Another vote for buying a mixer and doing it at your own pace. Unless you HAVE to have a large monolithic pour. A year ago I did some cast concrete raised garden bed panels, mixing by hand. Didn't enjoy it. Last summer when starting a cast concrete pillar project I went ahead and sprung for the Harbor Frieght mixer, seconding that it will only handle 2x60# at a time. Worked great for my purposes. Just used it again today for an ancillary project on that back patio. The footers for the pillars were about 3cu' each which was about 7 bags. The mixer made that quick work.
Made it from scratch. PIcked a shape. Split a 2" PVC pipe on the tablesaw, worked up a braced form / box, used a pvc FOR RENT sign to craft the curved top surface in the bottom of the mold, filled the voids with polyurethane resin so it could support a concrete cast. Cast it 3x with months-old concrete before I got a decent one intact out of the mold. Then did a bunch of bodywork on that concrete buck, getting rid of defects and making it smooth and pretty. Then I cast it 2x in RTV silicone, first making a gang-mold. Pulled and inverted those silicone molds in the gang-mold tray and you've seen the results.Where did you get the molds for the capstone pieces?
Any Idea, How the Drum tilts to empty?I have been casually watching for one of these vintage 3 point hitch cement mixers for a couple of decades with no success. Friction drive off of a PTO shaft extension. All of the similar ones sold today are gear or chain driven by a PTO driveline shaft. It would look just right on the back of my 1957 Oliver Super 55.
Thanks. Total time isn't bad, it's just taking a lot of different skillsets and tools. Anybody with just a bit of woodworking and concrete handling skills can do it, though.That does look like a lot of work. The results are terrific looking.
It is mounted on the 3 point arms, as it is lifted it tilts to dump the concrete out of the drum.Any Idea, How the Drum tilts to empty?
so your cost came out HIGHER and it was a lot harder work? think you should have gone with the 'yard at a time' guysWell, We did it. I was able to recruit an able-bodied friend to help.
9 cu ft gas powered tow behind rental mixer, Rental trailer to haul the pallet of 56 concrete bags. Mixer was able to take 6 bags at a time, Closest we could get the truck/trailer was about 50 feet away so had to haul the bags that far. Was able to rig up a 'Chute' the mixer could dump into it then slide down into the forms. Took us about 6 hours and had 4 bags left over.
That was hard work. I bet I'm stiff tomorrow. Cost actually came out fair bit higher than it would have to use the "Yard at a time guys" who quoted $550/yard
