If you deadlift with concrete weights, and need to drop them, make two small sandboxes and lift from the sandboxes. drop them into 6 inches of loose sand. You'll need a 6 inch lifting platform to keep things even.
You are severely overthinking this!!!!! If you weigh out 45 pounds of the dry mix, cut your pipe long and trim it after the concrete cures, you will end up with a 45-pound plate! I have made these many times the water does not add a significant amount to the final fully cured weight of the concrete!! If you then measure the final thickness of the pipe after you trim it you can cut them to that length in the future! If you're not using Fiber-Reinforced High Strength Concrete you should be, you can also add additional fiber to the mix to give it more strength against cracking. Generally, the concrete will be at about 80 to 90 Percent strength in 7 to 10 days and not fully cured till around 27 days. Also tapping or vibrating the bucket will help to remove the bubbles, and I would silicone or use grip tight glue to fasten the pipe to the bucket, it will pop off easily as it will not adhere well to the type of plastic that the bucket is made from.
This was excellent my guy. Also, you're detailed description and willingness to show each and every attempt regardless of success was the best! I could feel the frustration mixed with "challenge accepted " energy! Thanks for a great video!
I added rebar to try and make my concrete weights more sturdy and they survived the drop test, I was removing 1 50lbs weight off of the bar and tipped the bar without realizing it and the other weight fell about 5 feet to the ground and only chipped about the size of my pinky tip. FULL DISCLOSURE I did also use the concrete with the fiber pre mixed into it and it fell onto an old satellite dish that was sitting on top of gravel ground outside not a concrete garage floor
Two thoughts: put wet concrete into a "weighing" bucket then pour the whole, weighed amount in the mold. Second, when removing the plate from the mold, put a second bucket _inside_ the mold holding the plate, then invert the whole thing, lift the mold bucket, the plate should detach a be sitting on top of the second bucket or drop down only a short distance.
Yeah I agree, Good advice!... I'd also say first you should cut the pvc few inches too long and hot glue it to bottom of the bucket and trim it to length after demolding...then make sure you get the mix water content exact and weigh out the amount of mixed material using a cheap digital luggage scale. That way you can be sure the finished plates will be consistent and also should be pretty close to the target weight....I would also embed a layer or two of chicken wire in the plates. So if you do crack a plate the wire will hold it together well enough so you don't suddenly lose 45# from one side of your bar during a lift.
Aside from reinforcing the plates, make your life easier with a bigger trough or bucket to mix so it'll be more consistent on pour, that blue bucket is perfect size though! Great find and excellent calculations. Math never fails!
For those concerned about the bucket. 22.5 inches in the outter measurements of the bucket. 16.5 inches is the bottom of the bucket and 19 inches is the top
7/17/2022 Just poured my first of two hopefully 45 pound plates, well ahead of the time I reach my Olympic barbell set current Max load of 311 pounds. This was the simplest and cheapest of the diy plate recipes I could find on UA-cam. Since I already had junk chicken wire, I used it as a further stabilizing grid, doubling over a section, cutting a hole in the center for the PVC tubing, and mushing it down in the bottom of the Lowe's rope handle bucket. I think I may have lucked into the last of those buckets--our local Lowe's hasn't gotten any others because of either supply chain issues or it's just being discontinued. I did silicone spray the interior of the bucket before the concrete mix pour and I used petroleum jelly to water seal (mostly) the concrete tubing to the bottom of the bucket-mold. I also remembered to tap all along the outside of the bucket to help release air bubbles in the concrete mix (placing the moved bucket to a level section of the garage floor probably also helps in this regard). I will give this plate at least 4 days to cure.
@@glazedtv664 the first one came out 49-50 pounds, the second at 44-45 pounds. Until I have the time to try again, I cope by adding an additional 5-pound plate to the lighter side to even out the load.
