DRY POUR Concrete Pad 12x20 done in 6 Hours!

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  • Опубліковано 9 бер 2024
  • My latest dry pour project featuring a 12x20 pad at the side door to my garage. This was a very ambitious project with a very tight timeline, as rain is expected that night! I had 1 day to get it done in between a week of rain.
    Join me as I wrestle 85, 80 pound bags of concrete into a smooth and usable pad that will last for decades to come!
    If you feel so compelled, check the links below!
    The Hope Center in Central Kentucky. Homeless folk are overlooked far too often in this country and if you feel compelled to donate to a shelter versus giving money to a pan handler on the street, click the link below or locate a homeless shelter near you!
    Deuteronomy 15:11
    “For there will never cease to be poor in the land. Therefore I command you, ‘You shall open Wide your hand to your brother, to the needy and to the poor, in your land’”
    hopectr.org
    I have also set up a Buy Me a Coffee link for you to donate to my channel so I can keep making informative videos for you guys. Only if you feel I deserve it, see the link below!
    www.buymeacoffee.com/stationst
    God Bless!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 69

  • @lenalove8138
    @lenalove8138 Місяць тому +4

    What a likable guy, thanks for sharing! Sometimes we want to do projects ourselves not because we don't have the money to do it professionally, but to know, at least for me, that I did it with my own hands.

  • @joeteejoetee
    @joeteejoetee 3 місяці тому +3

    Bravo SIR: You are an inspiration!

  • @benjrtofilau9627
    @benjrtofilau9627 2 місяці тому +1

    Thanks brother

  • @ryank9910
    @ryank9910 28 днів тому

    I love it!

  • @anothertime2023
    @anothertime2023 Місяць тому +2

    Glad to see another Kentucky homestead channel! I got the same on my videos last year. I have done three slabs and they are all holding up perfectly! ❤

  • @Ballinonabudget777
    @Ballinonabudget777 20 днів тому

    Thank you so much sir❤I’m doing this myself at the same size also

  • @mmxm1972
    @mmxm1972 22 дні тому +3

    I did a 8x10 slab a year ago. Reinforced with concrete mesh, super thick gauge. It's held up well. My neighbor did the similar size by "Professionals" for 3k+. His is already cracked 😂. Both are 4inch thick. But my slab only cost me $120 or something. I can't really remember how much my total was but definitely did not pass $200.

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  22 дні тому

      Lol that's great. I had 85 bags for my slab and drive my tractor on it and the edges are still crisp when the first thing concrete bros say is they'll crumble.

  • @mv4463
    @mv4463 Місяць тому +4

    $4-6k just for a parking pad... its the only reason id do it myself. Neighbor had his done by a contractor. And not even 6mo later its cracked and chipped. Myself i dont need pretty .. i need strong 💪. Its just for parking suv's that sit . I will paint a sealer afterwards.

  • @daveisnothere
    @daveisnothere 3 місяці тому +6

    Nice to see another dry pour. I have a few of them planned myself. No rebar or metal reinforcement?

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  3 місяці тому +1

      Not on this one. Its only 3 inches think and will never support anything more than a lawn tractor. The substrate was pounded extremely well and should stay put when it cracks.

    • @daveisnothere
      @daveisnothere 3 місяці тому +1

      @@StationStWoodworking I like your honesty... "when it cracks" haha

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  3 місяці тому +3

      Haha yup, all concrete cracks. Just a matter of when.

  • @cryptothedawg1160
    @cryptothedawg1160 2 місяці тому +4

    I dig your attitude and passion brother!

  • @terrymorton9941
    @terrymorton9941 14 днів тому +1

    He just lobbed it! Hahah no messing here get lobbing...

    • @terrymorton9941
      @terrymorton9941 14 днів тому +1

      He doesnt care if its perfect, love it, its tidy its yours who cares lol

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  13 днів тому

      Damn right, it's attached to a garage not the entrance to a mansion. Serviceable and still looks ok

    • @terrymorton9941
      @terrymorton9941 День тому +1

      @@StationStWoodworking great vid i loved the lobbing haha

  • @Redeyedtrucker2024
    @Redeyedtrucker2024 Місяць тому +1

    Dry pour every time and save thousands!!

  • @mehill00
    @mehill00 Місяць тому +2

    Thanks for the video, despite the missing footage. The thing that frustrates me is the people who shit-talk dry-pouring for things that it isn’t trying to do. I think I’ve seen folks mock how watering it every hour will take them longer at the site, but the point is dry pouring is for diy’ers who want something a step or two up from gravel and don’t want to deal with the time pressure of mixing all that concrete and floating it before it begins to set up. That’s a stressful and error-prone process for inexperienced folks. You can go over the dry mix many times to get it smooth. Except for the possibility of rain, you can stop part way through and finish it later. If you bought the wrong amount there is no panicking need for more bags immediately. I would never use it for structural work…only if gravel would almost work but I want something better, without spending the extra thousands that come with getting a truck and a crew to do a professional slab. Cheers.

