up and did not arrange for any help. The plumber is older than me and pretty stove up. He was done in by the end of the day.
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We get a couple of helpers tomorrow, which is good. Pointless to gear up without the help.
 

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
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I got my box of rocks within reach. All good.
This is the end of the line set. Then I got to come dig back at it from the sides. The only way to do it's the backfill and then dig it back up again.

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skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
Or so I had planned. I started looking at it and hey, I can reach the end of that trench if I straddle the box.
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I reached that, then went around and dug against the side of the box, and pulled a notch away from it on my side. then I got back beyond it and stabbed it out of there. Reset across the other ditch and Sam cleaned up the last little bit into the bucket.
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CM1995

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Joined
Jan 21, 2007
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13,379
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
SK that glacial material looks very similar to the river gravel in Costa Rica. Volcanic in nature, worn and rounded by tumbling down the river to the Pacific Ocean. Great material to work with. Probably hauled in 5-6K yards to fill in a development many years ago.
 

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
We got the deep stuff in first per rule #1. This is the sanitary, and that trench is half in the deep trench.
I dug it far enough for a 20', and then turned around and worked back to that.
The plan was bury that 20' except for the couplings so the inspector can eyeball that. That was my escape path.
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I set the laser so it could shoot over the track, and then nosed right up to the forms to reach the orange marks and bring it under that hairpin and the 8 pack of rebar for the tension tie across the building.
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skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
I have been buying pea gravel for this job and getting reimbursed for it from the closest pit, Miles Sand and Gravel in Shelton. It has a phone to the office for remote scale operations.They are a big outfit around here, and I think their name should have something to do with the miles of conveyors they use!
Driving out along the bank run coming to the plant.
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add a conveyor and a bend. That's State Route 101 overhead.

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on the other side it goes like the energizer bunny.
Then it turns up into the mine site.

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skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
You can find their sites all over, some with tunnels under the road for the conveyors as they expand outward from the plant. They don't move the plant to the rock, they move the rock to the plant.
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They sell a lot of concrete and go through a bunch of sand. They have a fleet of double belly dumps to haul it to the plants, and they get it at the sand pit near Roy. This is the only sand dredge setup I have seen in fresh water. It has one of those conveyor through the pipe runs that would be a bugger to work on.
Screenshot 2024-04-11 6.50.41 PM.png
 

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,668
Location
washington
They did not make it easy. We added a few inches of crushed and compacted it against the newly poured pool wall.
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We buried the pipe in several tons of pea gravel and capped it with some more crushed to give it a foot of cover. The site guys can take it from there.
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I used some gentle swing persuasion to pull the pipe into the long bell joint.

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The site guys need access to start backfilling Monday, so I buried that stick and left the joints exposed for the inspector. That usually works OK.
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