You need to reinforce your plates with a lightweight mesh or rebar. It won’t necessarily stop them cracking but it will hold it together. And personally I would make a form for the plates and not use the bucket. But each to their own method. You still did a great job. Another tip. You should really give whatever you are moulding your concrete in a good tapping all round with a hammer. You need to expel the air or there will be air pockets ( we call it honeycomb) in the plates and that alone will make a difference to the weight.
First, thanks for sharing! If you arent concerned about freezing temps fly ash can be used to make the concrete a little more durable. Fiber glass reinforcement and concrete wire mesh can also be used. Also noticed you didnt vibrate your mix to remove air bubbles. Glad it still came out smooth.
After 6 tries you finally got it right but thanks for making the video, I've been wanting to make my own cement weights as well but I figured they wouldn't come out that accurate or good so I haven't done it but really interesting video and thanks for sharing it!
Hey!! Just made some of these plates and they turned out great. The way I tackled the weight issue is I dry weighed the concrete to weight then added water. The first 2 I did were 47 and 48, and I shaved them down to 45 each, thought it was a really easy way to make sure they were 45 exact. Again, the mold Idea you had made for smooth, perfectly shaped weights, keep up the videos man.
@@knowitall8799 I'm guessing he used diamond polishing pads with an orbital sander (sounds expensive but you can get a sander for $30 and a set of those pads for $20 on amazon)
Not sure if Spray Paint would be best option but a couple coats would add 0.5-1lb, I saw someone do it to old plates they had that got lighter over time he spray painted them to restore the weight
if you still have those 43 pounders, you can add more mortar to one side to make it reach 45 pounds. to the old concrete, you can apply concrete epoxy or acrylic admix to make the bond stronger.
Weigh the dry mix first then add water and pour it also just make the pipe a bit longer then cut it flush later and also make some groove on it to prevent pvc from slipping out in the future
You should think about buying and making some of your own rock weights where you just pour the cement in the sides of the dumbbells or the bottom of their kettlebell because I think they have a really great concept and it's more simple to just keep the mold basically there around the cement and not reuse them to help make them accurate as well as stronger and to look better as well.
Material list: 1) 2 inch in diameter pvc pipe cut at a length of 2&5/8ths 2) Castin' Craft Mold Builder you can buy from Michael’s 3) 8 cups of water 4) 60 lb quikrete concrete mix
You’re awesome man. I’m going to make some plates with your guide. I have bumpers and iron. But I want more plates and I just doing feel like spending more money.
I love the shape of the disk and it's also easier to make. Very informative 10/10. Thank you very much for the videos, they have helped me a lot to do my project. Could you make a video to make a barbell with its stops at low cost please?
i certainly would not write 45lbs on a 43lb plate unless maybe i was only making the two... i do like that bucket seems excellent choice... and you should be able to make several...have you ever added fiber glass? or spray painted rubber bed liner paint on them? again these seems great...
theres a lot of good things about that blue bucket as mold,but that beveled edge is a negative some what... when weights are on bar on ground then outer edge only hits ground...with normal weight entire edge hits equally..
@@fiendeng omg sry lmaoo i didn't realize you meant tools I thought you meant shed all the weight off by working out (which I thought you meant by slowly chipping the concrete) mb mb
@@knowitall8799 Most definitely. As a recommendation I would put your mold on the scale, zero the scale and weigh out your concrete mix before hand. I like to do this with just the dry mix, the mold and any reinforcement first. You don't have to worry about the slight bit of weight the water adds as it will eventually evaporate out of the weights. Through doing this you can get the plates within a margin of error of less than an ounce depending on the accuracy of your scale.
Awesome concrete videos!! I have my own concrete budget garage gym and I'm gonna try out your 45 pound plate design. With some of my weights, I used duct tape all around them to reinforce it that way
The last one I made, the consistency was solid enough that I could pick the bucket up and stand on a scale to check the weight which helps you get even more accurate. Good luck!
If u use rebarb on the inside of the concrete it makes the concrete much stronger. This is why you see rebarb used in concrete in professional construction
@@angusnickerson6570 ya I ended up using this metal material I found at Lowe's. Not sure what it is, its like a thin miniature scale fence that I could cut fairly easily. I cut a few rectangles of it and put like 10 in each plate.
