Hobby_Man22
Well-known member
I'd prefer to overdo it than underdo it and regret it later. I may buy a forklift one day. Is there a big difference in cost?
People do unnecessary stuff all the timeGuess not. Could have sworn I read somewhere of guys making a thicker area in their slab for a lift. Bendpak requires 4.25" slab for a 10k lift. That's all I would need.
Because not everyone does quality work?How come I see sidewalk edges and it's like their was a big air pocket when they poured the cement that never got filled so that little section is only like 2" instead of 4"
Honey comb? Usually poured to dry.It was actually a patio for a house.
It's like where I work...main plant floor is 36" thick, but then we have some equipment that weighs in well over 2500 tons....and used to have a forklift that was rated for 80,000 pound lift at 96" from the mast. The original floor was poured in 1942, and is 300' wide and 1.26 miles long.One company I worked for built a new shop. 6" slab. It was an HVAC shop and had a forklift capable of lifting 10,000 rolls of steel. So you have a 10,000 pound roll of steel on a forklift that probably weighed 15,000 pounds! No issues with the floor.
It was actually a patio for a house.
well he's got the money then. **** it.At my last place the previous owner had put a 20x30ft extension on the back of the 20x20ft garage. He didn't do anything about the change in grade & just poured concrete to bring it up to level... damn near 25 yards of it.
I should point out that he was an aerospace engineer...
That extension cost him $36k, I paid $99k for the garage, house & the 1/2 acre of lane it was on... in 1997.well he's got the money then. **** it.
Usually cheaper to buy an existing property. That's what I did. Now I'm just adding on to make it suit me better.That extension cost him $36k, I paid $99k for the garage, house & the 1/2 acre of lane it was on... in 1997.
