Sorry for the camera lose but the view was impressive . The positive effects of explosives , what lead the concrete outfit to you ? Hope you had a helper or two to dig out the rubble for you !
@D J i get to play with the other white stuff, concrete. I usually wore my safety specs but respirators never seemed to be around when you needed them. They are also horrible to wear when its 100 out. You can see the dirt marks on your skin from the moisture and sweat from wearing the mask. Few years ago OSHA started pushing for silica safety. It's a pain in the ass. i suppose it is safer but really, what isn't bad for you and what isn't known to the state of California to give you cancer.
Thank you so much for this Dave. Ever since the Mythbusters episode, I've always wondered if a skilled explosives expert could have broken up the concrete without damaging the vessel rather than just filling it with anfo and completely obliterating everything. I expect it would have been even easier in their case as it probably wasn't nearly as high strength nor fibre reinforced.
It was a long time ago but from what I remember didn’t they have a FBI explosive specialist helping them out. I think they tried different levels until the big finale.
Great work Dave. Having sat in a concrete skip(kibble) in my youth with a jackhammer and needle gun for hours removing slab concrete I can only be amazed at this. 100mpa!!!!
Over the years I've come across old front porch stoops we would beat on for days with a jackhammer just to get them manageable to move. A handful of times we surrendered and used as fill once we had chipped away enough to pour the replacement. These were originally poured @1950-60 era in North Missouri and always had river rock aggregate. If shifting hadn't rendered them unusable they would have lasted another century. I always dreaded bidding one of those jobs they never were easy or the same!
@@carolrobinson7779 I remember coming across that sort of thing back when I was doing landscaping. Banging away at it all day with a breaker mounted on a Bobcat, just to get it small enough to pick up with the machine. Once, gave up and laid a new path using the old as the base, after finding the old to be up to 300mm thick, with 20mm thick rebar in it, and also tied into the building's foundation. That one was at a early 1950s era LDS church chapel. Those were never easy jobs!
Wow, this is incredible and again I have unintentionally learned something, great camera placement. Hmmmm I can only imagine how you loosen the lid on a new jar of Vegemite at your house 👍
I worked in a silica mine a few years and used dynamite to blast down the walls. We would drill 6 holes 10 feet deep each about 5 feet apart. Load 6 sticks of dynamite in each hole spend about 4 hours packing the holes . Blast them all at once and hope for the best. If everything goes right all you would hear is a snap the the wall would come down then the work started in 3 days .
@@mrbmp09 got to wait at least 3days so everything has fallen. Don’t want to be working around walls and have a bunch come crashing down on you. I had it happen to me once while close to wall . Wall came down I just barley jumped off tractor in time . Couldn’t see nothing of tractor but a little of back tire spent the rest of the day digging tractor out.
Do it like Jamie Hyneman. Grab a crate of dynamite, then take another one. Just to be sure, take a third. Put all sticks in a pile inside and light up. Success.
That was very different and some very reinforced looking concrete would not have considered blasting an option you are a true professional look forward to your' next post.
Retired Boilermaker, they used to have us go in the boiler with a 10 gauge shotgun. We used it to shot the clinkers out between the tubes in the superheat section. The trash burner in Newark NJ used ammfoe and broom handles to blast the clinkers out using the concussion, the whole boiler would shake and move.
It's more common for a guy with a jack hammer to spend a few days in there, this one because of it's small size would not allow a big jack hammer, only a small hand held air pick.
Normally they use air chippers - I work at a ready mix plant and every so often the trucks drums need chipped out and we hire people who come in with hand held chippers climb in the drum and do a great job without the risk of blowing up the truck or a fellow employee
They got to a point where it was all explosions for show (& the American audience). Did little miss Muffet sit on a tuffet? Lets blow up the tuffet with C4 to find out!
@@davenz000 The only good thing about all of those explosions and the use of very high speed cameras was that you got to see the formation and expansion of the shock wave. I found that to be very interesting.
FYI, there are clays that, when mixed with water and poured into holes, will expand to hundreds of times their mass and break rock and concrete up. It takes a day or so but its probably cheaper than the explosives. And most of the time you don't even need to be there, so no wasted man-hours.
Back in early 1990s I worked in a limestone quarry. Another part of the company was a lime plant. The lime kiln was,I'm guessing,200 ' long about 15' in diameter. To clean the slag out of the kiln,the company had a 10ga. Shotgun on a tripod and some workers stood there all day, maybe several shifts and fired 10 ga. Slugs at the paddles inside the kiln. I've seen 80 lb lime bags,dozens of them,full of spent paper 10ga. Shotshells.
There is some more of this coming sometime soon Waynel, the camera was OK. As turned out it was damaged soon after when the wind blew the tripod over and the lens hit a rock.
I recognised the fibres having co-operated a concrete batching plant. We used to sell concrete with the fibres, but the customer needed to provide their own wash-out. The issue with washing-out at the plant is the water recycling system. The fibres clog the pumps used to move the water back into the batching system after washout. It wouldn't surprise me if washout was refused to the operators of this barrel.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast I was wondering about that. Depending on the relative price of the machine it might be worth having a backup generator and a good stock of repair parts handy. Otherwise, if the machine is cheap (which I doubt) just take the financial hit if the machine or power go out, pay to dispose of the machine in a landfill, and buy another.
