Terrific update! As a reinforced concrete special inspector, I appreciate your attention towards consolidation and curing. Can’t wait for the next update
I really appreciate these wonderful videos. I bought your plans to express my gratitude. You put so much R&D into this series. I'm very inspired to make the lightweight garden walls. Thank you so much.
This is how you do DIY! Thank you SO much for showing all details, and communicating your thought process, You have made me confident that what I am seeing is the real thing.
Wow, your series on concrete/cement is amazingly well done. Really appreciate your detailed explanations on mix ratios, products, and test results. I made some stackable concrete planter parts a few years ago and they turned out way too heavy for me -- so if I ever do that again I'm going to try your perlite mix. Looks perfect.
so professional! I am simply impressed! And yeah: I crave the new aircrete-receipts, as I was in fear, you dropped this completely, as you could not like the warping in the older samples. THANKS FOR POSTING!!!
I remember watching the previous editions of this series and hoped that you would continue trying new materials. Thank you for the update. I'm near certain my wife will love a set of these panels for next year's garden.
Been fascinating watching the series and the results. I used a perlite/portland cement mix to lay a greenhouse base 25 years ago and it is still holding strong and stands up to wear and tear well. Where I live in the U.K. the soil is a heavy clay base. The addition of perlite helps aerate and lighten the soil giving much better growing results, over the clay soil.
Post the cost of each as money is important to most folks Thanks for the great work you have shown. Compare such as a 4x8' garden wall 12-24" high to wood price would be a plus for me. Dang you are good at building and me too. Thanks
This is fantastic information! I am watching all of your videos one after the other. It's like watching a mystery and needing to see what happens at the end.
Great design, nice proportions, beautifully photographed, expertly presented. This is something I have been thinking about for the past 10 years. You answered all my questions. Time to get off my butt.
Incredibly detailed and easy to follow video, very well explained. You’re a great teacher! So many vids on yt expect us novices to know way too much stuff out of the gate, so thanks for explaning the details!
Hi. Your videos, as usual, are a great source of inspiration. I'm placing this aside as I will definitely build some of these for my garden following your guidance. Thank you so much!
Love this video. I grew up in a family of masons and your attention consolidation and curing was superb. According to a concrete engineer, the glass fibers really do not and reinforcement; they provide even curing in hopes of avoiding checking, though engineers do not guarantee against it. Steel (rebar) provides tensile strength (you can't stretch it to a fracture easily) and concrete provides compression strength, which varies to aggregate qualities and ratios of cement.
I am in ...very interesting. I built an entire garden enclosure yrs ago with methods very similar, I had fun doing it and after watching you I think I will give it another shot.
Congratulations for your efforts. I think that an update to your mix of perlite would be adding it to the aircrete, so that way you'll be adding the strength to the aircrete. Just a thought. Keep up the good work.
I’ve watched all yr reinforced concrete vids. The perlite ones look more delicate and better for my small garden veg. Thanks for the precision; it makes me more confident the recipe will work. Will find a way to add hoop loops for cover, probably based on your plastic pipe and rebar method.
Seriously mate, your channel is awesome. I just bought your 3 version package, not so much because I couldn't figure out how to build these myself but more as an expression of thanks for all the concrete R&D you've done and your willingness to share with us all. I do need to start replacing the Macrocarpa boxes that I made a few years ago, so these will be perfect for the job. Would make great Christmas gifts using a Nordic symbol for the inset panel for the gardeners in the family too. Cheers from down under for the videos mate
Great work, I am really impressed with the effort you put into making the boxes lighter. Thank you so much for this. I am definitely going to try this process.
The red is my favorite! And I don’t normally prefer red bricks but this was a much lighter Adobe like appearance... stunning! Now I’d like to see lime without cement in your forms🤞🏼Lime floors are finally getting some acknowledgement as truly environmentally friendly, and can be reused unlike concrete/cement or today’s versions of an old traditional version of Rome’s concrete formerly known as Lime concrete. Besides the fact Lime gets stronger with time and moisture it’s also cooler to the touch when the sun has been bearing down on it making it perfect to be poured around pools and as back door patios. I’m curious if Lime has to be slaked at home “quicklime” or if hydrated or hydraulic lime (box store version) would function just as well? I’ve read arguments both supporting hydraulic lime and arguments that it needs to be freshly slaked... I have no idea, nor do I know what formula would make a strong block or brick for paving with hydraulic or hydrated lime. Yes ppl sometimes mix in cement/concrete but that ruins the water permeable/breathability nature of LimeCrete so I’d hate to use modern cement with lime. Seeing perlite used in this demonstration reminds me of a demonstration using powdered lime with volcanic ash as aggregate but also sand and pebbles may be necessary to make a brick/block. Anyways curious, hoping someone will take on the lime brick challenge, it’s not very popular because it’s not well known of its amazing properties and the fact that it is environmentally safe, reusable, etc. and grows in strength for 100’s and thousands of years.