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  Місяць тому +1

      You make great points. Yes concrete guys always think people are going to be parking tanks on a 3 inch slab!

    • @ExperimentLife
      @ExperimentLife Місяць тому

      Finishing concrete is very easy. And the working time is hours. I just don’t see the appeal of making a huge ugly pad with dry pour. I can understand making a tiny insignificant concrete pad of entrance. But still even for a small pad at that point why not just mix the concrete. I don’t know. It just doesn’t seem like a great option but it’s your time and money and you can do whatever you want.
      I mixed and poured a small pad and the whole thing took me about 30 min. And it took 2 hours before the surface was drying and workable enough to finish the surface.

  • @gulfsouth6231
    @gulfsouth6231 18 днів тому +1

    I've heard you and others say the reason to mist first is to create a crust on top to prevent dimples from the water spray when you flood the pad. However, if I don't care about the dimples, can i go straight to flooding the pad? Also, would the dimples help with traction on a 1ft high ramp to a shed for a riding mower and a few other wheeled items?

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  16 днів тому +1

      To be honest, the surface on a dry pour is not smooth. Even with a mist, it like a course sandpaper finish. I would not flood the pour as you will expose the aggregate and it with be really rough and rather unsightly in my opinion. If you can spare a couple hours after you give it a good mist, then you can flood at your hearts content

  • @sterlgirlceline
    @sterlgirlceline 2 місяці тому +1

    ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @WoWdem101
    @WoWdem101 Місяць тому

    Hey brother! Did you use all 100 bags? Looking to do a 12x16 so trying to get a guestimate on how many I would need for 80lb bags

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  Місяць тому +1

      Depends on your thickness. If you want a 4 inch slab, it'll take 107 bags. The bottom of my slab space wasnt consistent so i used 85 bags. I google concrete calculator and calculator.net comes up. Use that for the math. Good luck!

  • @tinamercier1512
    @tinamercier1512 2 місяці тому +1

    Im doing a 10x12. How long do i have to wait before removing the frame....an can walk an put my furniture on it

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  2 місяці тому

      I soaked it 3 days then it was fine to move around on. I didn't do anything real heavy on it for a week or so.

  • @haunday2094
    @haunday2094 28 днів тому +1

    Did you lay it level or at an incline?

  • @ijellecristobal
    @ijellecristobal Місяць тому +1

    how bags of concrete was used?

  • @boyd4024
    @boyd4024 Місяць тому

    Just mix it all that space to do the job right.Why cut corners?

    • @lanebigham6570
      @lanebigham6570 Місяць тому

      Do it yourlazyselfers love to cut corners

  • @johnlocke3481
    @johnlocke3481 Місяць тому

    Im glad this works for this gentlemen, but please don’t do this. Watch comparison videos of wet vs dry side by side. Dry pour is never a good idea. Even for small low traffic areas at best the edges will all be chipped away because the edges just crumble right off. at worst, you have no metal wire/rebar for tensile strength so anything heavy will crack it

  • @RiverVapor
    @RiverVapor Місяць тому +3

    I’m one of those dudes who does concrete and you’re right. I’ll tell you all day long how dry pour is weak as hell. Good luck in 2 years after the weather wastes all your time and money 😂

    • @slu2072
      @slu2072 Місяць тому

      Weak in what perspective? For cars, a patio, for people just walking on it? Yeah it’s weaker but I’m pretty sure it has plenty strength for these purposes.

    • @RiverVapor
      @RiverVapor Місяць тому

      @@slu2072 He said he’s driving a tractor over it. I guarantee it breaks up.

    • @lanebigham6570
      @lanebigham6570 Місяць тому +1

      Thank you these do it your lazyselfers with there self imposed "knowledge" are all over YT spouting this stuff I hope people will pay attention when experts like yourself speak up

    • @RiverVapor
      @RiverVapor Місяць тому

      @@lanebigham6570 It’s just common sense as well. Mixing concrete wet evenly distributes the cement in the mix and prevents pockets. The funniest thing is looking at failed dry pour pieces and seeing how dry it is and where moisture never even touches parts of it. I have no problem with diy guys. Just do it right and don’t be lazy. 😂

    • @Crunchifyable2
      @Crunchifyable2 Місяць тому

      Yes every time I tried dry pour it was crumbly trash. Everyone can afford like an eight dollar concrete mixing tub, mix it with a garden hose, pour it, repeat.
      Like this dude is going to have to spend the money on 100 bags probably within two years after vehicles destroy that garage pad. You are getting half the strength for full price. So yes dry pour is a lazy method and it ends up looking like aged concrete.