@@rorschacht8478 I understand that, but on multiple episodes, and it was theme not the just the title of the show, they stated the myth was busted. They both promoted themselves as being very scientific but oftentimes they were not.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast so... how big is a big one? Like, too big to drive about? Built on site and demolished after? Or is it like for massive factory production or something?
It's off of a cement truck and the motor used to rotate the mixer broke and once the mixer stops rotating the cement hardens. There are companies where all they do is jack hammer concrete to salvage the mixer.
I've heard that if sufficient sugar is added to the concrete prior to it hydrating it actually won't come up completely to strenth and is then easier to remove. Wouldn't want to be the chapter in the barrel stirring in the sugar though. Lol!
You are a brave man, Dave. I would have had the yellow gas bottle visible in the last shot removed (welding gas/acetylene?). Acetylene is really unstable, and a nice shockwave could have set the bottle off, removed the wall and put the mixer in low earth orbit... Glad it worked out for you!
Demolition Dave is where the "work actually" meets actually works. Sweet results again, Sir Dave! The filth never ends but seriously, kinda wished you were wearing respirator PPE though. I really enjoy your, no excuses; work, progress, egress shows here on "the tube."
Love it Dave. Glad you filmed it and took us along. I've heard about this before, and I saw Mythbuster's overkill version, but I've never seen it done properly. I bet you have to worry about splitting the barrel somewhere.
@@henryrollins9177 Not because of rubbish materials less than a decade from their initial construction date, but rather from negligent management of proper maintenance practices to suppress necessary taxation rates or unconscionably enhance profit.
My buddy used to remove concrete from trucks for a living. They would go in with jack hammers, sludge hammers, picks and wherever else they could use to break it up. I bet he would have loved this method over being in 95 degree heat inside a oven that’s 120 or more running a jack hammer for 10-12 hours a day all summer.
Aaahhhh....the smell of freshly exploded concrete & carbon fiber dust! Nothing quite like it! GREAT job, Dave! AND great camera work, too!! Stay safe, Jim
Yeah that's a bit more sensible than just loading it with 500lbs of ANFO, lol! (I seem to recall that was how much they used, don't think the quantity was actually mentioned until one of the look-back episodes)
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast the actual experiment where carried out with small amounts of explosives tonprove the method. And their conclusion was thatbit was plausible and likely worked. Then they got a bit carried away, and just let us say thatbthe cement truck ceased to exists.
Thanks for letting us know the aggregate i wondered why it looked reinforced and great work cause i know that even drilling the holes to put the explosives in will be a mission
What is is used for? ASCE concrete canoe competitions. Concrete countertops..sometimes done upside down with the surface poured first using a fine aggregate surface, then the fiber reinforced main layer. Expensive as frig for anything else.
@@assassinlexx1993 Well if it wasn’t the Boss’s son then who ever did it owes the Boss some very expensive booze to make up for it. That is assuming that they weren’t sent down the road straight away!
It happened to me once. Basically, this can happen if something happens while en route to deliver ready-mix concrete. A breakdown, caught in traffic, etc. Broken axles are a common incident for concrete mixers maneuvering through new construction then the truck gets stuck with no place to unload. You only got about 3 hours or so, depending on the mix and temperature. My story is I was driving a loaded 8 yard (16 tons) mixer and the driver side frame rail broke while I was driving, the drum was leaning heavily to the passenger side. The first thing the mechanic said to me was "How'd you keep this thing upright?" I dunno, I just held on for dear life. Meanwhile the truck sat for too long while the mechanics put a massive weld on the frame to get it back to the shop. That truck sat in the back of the yard for years with the cured concrete still in it.
In the late 70’s/early 80’s I was in the ready mix industry and saw the result of someone’s ham fisted attempt to blast set concrete in an agitator. As you would expect, it looked like the aftermath of a war bomb hitting a tank- pieces of metal everywhere. At a plant I managed, we cleared a barrel by getting the local fire brigade to hose out the wet concrete.
But back then it was relatively easy to obtain bangers and from stories I have heard, all kinds of things often went off the rails. I guess the fire hose is good if you are onto it quick.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast here’s one you will enjoy. Back then in the concrete plant I ran, there was a leftover box of detonators in a shed and the previous owner was there one day. I asked him how we should get rid of the detonators and he said to put them in a steel drum and burn them. He did so and a short while later, there was a massive bang and the drum went flying through the yard. So much for his expertise!
I saw the Mythbusters episode you referred to and when that thin blew, I jumped. You may have used smokeless powder, but the concrete dust more than made up for it. Did you get "Dirty Jobs wiht Mike Rowe in Australia? I think I remember an episode of him cleaning out a barrel like that with a jackhammer. That really was a dirty job. A bit risky too. The edges or the screw that either mix, or discharge the concrete, depending on the direction the barrel is turning, become razor sharp from the abrasiveness of wet concrete.
The edges on the screw or flights or what ever they are called were smooth on this one Jim, I don't think we se Mike Row here... but there again I don't watch TV.