Great video, thank you. I've been looking at these lightweight concrete products and was wondering if it would be possible to use it to build walls or a roof. It's lightweight. It should supposed to have insulation qualities so it sounds like it would be perfect, but I've watched other videos too and it showed that it usually breaks real easy or rubs off. But I think they were making more of air creed so maybe that's a different. If you were going to build a concrete house, would you use regular concrete for the floor walls and ceiling or roof or would you use the perlite mixed with cement? Or should these lightweight concrete only be used for decorational purposes?
Would you comment how the cost of these lightweight panels compare to a standard sand/cement panel? I believe that the perlite would be the most expensive component of making these lightweight examples. Thank you for this very informative video.
I'm probably going to make mine from your vermiculite portland mix from your other video. thank you so much for your detailed presentations. I can see your channel doing very well in the future!
Out of all the concrete blocks that you made for the raised beds which concrete mix you think the best for durability, strength, longevity and practicality? How much each concrete block weight? How would you add a top cover to a concrete form to make a green house and protect from animals to have an access to the garden? Thank you for all ideas you share with us.
Vegetable shortening is a great form oil for this too. I used to make these with forms that were slightly flared, like the sides of a cake pan, then the panels would just drop out by flipping the form over. No disassembly required. Seems like radiusing the ends would allow them to be connected at any angle and long serpentine beds or stand alone beds with as many sides as you want could be made.
Hi! I bought the plans but i have not been able to make them. I wish i was handy. I asked a woodworker to give me a quote for them. No answer so far! Anyways i found the portland cement here and i got 20 bags of it for cheap. I hope im able to get these boxes up and running before the garden season kicks in. I just hope they arent too heavy for me to carry coz if they are then i have to entice my nephews to help me out :D I am gonna stack them 3 high for height of the beds so then when i get older i wont have issues with my back, shoulders and neck. Thanks for the plans these boxes are awesome :D Much love from Norway
Nice videos. I'm an experimenter too! Sometimes a bit costly, but intriguing to me. I wonder how pinned walkway blocks would hold up on a paver sand base. Hum, may have to try it. Thanks for the motivation. Tuna out.
Love these videos and your experiment with various mixes, saves me the trouble. Perlite is a great idea due to surface area for portland or MCA to bind to. Using your idea to build forms out of steel now that wood has gotten so expensive.
Good morning. I have purchased 2 versions of your forms, and watched all your Versions of Mixes. In Part4 you made it super simple by noting the full bag mix, and only measuring out the Citric Acid. This Version (3.5) talks of the CSA and Perlite, but since using CementAll you changed the portions. Do you know (have you done) the portions for The Rapid Set Mortar Mix, Perlite and Sand? And if doing by Portions, is that so you have exact amount to fit 1 specific form size (36")? I think I am spoiled with your vs 4 filling 2-36" or 1-24" and 1-48".
Really good stuff! Very good video. One comment: I'd try to mix the color with most of the water you plan to use to get a most even color distribution. e.g.: If you expect to use 20L of water for a batch of concrete, I'd mix the required amount of color with 18L of water first, then mix that into the dry mix. Just a thought!
Appreciate this kind of information and quality of the video is outstanding. Is the wire mesh really a requirement? Wouldn't the concrete cure to a suitable strength for the designed application and considering these are not structural components?
Thanks! I never made a conscious effort to buy DeWalt. But they were always on sale when I was looking. And once you have invested in batteries they really have ya!
I love your easy to understand instructions and easy to follow video... You might want to try an even lighter mix, using NO sand... only perlite, portland cement and water... You do not need the sand as an aggregate because the perlite becomes the aggregate... and the mix is 4 parts perlite to 1 part portland cement... the panels will be much lighter... and strong..
I am glad to come across your video , please take care of your wheelbarrow it is a very thick plastic type material , cannot find it anymore the big box has a thin one cheaper which crack fast .
Great video !!! You did a great job of explaining your rationale on each experiment. I am ordering your plans and looking forward to mixing it up :-} Thanks again.
Why do you wrap the tube? It is not an integral part of the system, if it falls out re-insert it before you put in the connecting rod. Other casting project I just use a dowel rod and knocked it out after casting. Great ideas.
I realize this video has been posted for awhile, and I hope all is well. I’m really enjoying your videos. I’ve decided I am going to use your idea for the raised garden beds. Do you know how high they can be stacked?
Great series! Do you know the average cost per 48” panel (not including the form)? I wanted to do an estimate of what it’ll cost me to make a large quantity for my home. Thanks again for the series!
I've always had hydration issues with perlite. Either too much water, and it's weak; or it doesn't compact well and completely. I think a 'superplasticizer' would help, but I didn't really care that much to go find some.