I appreciate the insight. Final outcome you came out well. Sorry it took so many times. Correct me if I’m wrong, but can’t you just weigh the bucket 🪣 & weigh it again with an additional 47lbs inside? So it’s 47lbs + Bucket Weight = 45lbs cure product.?
When making concrete i realized that whatever weight i poored in cement, is the weight i got in concrete after mixing and curing and all. It could just be me, but thats how i got very precise measurements.
Do you mean before the water? So for example if you poured 45 lbs of dry concrete mix into a bucket and then added the recommended water you would end up with a 45 lb finished product?
@@PhilthyCasualMedia Yes that's correct. For example I made 30 lb plates, and I carefully poured in 30 lbs, did the whole process, and on while still wet it weighed 32 lbs or so, but after it fully dried it came out to 30.
ya i was thinking, if you pour dry mix into the bucket first, weight it to 45, then add your water, the water should cure and/or evaporate out so you'd just be left with 45lbs at the end
The concrete mix I got which was exactly the one you showed in the video had A LOT of pebbles and rocks in it. Yours looks so smooth and I didn't see any rocks... Am I missing something? Maybe Quikrete is diluting their concrete mix?
The consistency varies a LOT between concrete bags. I had some that were mostly sand, and some that had a lot of aggregate/rocks. It seems like the sides that cure against the bucket were smooth no matter which bags I had though.
Reason for the missing "3 pounds" :You should make up for it by simply adding the depth of the indent to the height of the PVC pipe. To make up for the variation caused by the indent ...also make sure to glue the base of the PVC pipe 👌
It is interesting that aiming for the 45 lb. you did not use the scale while pouring the concrete. Instead you chose to use a length of a pipe as a measuring method.
@George Armstrong calculated weight rather (volume x density of concrete) instead of actual weight read from scale. (saying length I used thought shortcut)
some tips. 14 :30 illustrates Why some rebar is so important. all be it chicken wire. or clothes hangers or osme sort of wire. thats NOT bendable no copper!. second tip you can indent the numbers with stensels or even a utensil ( spoon fork back) about 2 hours after the pour. you can even finish the top and give it a rounded edge that matches the bottom. tip 3 tap the sides with a hamer very lightly.. and/ or anything that vibrates. to get rid of the bubbles. they also weaken the weights. USing 4000/ 5000 psi concrete is reccomended because weights may be droped and u need better concrete for the wear and tear of daily use. even without dropping.
Hmm I wonder if instead of cutting the PVC pipe.. leaving it long and only marking where you want the concrete to come up to ... that way you can pack in more concrete without worrying about it flowing into the center of the PVC pipe... once it cures you can cut the excess PVC pipe off. 🤔
I just found out the hard way if you cut the bucket the weight of the concrete makes it bow out but luckily I was able to slide the piece over the lower half to bring it back to a normal cemetric circle
Just put 45 lbs of premix and dont count in the water....voila...wouldn't that be much easier to calculate. When it dries all the water goes away so you end up with 45 lbs of concrete. Dunno why go through the hassle of measuring diameters and stuff....
LOL I was just looking for how to make concrete weights and stumbled upon this video! Great job, look great and very well explained! Just some constructive criticism, maybe make videos like this a little faster... more like 18 minutes or less. Would probably help with view counts too!
Honestly this is enough for me I don’t got the budget for a $50 at the cheapest for a decent weight I’m not the person who drops weights I can get a full gym setup for like $800 (all I need right now and quality) I’ll add new equipment later that isn’t a must have like cardio I got a trail .25 miles from my house the city made one it’s like a marathon length If I sound kinda dumb it’s Bc I was up for like 48 hours now no idea why
@@warmesuppe Yes obviously it’s cement but what I’m saying is when it dries and hardens it will not be the same weight it was when it was a wet mixture due to the water weight
# 1 YES YOU can deadlift with Concrete . #2 use a full 80lb bag & 1 Gallon water . mix 1/4 bag with 1 Quart of water , 4 times . BUMPER platers YES SAME TUB. KNOW IT ALL _ YOU forgot 2 FINAL steps .... a- Make OTHER side almost as smooth and B - YES final step so yuo casn DROP the plates. I sold many plates since July .