Most of the regular clean out is just removing build up because over time it gets thicker and the capacity reduces, this is a whole different level of disaster when a full load goes off inside.
Who said this couldn't be done? The ready mix company where I grew up 50 years ago had 3 or4 extra barrels they kept at the quarry for times like this. The explosives guys at the quarry cleaned them out. As kids we loved to watch. One of them told me if they did it right it would temporarily expand the barrel like a balloon and most all the concrete would come loose. Those old boys were a hoot.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast I agree. Sadly, many industries have experienced the same. Thank you for the reply. A very cool video. Best regards from Indiana, USA.
I don't think Mythbusters bothered to drill any holes, who knew that drillholes can make it work? Also, Mythbusters didn't really care if the concrete came out or not, it was just TV. There is a yard at a concrete company in Los Angeles that has more than 10 full size mixers filled with concrete just sitting for years. I think they don't bother trying to get the concrete out anymore, they just eventually cut the mixer up for scrap steel.
This was very cool! Man I love UA-cam, where else would you be able to see such a specialized job in real life? You get into some pretty cool stuff, Dave!
I was going to ask but you, being quite a thorough gentleman, answered already - the straw like fragments was fiber/textile reinforcement material "carbon fibre aggregate".
I've been inside of those with a big air hammer chiseling out the concrete. The truck broke down or they evacuated the mine I can't remember. Its an underground mixer tank. They fill up the spraymecs to reinforce the shafts after they have been drilled and bolted. Hog wire is held down by 4" or so square plates from the bolts. Then sprayed with 3" or so inches of concrete. Interesting process with the fibers to increase the strength.
Yes, probably however at that time they had no hydraulic power source to get it turning, also have to be very careful that the whole thing does not tip over.
Great job, I had heard that they were placing explosives to remove the debris, where I worked a colleague removed about 5m3 with an electric demolition machine, greetings from Chile.
Spoke to a cement guy here in Jamaica and if for any reason he can't dump his load and it starts to harden ( starts seeing stream) he dumps a 10 pound bag of sugar in the mix so when it does harden its super weak and easier to break up.
The sugar works well when you are able to mix it in, this one had a hydraulic failure and was not able to turn and also I guess that since it was a shotcrete mix it was probably also fast setting.
Who in the right mind let's concrete go off inside one of these? Well done for getting it out though, I was wondering what the spikey bits were until you said Carbon fibres, I initially though they were steel wires but was confused as to why someone would put them in the drum.
If it's a concrete mixer.... you SHOULD BE ABLE to get it to turn in the direction that it spits out concrete to try to throw out all the loose stuff. Might be a bit hard for the engine as it won't turn smoothly but at least it will remove a lot of the loose stuff.
Ah... yes i did... in the description - "To compound the issue it was a special mix of very hard concrete with very tough fiber aggregate". Thanks for watching Travis.
Had a job like that many years ago. Full sized truck though, still cramped., spent a week on one of 'em. Never punched through tie side or wiped out a spiral. dirty nasty noisy job and exhausting for 8 hours a day with a jackhammer and a lil CP air hammer. I was laughed at when I suggested a bit of explosive....Nice job, dang stiff concrete there.
Yes, certainly a hard way to make a $$ Paul. There is very little info on the net about using explosives in this application, historically it is reasonably comon where I live. I just wonder if this video will flush out others that do it? Thanks for "Chipping in".
Cool!! I was wondering if you were to put more explosives to finish clearing out the barrel. Use to blow a bunch of things in the military. Loved working with C-4.
Was expecting to turn into a giant Christmas tree star ... but didnt.
Best comment.
those shots from the inside were fantastic
My little DJI Osmo Action Cam does not agree... Thanks for watching ZX.
Yea seriously tho loved it
Sorry for the camera lose but the view was impressive .
The positive effects of explosives , what lead the concrete outfit to you ? Hope you had a helper or two to dig out the rubble for you !
@@heartland96a just rotate the drum and most of the rubble would probably get out.
i was going to ask what the fibre was, but waited until the end and you told us.
.
another great result Dave.
Indeed, thanks for joining in Amanda.
Me too, I was wondering if concrete was made of mud and straw in Australia...
Amanda Gardner, Yeah that fiber is why they couldn't just jack hammer it out. Maybe if they would have got to it in the first 12 hours or so.
@@tomruth9487 Yeah whoever did that likely did it on purpose.
@@SilvaDreams , Ah good point. I didn't think of that.
When the dust enveloped the camera on the first shot, I could smell the concrete dust. Well done Dave.
@D J Down tiger.
Did ya get it all out, nothing worse than your nose bogeys setting like concrete
That's the smell of silicosis.
@D J i get to play with the other white stuff, concrete. I usually wore my safety specs but respirators never seemed to be around when you needed them. They are also horrible to wear when its 100 out. You can see the dirt marks on your skin from the moisture and sweat from wearing the mask. Few years ago OSHA started pushing for silica safety. It's a pain in the ass. i suppose it is safer but really, what isn't bad for you and what isn't known to the state of California to give you cancer.
No u couldn't
You had me at explosives….
