8"and 12" block are pretty much the norm here in the states in my area you get use to the weight man after 40 years lol enjoy the videos keep up the good work 👍👍👍
This is exactly the same as the bottom of my garden. We've built it up with gabion cages. Some neighbors have used block and some just accept that their garden is a flood plain.
Good question. I genuinely don’t know, it’s how it was before we started. There’s gravel behind the wall and under the building so I’m assuming there’s some sort of land drain 🤔
Why did you not add horizontal rebar in it as well? Was no structural engineering assessment paid for by the owner? And for such a specific wall, possibly exposed to water for days (possibly every year) was no special mortar (with an extra bonding agent like SikaBond SBR+) used as well?
You don’t use horizontal rebar with these blocks, just rebar through the hollows then fill with concrete 👍 No structural drawing, it’s just a cheap quick option to hopefully prevent it ever happening again. It’s only ever flooded once before as far as we know and that was over 10 years ago, it was a very freak and unfortunate event but the owner just wanted the wall higher for abit of peace of mind Mortar was 3-1 underground spec, so good enough for this situation 👍
@@MorganTheBuilder they usually come banded upside down that’s the way they are popped out of the gang moulds .some block yards have a machine to turn them the right way up but most don’t . Your labourer when he is stacking them should turn them the right way up . They are easier to handle when they are laid the right way up . Thin side down your bedding the thicker side .
@@MorganTheBuilder ya best to avoid them if you can 55 lb weight . the American version you see them slinging around with one hand are only 35 lb still heavy but considerably lighter . The metric equivalent of the American one is 390 x 190x190.
funny watching english lay block...check out fastest trowel on the block in las vegas. I'm terrible at brick but over here in the usa we fly with block
8"and 12" block are pretty much the norm here in the states in my area you get use to the weight man after 40 years lol enjoy the videos keep up the good work 👍👍👍
Did anyone get an early bath walking down those slippery narrow bits 😁. Great job mate.
Haha, there was a few close calls 😬 but none of us had to swim 🤣 cheers mate 👍🧱
This is exactly the same as the bottom of my garden. We've built it up with gabion cages. Some neighbors have used block and some just accept that their garden is a flood plain.
Green with algae and uncleaned surface from dust... 5:36 Hmmm
the mortar certainly has good contact. :)
3-1 underground mix used, sticks like s**t to a blanket that stuff, not going anywhere 👍
What happens to all the rain water that goes down between the metal siding & the back of the blocks?
Good question. I genuinely don’t know, it’s how it was before we started. There’s gravel behind the wall and under the building so I’m assuming there’s some sort of land drain 🤔
Why did you not add horizontal rebar in it as well? Was no structural engineering assessment paid for by the owner?
And for such a specific wall, possibly exposed to water for days (possibly every year) was no special mortar (with an extra bonding agent like SikaBond SBR+) used as well?
You don’t use horizontal rebar with these blocks, just rebar through the hollows then fill with concrete 👍
No structural drawing, it’s just a cheap quick option to hopefully prevent it ever happening again. It’s only ever flooded once before as far as we know and that was over 10 years ago, it was a very freak and unfortunate event but the owner just wanted the wall higher for abit of peace of mind
Mortar was 3-1 underground spec, so good enough for this situation 👍
thanks for the reply @@MorganTheBuilder
Interesting job morgan . why are you Laying the blocks upside down .
Cheers mate 👍🧱 I wasn’t aware I was 🤔 do these blocks have a right way up as they’re hollow all way through?
@@MorganTheBuilder they usually come banded upside down that’s the way they are popped out of the gang moulds .some block yards have a machine to turn them the right way up but most don’t . Your labourer when he is stacking them should turn them the right way up . They are easier to handle when they are laid the right way up . Thin side down your bedding the thicker side .
@@brickbybric ah right, genuinely didn’t know that. Thought they was the same all round, just heavy and awkward 🤣🤣👍
@@MorganTheBuilder ya best to avoid them if you can 55 lb weight . the American version you see them slinging around with one hand are only 35 lb still heavy but considerably lighter . The metric equivalent of the American one is 390 x 190x190.
Don't you have concrete formwork stones? A better result. Monolitic .
funny watching english lay block...check out fastest trowel on the block in las vegas. I'm terrible at brick but over here in the usa we fly with block
Yeah these aren’t so common in the UK 👍🧱