I bought that bucket because of your suggestion in a previous video. I threw a shout-out to you in one take, but it didn't make the cut. Have you found that if you buy concrete mix bags at different times, they have different consistencies? More or less aggregate in them?
If you deadlift with concrete weights, and need to drop them, make two small sandboxes and lift from the sandboxes. drop them into 6 inches of loose sand. You'll need a 6 inch lifting platform to keep things even.
Nice idea! I was also thinking about using some old tires, probably for 15" rims, and have one on each side so the plates will land on those.
You are severely overthinking this!!!!! If you weigh out 45 pounds of the dry mix, cut your pipe long and trim it after the concrete cures, you will end up with a 45-pound plate! I have made these many times the water does not add a significant amount to the final fully cured weight of the concrete!! If you then measure the final thickness of the pipe after you trim it you can cut them to that length in the future! If you're not using Fiber-Reinforced High Strength Concrete you should be, you can also add additional fiber to the mix to give it more strength against cracking. Generally, the concrete will be at about 80 to 90 Percent strength in 7 to 10 days and not fully cured till around 27 days. Also tapping or vibrating the bucket will help to remove the bubbles, and I would silicone or use grip tight glue to fasten the pipe to the bucket, it will pop off easily as it will not adhere well to the type of plastic that the bucket is made from.
This was excellent my guy. Also, you're detailed description and willingness to show each and every attempt regardless of success was the best! I could feel the frustration mixed with "challenge accepted " energy! Thanks for a great video!
I added rebar to try and make my concrete weights more sturdy and they survived the drop test, I was removing 1 50lbs weight off of the bar and tipped the bar without realizing it and the other weight fell about 5 feet to the ground and only chipped about the size of my pinky tip. FULL DISCLOSURE I did also use the concrete with the fiber pre mixed into it and it fell onto an old satellite dish that was sitting on top of gravel ground outside not a concrete garage floor
You could use fibre or metal mesh to keep them out of breaking
Español ??
@@wilberarmella4185 Croatia, just bad at writing
@@ivanstrnad2662 no entiendo nada 🤔
@@ivanstrnad2662 begeta
@@wilberarmella4185 jajaja, ponle subtitulos :b
Two thoughts: put wet concrete into a "weighing" bucket then pour the whole, weighed amount in the mold. Second, when removing the plate from the mold, put a second bucket _inside_ the mold holding the plate, then invert the whole thing, lift the mold bucket, the plate should detach a be sitting on top of the second bucket or drop down only a short distance.
Yeah I agree, Good advice!... I'd also say first you should cut the pvc few inches too long and hot glue it to bottom of the bucket and trim it to length after demolding...then make sure you get the mix water content exact and weigh out the amount of mixed material using a cheap digital luggage scale. That way you can be sure the finished plates will be consistent and also should be pretty close to the target weight....I would also embed a layer or two of chicken wire in the plates. So if you do crack a plate the wire will hold it together well enough so you don't suddenly lose 45# from one side of your bar during a lift.
Aside from reinforcing the plates, make your life easier with a bigger trough or bucket to mix so it'll be more consistent on pour, that blue bucket is perfect size though! Great find and excellent calculations. Math never fails!
For those concerned about the bucket. 22.5 inches in the outter measurements of the bucket. 16.5 inches is the bottom of the bucket and 19 inches is the top
And the PVC pipe cut to 2 5/8"
7/17/2022 Just poured my first of two hopefully 45 pound plates, well ahead of the time I reach my Olympic barbell set current Max load of 311 pounds.
