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Default Here you go John ....

On 10/16/2018 5:49 PM, True North wrote:
I put a shovel or so of gravel in the bottom of the hole. I like to keep our damp soil away from the treated wood.
I do my mixing in the wheelbarrow. Don't recall seeing the dry mix dumped into the hole and then water sprayed on top.


It works just fine.


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Default Here you go John ....

On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 17:59:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/16/2018 5:49 PM, True North wrote:
I put a shovel or so of gravel in the bottom of the hole. I like to keep our damp soil away from the treated wood.
I do my mixing in the wheelbarrow. Don't recall seeing the dry mix dumped into the hole and then water sprayed on top.


It works just fine.

I have never seen a fence company mix concrete but they usually drive
the posts into the dirt at the bottom of the hole and add the dry
concrete to a post that is already pretty secure.
I have done a lot of this sort of thing setting PVC dock posts, post
wraps and pilings that are in several feet of water. If you make
"cookie dough" concrete and dump it in, the water comes right out
without souping up the concrete much at all. You better make sure you
have your Rebar in because it is still too stiff to push it in once
the concrete is in the pipe.
I did this to squeeze a little more life out of a bad dock for the HOA
while they were fighting about building a new one.
http://gfretwell.com/ftp/piling%20patch.jpg

4 years later they are still thinking about it and I have worked on
the pier a few more times.


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Default Here you go John ....

On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 18:57:46 -0400, wrote:

On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 17:59:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/16/2018 5:49 PM, True North wrote:
I put a shovel or so of gravel in the bottom of the hole. I like to keep our damp soil away from the treated wood.
I do my mixing in the wheelbarrow. Don't recall seeing the dry mix dumped into the hole and then water sprayed on top.


It works just fine.

I have never seen a fence company mix concrete but they usually drive
the posts into the dirt at the bottom of the hole and add the dry
concrete to a post that is already pretty secure.
I have done a lot of this sort of thing setting PVC dock posts, post
wraps and pilings that are in several feet of water. If you make
"cookie dough" concrete and dump it in, the water comes right out
without souping up the concrete much at all. You better make sure you
have your Rebar in because it is still too stiff to push it in once
the concrete is in the pipe.
I did this to squeeze a little more life out of a bad dock for the HOA
while they were fighting about building a new one.
http://gfretwell.com/ftp/piling%20patch.jpg

4 years later they are still thinking about it and I have worked on
the pier a few more times.



I've seen fences put up here. Most have 4x4 posts which are not 'driven' into the ground. The corner
posts are concreted in, as Luddite's video showed.
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Default Here you go John ....

On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 20:27:03 -0400, John H.
wrote:

On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 18:57:46 -0400, wrote:

On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 17:59:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/16/2018 5:49 PM, True North wrote:
I put a shovel or so of gravel in the bottom of the hole. I like to keep our damp soil away from the treated wood.
I do my mixing in the wheelbarrow. Don't recall seeing the dry mix dumped into the hole and then water sprayed on top.


It works just fine.

I have never seen a fence company mix concrete but they usually drive
the posts into the dirt at the bottom of the hole and add the dry
concrete to a post that is already pretty secure.
I have done a lot of this sort of thing setting PVC dock posts, post
wraps and pilings that are in several feet of water. If you make
"cookie dough" concrete and dump it in, the water comes right out
without souping up the concrete much at all. You better make sure you
have your Rebar in because it is still too stiff to push it in once
the concrete is in the pipe.
I did this to squeeze a little more life out of a bad dock for the HOA
while they were fighting about building a new one.
http://gfretwell.com/ftp/piling%20patch.jpg

4 years later they are still thinking about it and I have worked on
the pier a few more times.



I've seen fences put up here. Most have 4x4 posts which are not 'driven' into the ground. The corner
posts are concreted in, as Luddite's video showed.


I was thinking chain link
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Default Here you go John ....

On 10/16/2018 6:57 PM, wrote:
On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 17:59:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/16/2018 5:49 PM, True North wrote:
I put a shovel or so of gravel in the bottom of the hole. I like to keep our damp soil away from the treated wood.
I do my mixing in the wheelbarrow. Don't recall seeing the dry mix dumped into the hole and then water sprayed on top.


It works just fine.

I have never seen a fence company mix concrete but they usually drive
the posts into the dirt at the bottom of the hole and add the dry
concrete to a post that is already pretty secure.
I have done a lot of this sort of thing setting PVC dock posts, post
wraps and pilings that are in several feet of water. If you make
"cookie dough" concrete and dump it in, the water comes right out
without souping up the concrete much at all. You better make sure you
have your Rebar in because it is still too stiff to push it in once
the concrete is in the pipe.
I did this to squeeze a little more life out of a bad dock for the HOA
while they were fighting about building a new one.
http://gfretwell.com/ftp/piling%20patch.jpg

4 years later they are still thinking about it and I have worked on
the pier a few more times.




As I recall the bags of quick setting Sacrete had instructions on it
for setting posts exactly the way I did it in Florida and how the video
that I linked for John did it. Just dig a hole, stick your post in,
pour the dry Sacrete in and flood well with water. Since the holes
in Florida were already half filled with water, it didn't take that
much more to flood it.


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