  • @lanebigham6570
    @lanebigham6570 Місяць тому

    I thought about this and chose not to do it I mixed my concrete in a garbage can with a 1/2 in drill and a drywall padel it came out perfect I believe the concrete EXPERTS and not YT do it your lazyselfers watch YT videos posted by PROFESSIONAL EXPERTS on how to do your own concrete work and carefully consider with common sense and wisdom what method you choose to use for your project
    A Do it once
    B Do it right
    C Never look back and wonder

    • @abidas138
      @abidas138 16 днів тому

      So, you really don't know what you're doing? You just watched yt videos?
      Don't you wish you'd paid a professional to use the proper tools with the proper installation know-how?
      You didn't buy quality concrete for cheaper than a concrete company per sq/ft.
      There's a reason concrete pros charge so much. What do you think you saved money on?
      Do you think your slab is competent as a pro-pour?

  • @juliancousineau3136
    @juliancousineau3136 Місяць тому +1

    Thats like 6 grand for a fuckin pad

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  Місяць тому

      I spent $450. Driven my tractor over it, off the edges and its not crumbled or cracked.

  • @karllangbehn6178
    @karllangbehn6178 Місяць тому

    I don’t understand what anybody is gaining by doing a “dry” NOT pour. Just call the truck have it poured and it’s done. No hauling bags, unloading bags, carrying bags…..you know, concrete trucks roll a drum for a reason.

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  Місяць тому +1

      Cost, time, no access to the pour spot and don't want or cant run wheelbarrows...thats 3 reasons without even trying.

    • @karllangbehn6178
      @karllangbehn6178 Місяць тому

      @@StationStWoodworking
      133 bags 80lbs @$5=$665
      Or
      3 yards concrete @$165=$495

  • @nilsschear1095
    @nilsschear1095 Місяць тому

    Nice. It took you three times as long and looks like crap. The only thing that’s been proven is it has about 50% of the compressive strength as wet poured concrete.

    • @StationStWoodworking
      @StationStWoodworking  Місяць тому

      As always, trolls leave the best comments! Thank you for taking the time!

    • @mehill00
      @mehill00 Місяць тому

      Well 50% strength is pretty generous, but that’s plenty strong for a nonstructural pad, but I doubt it took him three times the effort as it would to wet pour. A solo DIYer without a fair amount of concrete experience and extra equipment, would be hard-pressed to mix up all of that concrete wet for a 240 sq ft pad, spread it and float it before it begins to set up.
      What I don’t see often is an individual actually demonstrating the solo wet-pour job. They compare a solo dry pour DIYer to a few folks with a truck or enough people to use bags and a small mixer and pour it just ahead while others start to trowel it and float it before it’s all poured.
      It’s all about being doable by one guy, with reduced time pressure.

    • @nilsschear1095
      @nilsschear1095 Місяць тому

      @@mehill00 Trust me it’s doable with one guy. But I never mentioned effort, it took him three times as long. That being said a mixer from Home Depot is like $50 a day. So with a third of the time a mixer and about the same effort he could have had a much better result. People don’t realize that a proper finish is actually functional, and can drastically extend the life of the slab. This has no finish whatsoever. It’s like making a cake but skipping the frosting.

    • @mehill00
      @mehill00 Місяць тому

      @@nilsschear1095 I’m honestly asking, not trying to argue: how could it take less time to mix and pour 100 bags, say, than to just dump those bags in place? Where’s the time saving? Or are you saying wet pour is faster because you have to water the dry pour into the next day? Thanks.

    • @nilsschear1095
      @nilsschear1095 Місяць тому

      @@mehill00 A pour like that fully finished should take two hours tops. Then you leave it alone to cure. It’s mostly the time he spent coming back and watering. But if you use a mixer the physical labor is almost the same. Dry pour creates a very porous surface, that looks ugly. Your finish is the first line of defense against water intrusion. Water is concretes enemy. A porous surface allows water to flow through the slab, taking cement particles with it and rusting any reinforcing. In a cold area, this water will freeze and expand, creating pressure inside the slab. Eventually it will fail. A proper finish will help the concrete resist water intrusion. Plus there’s a few videos out there where they test the psi of dry pour. It has about half or less the strength. To make a long story short, dry pour it’s about the same labor and cost, but you get an inferior product.

  • @jeremylinton6129
    @jeremylinton6129 Місяць тому

    why?