Agreed. It was fixed but not on film. This owner wanted the least expensive solution for these pads. So we used wire mesh, not my typical solution. But know that we did lift it up once we had all the mud poured out. Just not on film. Thanks
It's from beating it with a hammer to loosen dried concrete. This is an old Cart-Away 1-yard concrete mixing trailer. These are still manufactured in McMinnville, Oregon. The controls are improved and instead of rotating the drum it uses a knob. These are well built machines.
For those yards you not able to back a cement truck into. An other jobs. Wish I owned one. Better than a gas powered three bagger. When you got 36 bags of concrete at 80 lbs. a bag lifting buy hand an bucket.
Awesome!
Cool video
Donde compro uno de esos?
Y para limpiar todo eso donde?
Why is your mesh not elevated to be in the pour not under it. The mesh cannot do its best job laying on the ground!
Agreed. It was fixed but not on film. This owner wanted the least expensive solution for these pads. So we used wire mesh, not my typical solution. But know that we did lift it up once we had all the mud poured out. Just not on film. Thanks
Супер!
looks beatup big time
It's from beating it with a hammer to loosen dried concrete. This is an old Cart-Away 1-yard concrete mixing trailer. These are still manufactured in McMinnville, Oregon. The controls are improved and instead of rotating the drum it uses a knob. These are well built machines.
It uses a knob not a lever to controll the drum rotation is what I meant to say
For those yards you not able to back a cement truck into. An other jobs. Wish I owned one. Better than a gas powered three bagger. When you got 36 bags of concrete at 80 lbs. a bag lifting buy hand an bucket.
No wire mesh at all straight poor. Bet it last about a year. Maybe !!!
Literally has wire mesh in every shot. How long it'll last depends more on the mix than the wire for such a small footprint.