Thank you, please like and subscribe
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast oh I did don’t you worry :D
Thank you so much for this Dave. Ever since the Mythbusters episode, I've always wondered if a skilled explosives expert could have broken up the concrete without damaging the vessel rather than just filling it with anfo and completely obliterating everything. I expect it would have been even easier in their case as it probably wasn't nearly as high strength nor fibre reinforced.
They just set out to make sensational TV.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast oh it was sensational alright.
That is really how it is done when concrete hardens in the mixer. You would be at it for weeks otherwise.
"customer is happy", driver that mucked the load holding the jackhammer in the corner is ecstatic!
Wait a minute! The Mythbusters got the concrete out! There was no concrete left in the truck when they were done. :)
Also there was no truck left unfortunately.
@@cpt_nordbart details. 😂
@@cpt_nordbart A minor detail....
Yeah he should've since it the Mythbusters method, he would've gotten more views garunteed 🤯💥💣
It was a long time ago but from what I remember didn’t they have a FBI explosive specialist helping them out. I think they tried different levels until the big finale.
I thought that the whole thing was about to explode but damn they really good with explosives
Great work Dave.
Having sat in a concrete skip(kibble) in my youth with a jackhammer and needle gun for hours removing slab concrete I can only be amazed at this. 100mpa!!!!
Only you would know the difficulty WK, I had never heard about concrete that strong either and the fibres make it a lot more difficult they tell me.
Over the years I've come across old front porch stoops we would beat on for days with a jackhammer just to get them manageable to move. A handful of times we surrendered and used as fill once we had chipped away enough to pour the replacement. These were originally poured @1950-60 era in North Missouri and always had river rock aggregate. If shifting hadn't rendered them unusable they would have lasted another century. I always dreaded bidding one of those jobs they never were easy or the same!
@@carolrobinson7779 I remember coming across that sort of thing back when I was doing landscaping. Banging away at it all day with a breaker mounted on a Bobcat, just to get it small enough to pick up with the machine. Once, gave up and laid a new path using the old as the base, after finding the old to be up to 300mm thick, with 20mm thick rebar in it, and also tied into the building's foundation. That one was at a early 1950s era LDS church chapel. Those were never easy jobs!
@@carolrobinson7779 Yeah river rock driveways in missouri are built like roman roads. Indestructible.
I have been told this was how mixers were cleaned out after concrete set. Thanks for showing this.
This is the quick way.
Me:" It's never fun cleaning up someone else's mess". Dave: "let's blast it!" Me: "okay, maybe a little fun". Lol
Wow, this is incredible and again I have unintentionally learned something, great camera placement. Hmmmm I can only imagine how you loosen the lid on a new jar of Vegemite at your house 👍
Hahahah - yeah, 2 turns of det cord gets any lid off!
That's brilliant. No vegemite no problem!
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast And then another strip of det cord to get the vegemite off the ceiling?
I worked in a silica mine a few years and used dynamite to blast down the walls. We would drill 6 holes 10 feet deep each about 5 feet apart. Load 6 sticks of dynamite in each hole spend about 4 hours packing the holes . Blast them all at once and hope for the best. If everything goes right all you would hear is a snap the the wall would come down then the work started in 3 days .
Why wait 3 days?
@@mrbmp09 got to wait at least 3days so everything has fallen. Don’t want to be working around walls and have a bunch come crashing down on you. I had it happen to me once while close to wall . Wall came down I just barley jumped off tractor in time . Couldn’t see nothing of tractor but a little of back tire spent the rest of the day digging tractor out.
I was really surprised that you could see anything at all after the blasts.
And those blasts looked very gentle. Interesting...
They were relatively gentle little blasts.
Well that's a unique job. I would expect its tough to guess how much without the drum failing. My admiration.
Starting small is a good plan.
Do it like Jamie Hyneman. Grab a crate of dynamite, then take another one. Just to be sure, take a third. Put all sticks in a pile inside and light up. Success.
Incredible job with no apparent deformation of the steel especially given what was need to account for the carbon fiber thread inclusions.
Its not carbon fibres... its glass-fibre, polypropylene, steel or macro-synthetic fibres...
www.roadstone.ie/product/fibre-reinforced-concrete/
That was very different and some very reinforced looking concrete would not have considered blasting an option you are a true professional look forward to your' next post.
Thanks for tuning in DF.
Is that concrete reinforced with fiberglass or something? It seems to have a whole bunch of fibers mixed in with it.
It is super high strength concrete with carbon fiber mixed in.
Great views from inside during the shots. I was wondering what the fiber was, glad you answered it at the end.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Retired Boilermaker, they used to have us go in the boiler with a 10 gauge shotgun. We used it to shot the clinkers out between the tubes in the superheat section. The trash burner in Newark NJ used ammfoe and broom handles to blast the clinkers out using the concussion, the whole boiler would shake and move.
Common practice Ken.
That's a perfect example of where the autostem product works great. Very effective and you can drill the small charges with a hammer drill.
Just checked out your channel, subscribed and will fully check it out later, we will talk more about autostem.
A full load of concrete left inside to set solid. That's passive sabotage.