This was the simplest and cheapest of the diy plate recipes I could find on UA-cam. Since I already had junk chicken wire, I used it as a further stabilizing grid, doubling over a section, cutting a hole in the center for the PVC tubing, and mushing it down in the bottom of the Lowe's rope handle bucket.
I think I may have lucked into the last of those buckets--our local Lowe's hasn't gotten any others because of either supply chain issues or it's just being discontinued.
I did silicone spray the interior of the bucket before the concrete mix pour and I used petroleum jelly to water seal (mostly) the concrete tubing to the bottom of the bucket-mold. I also remembered to tap all along the outside of the bucket to help release air bubbles in the concrete mix (placing the moved bucket to a level section of the garage floor probably also helps in this regard).
I will give this plate at least 4 days to cure.
How did it end up? Good or bad?
@@glazedtv664 the first one came out 49-50 pounds, the second at 44-45 pounds. Until I have the time to try again, I cope by adding an additional 5-pound plate to the lighter side to even out the load.
Just sand down the extra 5 lbs???@@robertlehnert4148
You need to reinforce your plates with a lightweight mesh or rebar. It won’t necessarily stop them cracking but it will hold it together. And personally I would make a form for the plates and not use the bucket. But each to their own method. You still did a great job. Another tip. You should really give whatever you are moulding your concrete in a good tapping all round with a hammer. You need to expel the air or there will be air pockets ( we call it honeycomb) in the plates and that alone will make a difference to the weight.
This is so enjoyable to watch, was cheering throughout the video hahah. Thanks for sharing the mistakes so others can avoid.
First, thanks for sharing!
If you arent concerned about freezing temps fly ash can be used to make the concrete a little more durable. Fiber glass reinforcement and concrete wire mesh can also be used.
Also noticed you didnt vibrate your mix to remove air bubbles. Glad it still came out smooth.
Fly ash can be bought cheap at just about any concrete place. Bring a gallon jug with you.
Add about 1% by weight fibre glass fibres to cement mix. It helps with its strength.
Just made an Olympic bar and now I need to make some plates as well! 💪🏽
Hey man, howd you make the bar?
@@DanteLikesRock I got the idea from diyduke & 100% Missouri. They have good videos on how to make an easy bar. Check them out
@@pbpyro5546 ah, I see. thanks
After 6 tries you finally got it right but thanks for making the video, I've been wanting to make my own cement weights as well but I figured they wouldn't come out that accurate or good so I haven't done it but really interesting video and thanks for sharing it!
How much dry concrete should I use? How much water do I need to add? Thank you
Hey!! Just made some of these plates and they turned out great. The way I tackled the weight issue is I dry weighed the concrete to weight then added water. The first 2 I did were 47 and 48, and I shaved them down to 45 each, thought it was a really easy way to make sure they were 45 exact. Again, the mold Idea you had made for smooth, perfectly shaped weights, keep up the videos man.
What did you use to shave them down?
@@knowitall8799 I'm guessing he used diamond polishing pads with an orbital sander (sounds expensive but you can get a sander for $30 and a set of those pads for $20 on amazon)
@@knowitall8799 you can use an angle grinder with diamond grinding disk
Not sure if Spray Paint would be best option but a couple coats would add 0.5-1lb, I saw someone do it to old plates they had that got lighter over time he spray painted them to restore the weight
Que diámetro tiene que tener el recipiente y la altura para hacer distintos discos?
if you still have those 43 pounders, you can add more mortar to one side to make it reach 45 pounds. to the old concrete, you can apply concrete epoxy or acrylic admix to make the bond stronger.
is there any substitute for the bucket. My lowes sold out
I bought the last one in mine!😎
Weigh the dry mix first then add water and pour it also just make the pipe a bit longer then cut it flush later and also make some groove on it to prevent pvc from slipping out in the future
You should think about buying and making some of your own rock weights where you just pour the cement in the sides of the dumbbells or the bottom of their kettlebell because I think they have a really great concept and it's more simple to just keep the mold basically there around the cement and not reuse them to help make them accurate as well as stronger and to look better as well.
