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John H.[_5_] October 17th 18 06:42 PM

New post stuff
 
A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.

Bill[_12_] October 17th 18 06:51 PM

New post stuff
 
John H. wrote:
A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.


That looks pretty nice.


[email protected] October 17th 18 07:06 PM

New post stuff
 
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 13:42:11 -0400, John H.
wrote:

A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.


I am not sure how that will work out with the water in the hole. It
will just float on top where the concrete sinks and displaces the
water. It does look like an interesting idea in a dry hole tho. It
also gives you an idea of the required compressive strength necessary
to hold a pole,. If styrofoam will do it, I can't imagine any concrete
mix that wouldn't even if it started with the consistency of tomato
soup.
I am also not sure why a can of spray foam would not do the same
thing.

Keyser Soze October 17th 18 07:39 PM

New post stuff
 
On 10/17/18 1:51 PM, Bill wrote:
John H. wrote:
A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.


That looks pretty nice.



Crikey, a retired Army "engineer" can't figure out how to set a simple
mailbox post in the ground...too, too funny.

True North[_2_] October 17th 18 08:17 PM

New post stuff
 
Keyser Soze

- show quoted text -

"Crikey, a retired Army "engineer" can't figure out how to set a simpleÂ*
mailbox post in the ground...too, too funny."



The John was complaining there was water in the hole and in the video it says no standing water.
What could go wrong?

Keyser Söze October 17th 18 08:25 PM

New post stuff
 
True North wrote:
Keyser Soze

- show quoted text -

"Crikey, a retired Army "engineer" can't figure out how to set a simpleÂ*
mailbox post in the ground...too, too funny."



The John was complaining there was water in the hole and in the video it
says no standing water.
What could go wrong?


Is herring as dumb as a fence post?

--
Posted with my iPhone 8+.

Mr. Luddite[_4_] October 17th 18 09:19 PM

New post stuff
 
On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote:
A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.



I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid.
Didn't come in a bag though. He had to glass vials with the
components in it. He used it to put flotation foam on each end
of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft
we had in a small lake.

Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing
water in the hole. I seem to remember you commenting that there was
water or the water table was very high or something.



Its Me October 17th 18 09:25 PM

New post stuff
 
On Wednesday, October 17, 2018 at 2:07:15 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 13:42:11 -0400, John H.
wrote:

A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.


I am not sure how that will work out with the water in the hole. It
will just float on top where the concrete sinks and displaces the
water. It does look like an interesting idea in a dry hole tho. It
also gives you an idea of the required compressive strength necessary
to hold a pole,. If styrofoam will do it, I can't imagine any concrete
mix that wouldn't even if it started with the consistency of tomato
soup.
I am also not sure why a can of spray foam would not do the same
thing.


I'm not sure John meant he'd try it on his current post, but maybe just that he would try it at some point?

John H.[_5_] October 17th 18 09:52 PM

New post stuff
 
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 14:06:56 -0400, wrote:

On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 13:42:11 -0400, John H.
wrote:

A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.


I am not sure how that will work out with the water in the hole. It
will just float on top where the concrete sinks and displaces the
water. It does look like an interesting idea in a dry hole tho. It
also gives you an idea of the required compressive strength necessary
to hold a pole,. If styrofoam will do it, I can't imagine any concrete
mix that wouldn't even if it started with the consistency of tomato
soup.
I am also not sure why a can of spray foam would not do the same
thing.


Water has to come out. It's still flowing into the hole at the rate of about a gallon an hour. I'm
just going to let it sit for a few days and hope the water table goes down. Hell, we're on a hill!

The question would be - how many cans of spray foam? This stuff will more than fill the hole for
$9, and I have a few seconds to shift the post if it's not plumb.

John H.[_5_] October 17th 18 09:53 PM

New post stuff
 
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 13:25:50 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote:

On Wednesday, October 17, 2018 at 2:07:15 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 13:42:11 -0400, John H.
wrote:

A friend told me about this stuff:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM

Will try it.


I am not sure how that will work out with the water in the hole. It
will just float on top where the concrete sinks and displaces the
water. It does look like an interesting idea in a dry hole tho. It
also gives you an idea of the required compressive strength necessary
to hold a pole,. If styrofoam will do it, I can't imagine any concrete
mix that wouldn't even if it started with the consistency of tomato
soup.
I am also not sure why a can of spray foam would not do the same
thing.


I'm not sure John meant he'd try it on his current post, but maybe just that he would try it at some point?


No, I bought the stuff to try on this post. My friend said he did many of his fence posts with it,
and it works great.


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