No, just a hydraulic failure in this case, have done other truck mixer that definitely was sabotage though.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast just that we had that happen as well and managed to shovel and bucket most of it out. Warm work though.
And the smell of ammonia?
I don't miss cleaning those. Never got to use dynamite, closest thing we did was let em freeze really good then hit em with hot water.
That is an interesting idea.
Does that heat shock crack the concrete effectively?
Skill , experience and wanting to satisfy the customer instead of thrilling for ratings seems effective ! Bravo !
Thank you very much!
I've always wondered how they clear out set concrete in a bottle. Fascinating stuff
It's more common for a guy with a jack hammer to spend a few days in there, this one because of it's small size would not allow a big jack hammer, only a small hand held air pick.
Normally they use air chippers - I work at a ready mix plant and every so often the trucks drums need chipped out and we hire people who come in with hand held chippers climb in the drum and do a great job without the risk of blowing up the truck or a fellow employee
So this seems to be strictly for entertainment and that’s about it
Much better than misbusters, You accomplished something useful thanks for the show and give that brave camera a fresh new battery for it's troubles :)
The camera needed a good clean with compressed air between shots.
They got to a point where it was all explosions for show (& the American audience). Did little miss Muffet sit on a tuffet? Lets blow up the tuffet with C4 to find out!
@@davenz000 The only good thing about all of those explosions and the use of very high speed cameras was that you got to see the formation and expansion of the shock wave. I found that to be very interesting.
Fascinating Dave! Round two you could see the blast wave rebound on itself
FYI, there are clays that, when mixed with water and poured into holes, will expand to hundreds of times their mass and break rock and concrete up. It takes a day or so but its probably cheaper than the explosives.
And most of the time you don't even need to be there, so no wasted man-hours.
Dave does that, too!
Could you please help me find this clay? What is it called?
@@mariarust. Demolition grout. Drill a series of holes, mix the grout, pack it in, wait.
Should have put a fire mission down on it.
5 rounds HE Fire for effect!!
Direct fire from M777 or some rounds from the Dita spg could do the trick.
Pffft damn Arty
Repeat or say again?
@@brooksieluke If I hear repeat over the radio, I'm putting ANOTHER 5 rounds on target.
@@JT-CO That's how people die. I have nightmares of saying that word on the radio. I have deleted that word from my vocabulary.
Back in early 1990s I worked in a limestone quarry. Another part of the company was a lime plant. The lime kiln was,I'm guessing,200 ' long about 15' in diameter. To clean the slag out of the kiln,the company had a 10ga. Shotgun on a tripod and some workers stood there all day, maybe several shifts and fired 10 ga. Slugs at the paddles inside the kiln. I've seen 80 lb lime bags,dozens of them,full of spent paper 10ga. Shotshells.
That is a lot of lead to spray around inside!
"You were only supposed to blow the doors off." Should have called Dave...
Yeah they were probably just supposed to give the drum light cleaning...
Awesome! I’ve never seen such clear footage right by an explosition. Rip to that camera
There is some more of this coming sometime soon Waynel, the camera was OK. As turned out it was damaged soon after when the wind blew the tripod over and the lens hit a rock.
Thanks for telling us the concrete specs. I wrongly assumed it was fiberglass. Interesting job for sure.
Thanks for watching Shain.
I recognised the fibres having co-operated a concrete batching plant. We used to sell concrete with the fibres, but the customer needed to provide their own wash-out. The issue with washing-out at the plant is the water recycling system. The fibres clog the pumps used to move the water back into the batching system after washout.
It wouldn't surprise me if washout was refused to the operators of this barrel.
That is something that I had never thought of.
100mpa with carbon fibre, that’s a special batch someone left sit.
Expensive mistake or bad planning on someone’s part.
Yeah, most probable cause is usually hydraulic failure or electrical failure.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast I was wondering about that. Depending on the relative price of the machine it might be worth having a backup generator and a good stock of repair parts handy.
Otherwise, if the machine is cheap (which I doubt) just take the financial hit if the machine or power go out, pay to dispose of the machine in a landfill, and buy another.
another fascinating video Dave .hats off to the driller.the dust and noise in there would have been extreme.thanks for posting.
Glad you enjoyed it Bruce.
"Unlike Mythbusters we're going to do it the way it works." Lol, I love it! Mythbusters were so full of themselves at times.
They may have done it wrong on the show but you can't deny the end was impressive
What's wrong or right depends on your goal... Mythbusters didn't intend to clean out the truck.
@@rorschacht8478 I understand that, but on multiple episodes, and it was theme not the just the title of the show, they stated the myth was busted. They both promoted themselves as being very scientific but oftentimes they were not.
@@troyezell5841 That's true but they were making a show. You should check out Tested on youtube, adam explains and talks about the show a lot.
@@rorschacht8478 I don't mean to sound overtly aggressive toward the show, it was just a bit excessive at times. You make a good point.
That was a very different blast! Shows your skill level controlling those shots! Amazing! Very cool video
Glad you enjoyed it!
Lol he said “portable mixer” like someone would have this in the back of their truck for a day job
Ok, relocatable mixer.
I carry one in my rucksack
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast so... how big is a big one? Like, too big to drive about? Built on site and demolished after? Or is it like for massive factory production or something?