It came out smooth like new born baby
Great video! All of the Lowes in the world are out of those stinkin buckets! 😂
subtract the bucket weight..?
i like your extended thoughts on problem solving. very good of you
Material list:
1) 2 inch in diameter pvc pipe cut at a length of 2&5/8ths
2) Castin' Craft Mold Builder you can buy from Michael’s
3) 8 cups of water
4) 60 lb quikrete concrete mix
what is the trash can
Try putting a wire gauze in between the concrete...that will improve the integrity of the plate
Amazing! Congrats for the persistence and video! Cheers from Brazil!
Awesome video! Thank you for putting in all this effort so we don't have to. Also: Love the cat cameos in your videos!
Thanks for the vid. I'm trying to find a way to make a mold for plates. Buckets are currently OOS. Any thoughts about an alternative?
You’re awesome man. I’m going to make some plates with your guide. I have bumpers and iron. But I want more plates and I just doing feel like spending more money.
Take a old car tire, cut it the width of the tire and epoxy it around the edge, it helps for drop sets.
I love the shape of the disk and it's also easier to make. Very informative 10/10. Thank you very much for the videos, they have helped me a lot to do my project. Could you make a video to make a barbell with its stops at low cost please?
Did you zero out the mold?
i certainly would not write 45lbs on a 43lb plate unless maybe i was only making the two... i do like that bucket seems excellent choice... and you should be able to make several...have you ever added fiber glass? or spray painted rubber bed liner paint on them? again these seems great...
to prevent the weights from breaking add some mesh or fibres to the mix
@Breast Boi Get chicken wire or 1" perforated wire fencing. That will re enforce the concrete and bond it together better.
Can you tell us the ratio of the concrete?cement?sand?water?ect..
Whole time I was Thinking just add 2 more pounds of concrete and weigh it then cut the pipe flush after it dries, didn't need to rely on the math lol
Great video again! Made dumbells after watching that vid, they turned out great, gonna give this a try 👍
That's awesome! Glad to hear the video helped, and hope the plates turn out for you too.
so wouldn't the concrete get even lighter after 30 days??? thinking at least 1/2 pound lighter.
Thanks for Sharing and letting us know your mistakes to stay away from!
theres a lot of good things about that blue bucket as mold,but that beveled edge is a negative some what... when weights are on bar on ground then outer edge only hits ground...with normal weight entire edge hits equally..
now we need a workout video
what trash can do you use
But you haven't put iron rods in it to make them more stronger
You are awesome. Thank you for showing the errors. It made your video enjoyable. I was rooting for ya. Congrads and thanks again .
Maybe over shoot ....Then grind away the excess . 👍
but wdym grind it away it wont really break if made properly
@@revolution545 corded angle grinder, a half dozen masonry discs and you can polish off 5 lbs worth on concrete.
@@fiendeng omg sry lmaoo i didn't realize you meant tools I thought you meant shed all the weight off by working out (which I thought you meant by slowly chipping the concrete) mb mb
Very tedious
IF YOU WANT IT YOU FFKING GET IT !
Cant you just add more material in it to make it more accurate?
I love iron and hate vinyl-sand, this is a nice medium between the two at like $20 for a full set of weights.
Even with all the mistakes I made, still dirt cheap if you've got the time and energy!
@@knowitall8799 Most definitely. As a recommendation I would put your mold on the scale, zero the scale and weigh out your concrete mix before hand. I like to do this with just the dry mix, the mold and any reinforcement first. You don't have to worry about the slight bit of weight the water adds as it will eventually evaporate out of the weights. Through doing this you can get the plates within a margin of error of less than an ounce depending on the accuracy of your scale.
No one like concrete weights. The concern is two 45 plates now cost about $150 new, or $100 used if you can find them.
@@uSS-kc7fx So if you put 45 lbs of dry concrete mix in, after they are fully cured you'll end up with 45 lbs weights?