@@Mogliz0rz very much bigger than this and they construct an on site batch plant and disassemble it to move to the next job
It's off of a cement truck and the motor used to rotate the mixer broke and once the mixer stops rotating the cement hardens. There are companies where all they do is jack hammer concrete to salvage the mixer.
I've heard that if sufficient sugar is added to the concrete prior to it hydrating it actually won't come up completely to strenth and is then easier to remove. Wouldn't want to be the chapter in the barrel stirring in the sugar though. Lol!
3:24 what are all those small strings hanging off the concrete? Did they mix a batch of glass fiber reenforced concrete or is that some steel wire?
Short bits of carbon fibre as aggregate / reinforcement.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast Damn, no wonder they went to blasting.
You are a brave man, Dave. I would have had the yellow gas bottle visible in the last shot removed (welding gas/acetylene?). Acetylene is really unstable, and a nice shockwave could have set the bottle off, removed the wall and put the mixer in low earth orbit... Glad it worked out for you!
Fear not, the yellow bottle was only a compressed air receiver.
Demolition Dave is where the "work actually" meets actually works. Sweet results again, Sir Dave! The filth never ends but seriously, kinda wished you were wearing respirator PPE though. I really enjoy your, no excuses; work, progress, egress shows here on "the tube."
Look again JW, I had my Sundstrom SR100 half face respirator on, there is no way I would go in there without it.
Love it Dave. Glad you filmed it and took us along. I've heard about this before, and I saw Mythbuster's overkill version, but I've never seen it done properly. I bet you have to worry about splitting the barrel somewhere.
The Mythbusters version was all about making sensational TV.
Good job Dave👍👍
Good thing you're not claustrophobic 😁, that looks really tight place to work 😳
I am claustrophobic and there is no chance that you would have got me in there.
Well now, I found a new channel I enjoy on the last day of our lockdowns. I know what I’m doing. Subscribed and onto his next video!
That's great news!
that giant swirl of smoke in slowmo is amazing
Sure is.
100mpa, 100 metric tonne crushing force to force it to deform. Carbon fibre is similar to using mesh. Thats some pretty tough stuff
Thanks dave and well done. If you ever need to break Chinese concrete a loud sneeze will bring down the tallest building.HA HA HA.
Ahh... my coffee just came out my nose.
But it's the US infrastructure that is falling apart...! 😀
@@henryrollins9177 Not because of rubbish materials less than a decade from their initial construction date, but rather from negligent management of proper maintenance practices to suppress necessary taxation rates or unconscionably enhance profit.
True Story no concrete but also no truck! ! ! !
@Steve Arthur unless its that hospital housing wu-flu patients that collapsed a week after it opened.
My buddy used to remove concrete from trucks for a living. They would go in with jack hammers, sludge hammers, picks and wherever else they could use to break it up. I bet he would have loved this method over being in 95 degree heat inside a oven that’s 120 or more running a jack hammer for 10-12 hours a day all summer.
It's a hard job Rusty.
Carbon fibre aggregate :O
The respirator is *well* worth it, I mean concrete dust is nasty but dammmnnnnnnn that's a whole other level.
For sure, we had a vac system sucking through it but not the space I would like to be in very often.
Indeed. CF dust is like a bunch of little multi-pointed razor-blades. In your lungs, it's like Asbestos on steroids, and then some.
Great job Dave! Thank goodness your only small bloke, what a tight fit, there’s not many blokes who could do that job! Well done.
Hi Con, you might be physically excluded from this line of work.
I always said there was more to Dave then means the eye. He's got a bag of tricks for everything.
You Betcha.
Demolition Dave, I really feel for you. I can’t fathom anyone not washing out a mixer, big or small! Wow.
I think it had a hydraulic fail Marc, not much they can do then.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast Never occurred to me - that feels better!
that was awesome!! when younger i had to climb into one of them to 'clean' the bits out of
It's a young mans job all right.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast oh i couldnt do it now not one legged wear'n a prosthetic heck i have a time climbing a ladder LOL
Amazing, the alarm sound is louder than the explosion 👌
Aaahhhh....the smell of freshly exploded concrete & carbon fiber dust! Nothing quite like it! GREAT job, Dave! AND great camera work, too!! Stay safe, Jim
I tried very hard not to get any smells of it Jim.
Yeah that's a bit more sensible than just loading it with 500lbs of ANFO, lol!
(I seem to recall that was how much they used, don't think the quantity was actually mentioned until one of the look-back episodes)
It was probably a bit heavy handed.....
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast the actual experiment where carried out with small amounts of explosives tonprove the method. And their conclusion was thatbit was plausible and likely worked. Then they got a bit carried away, and just let us say thatbthe cement truck ceased to exists.
Thanks for letting us know the aggregate i wondered why it looked reinforced and great work cause i know that even drilling the holes to put the explosives in will be a mission
Yes, nothing easy about this job.
Wow, 100mpa and fibres!! Be interesting to know what that was being used for, 👍🇬🇧👍
That's for my garden barbecue. My neighbor always try to steal things from me. From now on, he'll need explosives.