@@PhilthyCasualMedia Yes, The water does not stay in the concrete and should NOT be accounted for when weighing. The difference is slight nonetheless.
HOw Are You PLATES and dumbbells holding up ?
Awesome concrete videos!! I have my own concrete budget garage gym and I'm gonna try out your 45 pound plate design. With some of my weights, I used duct tape all around them to reinforce it that way
The last one I made, the consistency was solid enough that I could pick the bucket up and stand on a scale to check the weight which helps you get even more accurate. Good luck!
If u use rebarb on the inside of the concrete it makes the concrete much stronger. This is why you see rebarb used in concrete in professional construction
@@angusnickerson6570 ya I ended up using this metal material I found at Lowe's. Not sure what it is, its like a thin miniature scale fence that I could cut fairly easily. I cut a few rectangles of it and put like 10 in each plate.
I appreciate the insight. Final outcome you came out well. Sorry it took so many times. Correct me if I’m wrong, but can’t you just weigh the bucket 🪣 & weigh it again with an additional 47lbs inside? So it’s 47lbs + Bucket Weight = 45lbs cure product.?
When making concrete i realized that whatever weight i poored in cement, is the weight i got in concrete after mixing and curing and all. It could just be me, but thats how i got very precise measurements.
Do you mean before the water? So for example if you poured 45 lbs of dry concrete mix into a bucket and then added the recommended water you would end up with a 45 lb finished product?
@@PhilthyCasualMedia Yes that's correct. For example I made 30 lb plates, and I carefully poured in 30 lbs, did the whole process, and on while still wet it weighed 32 lbs or so, but after it fully dried it came out to 30.
Weigh the amount of concrete you need in a separate bucket before you pour in the mold
ya i was thinking, if you pour dry mix into the bucket first, weight it to 45, then add your water, the water should cure and/or evaporate out so you'd just be left with 45lbs at the end
@@michaelrogers3857so when concrete cures the water added weight will evaporate?
You have to weight the dry concrete with more than 45 lb and then add te water
Do you leave the PVC pipe in it after curing?
The concrete mix I got which was exactly the one you showed in the video had A LOT of pebbles and rocks in it. Yours looks so smooth and I didn't see any rocks... Am I missing something? Maybe Quikrete is diluting their concrete mix?
The consistency varies a LOT between concrete bags. I had some that were mostly sand, and some that had a lot of aggregate/rocks. It seems like the sides that cure against the bucket were smooth no matter which bags I had though.
Vibrate your bucket. All the air will make its way out leaving a nice finish no matter what aggregate is in it.
very good job my brother, there are always flaws but at least it weighs what is important
Dile que se pase por tu canal, ahí le hubiera salido más fácil y muy personalizados :v
ya gotta steal reinforce the concrete.. with rebar and wire mesh inside
Reason for the missing "3 pounds" :You should make up for it by simply adding the depth of the indent to the height of the PVC pipe. To make up for the variation caused by the indent ...also make sure to glue the base of the PVC pipe 👌
You’re my hero bro
Those two dislikes are from people who couldn´t get 45 pounds
It is interesting that aiming for the 45 lb. you did not use the scale while pouring the concrete. Instead you chose to use a length of a pipe as a measuring method.
@George Armstrong calculated weight rather (volume x density of concrete) instead of actual weight read from scale. (saying length I used thought shortcut)
Attempt #6, PVC pipe cut to 2 5/8"
some tips. 14 :30 illustrates Why some rebar is so important. all be it chicken wire. or clothes hangers or osme sort of wire. thats NOT bendable no copper!. second tip you can indent the numbers with stensels or even a utensil ( spoon fork back) about 2 hours after the pour. you can even finish the top and give it a rounded edge that matches the bottom. tip 3 tap the sides with a hamer very lightly.. and/ or anything that vibrates. to get rid of the bubbles. they also weaken the weights. USing 4000/ 5000 psi concrete is reccomended because weights may be droped and u need better concrete for the wear and tear of daily use. even without dropping.