@@arneanka4633 too bad, your neighbour is now going to call Dave when you're out and say it's his house and he wants to remove those.
What is is used for? ASCE concrete canoe competitions. Concrete countertops..sometimes done upside down with the surface poured first using a fine aggregate surface, then the fiber reinforced main layer.
Expensive as frig for anything else.
@@keithjurena9319 how long does it last?
Did they turn it on to get the big chunks out? Fun to watch. Can wait to see what's next.👍👍👍👍👍👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Got to be a bit careful doing that as the whole thing can overturn!
Great job Dave. Would have loved to learn the backstory of how that happened.
The boss's son😉🤫
I don't actually know the back story on this one Zaph.
@@assassinlexx1993 Well if it wasn’t the Boss’s son then who ever did it owes the Boss some very expensive booze to make up for it. That is assuming that they weren’t sent down the road straight away!
@@markfryer9880
I would be surprised who did this. Would have a job.
It happened to me once. Basically, this can happen if something happens while en route to deliver ready-mix concrete. A breakdown, caught in traffic, etc. Broken axles are a common incident for concrete mixers maneuvering through new construction then the truck gets stuck with no place to unload. You only got about 3 hours or so, depending on the mix and temperature. My story is I was driving a loaded 8 yard (16 tons) mixer and the driver side frame rail broke while I was driving, the drum was leaning heavily to the passenger side. The first thing the mechanic said to me was "How'd you keep this thing upright?" I dunno, I just held on for dear life. Meanwhile the truck sat for too long while the mechanics put a massive weld on the frame to get it back to the shop. That truck sat in the back of the yard for years with the cured concrete still in it.
In the late 70’s/early 80’s I was in the ready mix industry and saw the result of someone’s ham fisted attempt to blast set concrete in an agitator. As you would expect, it looked like the aftermath of a war bomb hitting a tank- pieces of metal everywhere. At a plant I managed, we cleared a barrel by getting the local fire brigade to hose out the wet concrete.
But back then it was relatively easy to obtain bangers and from stories I have heard, all kinds of things often went off the rails. I guess the fire hose is good if you are onto it quick.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast here’s one you will enjoy. Back then in the concrete plant I ran, there was a leftover box of detonators in a shed and the previous owner was there one day. I asked him how we should get rid of the detonators and he said to put them in a steel drum and burn them. He did so and a short while later, there was a massive bang and the drum went flying through the yard. So much for his expertise!
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast Breaks down the Cement Paste Ratio to almost nothing. Just need the room to make the mess.
...sure beats a car wash...lol...good job, stay safe and have a great week..
I think I needed to go through a car wash after working in there Bob.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast ...lol..
Straight and to the point, good angles, decent explaination, hekkin great video my guy!
Thanks Summer! Plenty of similar videos on this channel, please like and subscribe.
Nothing better than a confined explosion.
I saw the Mythbusters episode you referred to and when that thin blew, I jumped. You may have used smokeless powder, but the concrete dust more than made up for it. Did you get "Dirty Jobs wiht Mike Rowe in Australia? I think I remember an episode of him cleaning out a barrel like that with a jackhammer. That really was a dirty job. A bit risky too. The edges or the screw that either mix, or discharge the concrete, depending on the direction the barrel is turning, become razor sharp from the abrasiveness of wet concrete.
The edges on the screw or flights or what ever they are called were smooth on this one Jim, I don't think we se Mike Row here... but there again I don't watch TV.
I WAS wondering how they cleaned them out at the end of a YEAR!
Most of the regular clean out is just removing build up because over time it gets thicker and the capacity reduces, this is a whole different level of disaster when a full load goes off inside.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast Word for word, that's what she said.
Love the explosion effect on the inside, looks like it explodes, implodes then explodes ... Weird
Grandfather was a mason. He knew of a guy who let the concrete set in a mixer like that. The boss made the guy bust it out with a sledge and a chisel
That would be the worst month of his life.
Who said this couldn't be done? The ready mix company where I grew up 50 years ago had 3 or4 extra barrels they kept at the quarry for times like this. The explosives guys at the quarry cleaned them out. As kids we loved to watch. One of them told me if they did it right it would temporarily expand the barrel like a balloon and most all the concrete would come loose. Those old boys were a hoot.
A lot of skill in this industry has been lost Bill.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast I agree. Sadly, many industries have experienced the same.
Thank you for the reply. A very cool video. Best regards from Indiana, USA.
there you go Mythbusters dave can do it . 💹
I wonder what else they failed at that I could do??
I don't think Mythbusters bothered to drill any holes, who knew that drillholes can make it work? Also, Mythbusters didn't really care if the concrete came out or not, it was just TV.
There is a yard at a concrete company in Los Angeles that has more than 10 full size mixers filled with concrete just sitting for years. I think they don't bother trying to get the concrete out anymore, they just eventually cut the mixer up for scrap steel.
This was very cool! Man I love UA-cam, where else would you be able to see such a specialized job in real life? You get into some pretty cool stuff, Dave!
I totally don't watch any TV at all these days David.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast Too many interesting videos to watch on UA-cam .
Definitely earned your pay cheque that day. Don't think id enjoy that one haha
I was going to ask but you, being quite a thorough gentleman, answered already - the straw like fragments was fiber/textile reinforcement material "carbon fibre aggregate".
Thanks for watching Don.
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast My pleasure as always, your fine efforts on the episodes.
I would have shouted into the mixer, "FIRE IN THE HOLE!"
I've been inside of those with a big air hammer chiseling out the concrete. The truck broke down or they evacuated the mine I can't remember. Its an underground mixer tank. They fill up the spraymecs to reinforce the shafts after they have been drilled and bolted. Hog wire is held down by 4" or so square plates from the bolts. Then sprayed with 3" or so inches of concrete. Interesting process with the fibers to increase the strength.
That is exactly whet this one is used for Pat.
Ya I thought so. Looks like the normets drum we used. Those fibers makes it impossible to clean by hand
I think whoever let it set in there should be the one that has to clean it out! 🤣
I think he quit
@@fusco515 I think he was fired or shot. Maybe both.
@@jakubkopec9313 Hung, Drawn, Quartered, Shot and then Sacked.
If a mechanical issue is preventing the barrel from rotating, it can't be discharged. It happens.
Awesome job. I wonder if inverting the barrel for each shot would help. Clear the muck, and maybe allow chunks to fall free.
Yes, probably however at that time they had no hydraulic power source to get it turning, also have to be very careful that the whole thing does not tip over.
Mythbusters method worked just fine! lol
Great job, I had heard that they were placing explosives to remove the debris, where I worked a colleague removed about 5m3 with an electric demolition machine, greetings from Chile.
Unlike Mythbusters . . . LOL. Those guys were always so confidently incompetent.
Mythbusters was a quasi-scientific entertainment variety show. The talent "not knowing what they were doing" was part of the act.
Hey at the end of the day they had no cement left or truck for that matter
Great job Dave. Please show us some photos after cleaning out
I will get some.
That’s brilliant Dave. Hell, 100 mPa with carbon, that must be damn tough.
it was extremely difficult for the small air pick.
I remember being inside the full sized ones with a sledgehammer and jackhammer... Your method is much better.
Not easy work and enthusiasm gets fairly low by the second week.
Drilling those holes in that confined space must have sucked.
Yes!
Nice . Years ago my brother told me about using plastic fibers to reinforce the concrete .
First time I haver seen it David.
Some cool shots! Probaly no handbook on how much and where to place the shots for that! Good job!!
No sir, not much written on this at all, but has been common practice around these parts for many years.
Spoke to a cement guy here in Jamaica and if for any reason he can't dump his load and it starts to harden ( starts seeing stream) he dumps a 10 pound bag of sugar in the mix so when it does harden its super weak and easier to break up.
The sugar works well when you are able to mix it in, this one had a hydraulic failure and was not able to turn and also I guess that since it was a shotcrete mix it was probably also fast setting.
Who in the right mind let's concrete go off inside one of these? Well done for getting it out though, I was wondering what the spikey bits were until you said Carbon fibres, I initially though they were steel wires but was confused as to why someone would put them in the drum.
Great - but I was waiting for a huge smoke ring to come out. 😉💨
Looked like wire in the mix - I'm glad you explained what it was.
That's cheered my Monday morning up, thanks Dave.
Glad to hear it Tim.
If it's a concrete mixer.... you SHOULD BE ABLE to get it to turn in the direction that it spits out concrete to try to throw out all the loose stuff. Might be a bit hard for the engine as it won't turn smoothly but at least it will remove a lot of the loose stuff.
I'd be very concerned about it tipping over LK
dam u didnt mention the heavy use of fiber reinforcement! that makes it even waay more impressive
Ah... yes i did... in the description - "To compound the issue it was a special mix of very hard concrete with very tough fiber aggregate". Thanks for watching Travis.
Had a job like that many years ago. Full sized truck though, still cramped., spent a week on one of 'em. Never punched through tie side or wiped out a spiral. dirty nasty noisy job and exhausting for 8 hours a day with a jackhammer and a lil CP air hammer. I was laughed at when I suggested a bit of explosive....Nice job, dang stiff concrete there.
Yes, certainly a hard way to make a $$ Paul. There is very little info on the net about using explosives in this application, historically it is reasonably comon where I live. I just wonder if this video will flush out others that do it? Thanks for "Chipping in".
@@demolitiondavedrillandblast I have often wondered if using a hammer drill instead of just a chisel point breaker would work better?
my dad worked as concrete deliverer , he had to chisel out one liek that by hand with a electric hammer drill , worked like two weeks on that
Yeah, it is not quick, even with the right tools an experience.
It's morning here and I'm late leaving for work and I noticed Dave has posted.... Think I'll just watch it 😂
He, he, thanks Hammy.
You’re going to get yourself stuck in traffic!
Demolition Dave is awesome. Thanks for making these videos, these are super cool and you have a great personality. Hope to see many more!
More to come!
Cool!! I was wondering if you were to put more explosives to finish clearing out the barrel. Use to blow a bunch of things in the military. Loved working with C-4.
You like the old "White Noise" hey! I have to tread a fine line here Dan, very easy to overload and break these things.