17:08 clearly that would be easy to test. Fill that thing water and see what weighs. Almost certainly not 3 lbs.
Hmm I wonder if instead of cutting the PVC pipe.. leaving it long and only marking where you want the concrete to come up to ... that way you can pack in more concrete without worrying about it flowing into the center of the PVC pipe... once it cures you can cut the excess PVC pipe off. 🤔
Maybe you first measure the container eighty=w1, the measure with concrete w2=w1+45? This way will make calculation and tryout not needed.
Bro y didnt u cut the bucket the same height as the pipe thats much easier also add rebar it gives the concrete mix something to hold onto
I just found out the hard way if you cut the bucket the weight of the concrete makes it bow out but luckily I was able to slide the piece over the lower half to bring it back to a normal cemetric circle
Just put 45 lbs of premix and dont count in the water....voila...wouldn't that be much easier to calculate. When it dries all the water goes away so you end up with 45 lbs of concrete. Dunno why go through the hassle of measuring diameters and stuff....
Do these sell?
use fiber to strengthen... good video
LOL I was just looking for how to make concrete weights and stumbled upon this video! Great job, look great and very well explained! Just some constructive criticism, maybe make videos like this a little faster... more like 18 minutes or less. Would probably help with view counts too!
Watch them in 2x speed. The amout of time it takes a person to hone in on a short video is a lot. Its easier to just speed the video up
Usas cemento puro o con arena ..??
Se puede usar con arena y piedritas
@@freddyconoz1985 no porque se empiesa a desmoronar y aparte no pesan nada..mejor si laas haces casi puro cemento quedan mas resistentes y pesadas
Put a metal mesh
Its dosent break
Solo sube las medidas se nos complica lo de la calculadora
Great video dude!
Honestly this is enough for me I don’t got the budget for a $50 at the cheapest for a decent weight I’m not the person who drops weights I can get a full gym setup for like $800 (all I need right now and quality) I’ll add new equipment later that isn’t a must have like cardio I got a trail .25 miles from my house the city made one it’s like a marathon length
If I sound kinda dumb it’s Bc I was up for like 48 hours now no idea why
What if u only have 1 inch barbell
You can use a 1 inch piece of PVC. I made some of those as well using the same method
@@knowitall8799 thank you
Than workout like a beast
hell man pour some resin in the plate until the face is full that should do it
Great effort!
1:37 theres a gym cat for all the gym rats out there :D
use dry mix weight it and you know
Você é um gênio, obrigado! 🇧🇷
אתה מוכשר !
25:25 this is when the video actually starts
those look great, btw follow instructions, engineers know something after all
when it dropped, i said to myself, no rebar. Bucket removes, cracked in half.
Or you can just weigh the Cement, and sand so that it will be accurate
He doesn’t use sand he just uses cement but when it dries you lose a percentage of the weight due to the water
@@DanielJ096 It doesn't just dry it hardens with the water.
@@warmesuppe Yes obviously it’s cement but what I’m saying is when it dries and hardens it will not be the same weight it was when it was a wet mixture due to the water weight
@@DanielJ096 Just weight before add water...simple
Thanks buddy!
Put in 3 lbs of re bar
Good stuff
You'll get your weight if you weigh the concrete dry, after 28 days, or so almost all the water is gone.
Maybe make it just over 45 lbs and then grind it down to exactly 45.
# 1 YES YOU can deadlift with Concrete . #2 use a full 80lb bag & 1 Gallon water . mix 1/4 bag with 1 Quart of water , 4 times . BUMPER platers YES SAME TUB. KNOW IT ALL _ YOU forgot 2 FINAL steps .... a- Make OTHER side almost as smooth and B - YES final step so yuo casn DROP the plates. I sold many plates since July .
I bought that bucket because of your suggestion in a previous video. I threw a shout-out to you in one take, but it didn't make the cut. Have you found that if you buy concrete mix bags at different times, they have different consistencies? More or less aggregate in them?
Overshoot it and then grind it down after it’s cured
nice 👍👍👍