Be sure to wear a mask when working with dry perlite. The dust is a lung hazard, some nurseries pre-wet it to rinse out the dust before using. The volume does not change with rinsing.
I have no problem wearing masks with any dusty materials, and N-95 is considered a respirator and would be fine. Studies on miners in various countries have failed to show toxicity opposed to vermiculite, which often contains asbestos and requires an N-99 mask (hepa-filtered). See NIOSH-CDC.
I keep trying to go to your website as I have several questions, but I keep getting the message that the site is unsafe and it won't let me through. I love your site as you take the time to explain what you are doing and why. I a new to working with cement, but I want to do some approx 3.5'x3.5' finished size garden boxes from the perlite mixture. I'm wondering about the need for some sort of support (?) in the bottom and sides to strengthen them and keep them from cracking. What would you recommend? Have you made any raised beds that are larger and taller ( to avoid so much bending)? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I'm borrowing your idea to make perlite concrete blocks that interlock like Legos. But only for the walls of a shed. I only have 20 forms so it's taking a while. The blocks lock together loosely with a bead of grout on the bottom and the inside. They lock together pretty tight from side to side so I'm thinking of just putting some silicone between them to make a weather seal. There is zero room for grout on the sides. Or maybe some liquid nails construction adhesive. Not sure yet. Still in the testing phase.
Excellent video Kent.....The methodical way you text and your production of the videos sets you apart. Question: Is there an upper limit of the amount of Perlite you can use before you see a loss in durability/performance? Thanks for all of your hard work.
QUESTION... First, thanks for the awesome video series, I will be ordering the plans for these. I guess your plans can easily be scaled up to any size? I think I will be going with the CSA and perlite mix. Because my wife and I are tall and have some back and knee issues we would like beds 20" high by 6' wide by at least 24" long that we can sit on the edge. I weigh 260lbs are 10" x 6' long blocks an issue other than possibly needing two people to demold, move and set in place? Do you think rebar driven into the ground is enough to keep the 24' long walls vertical with rebar every 6'? Should I incorporate more tubes at the 3' mark for additional rebar or should I just make more 4' or 3' long blocks? Other than using a tub to post-cure the concrete what else do you recommend? would simply placing them on a thick plastic tarp on the ground and covering them with the same think tarp and keeping them wet be okay or do they need to be submerged in water? Do you have a spreadsheet with your results for all the different mixtures?
Did you ever try any plasticizers to reduce the amount of water needed to get the mix to flow? I have used a squirt of Dawn dish soap when mixing mortar for bricklaying, makes it gooey and easy to work
Yes I have. In Part 4 of this series I used it with the Rapid Set Mortar Mix. Works very well. Also in my video on the concrete garden bench. I also use it in an upcoming episode of making aircrete with CSA cement.
I plan to start building raised garden beds this winter and I really like your design! I had planned to get a small, electric concrete mixer and am now curious -May I ask why you mix everything in a wheelbarrow instead of a concrete mixer?
I use a wheelbarrow to show that a mixer is not essential for this volume of concrete or this type of DIY project. I have a mixer myself and use it for bigger pours. Also, I like using a wheelbarrow while I'm testing new blends. Kent
when we mix concrete we use 1:2:3 1 cement 2 sand 3 gravel it should be possible to just replace gravel with perlite. I haven't calculated what it does in terms of weight or strength. But it should work for that. leca balls are often used in renovations in bathrooms in apartments to save weight.
Fantastic! Following since Ep. 1, and was disappointed you weren't letting them cure properly.... Only one test left, Destructive testing to see how strong they are compared to normal concrete. I mean really, how many planter boxes does Mrs. Man about Tools really need?
Thanks! I'm impressed with the strength and durability of the vermiculite and perlite panels. In this application I'd guess that they are strong enough for the job.
You can make it lighter by using foam in the mix. If you have a 50 gal drum you mix your concrete to 45 gal mark and then keep shooting in foam while mixing for the rest of the 5 gallon. it will make a light concrete that is still strong.
I now have molds ready-to-go here: manabouttools.com/store-plastic-concrete-molds/
Terrific update! As a reinforced concrete special inspector, I appreciate your attention towards consolidation and curing. Can’t wait for the next update
fully agreed! submerging also seemed like a great method to help an even curing and avoiding micro cracks!
@@gyorgyangelkottbocz9766 A good reason to make the panels short enough to fit in a bathtub.
Kent you're a clever guy and a natural teacher, you made it look easy and explained everything.
Brian from Liverpool - UK.
The first concrete box video was Gold....this part is DOUBLE GOLD!!!!!!!!!!!
I really appreciate these wonderful videos. I bought your plans to express my gratitude. You put so much R&D into this series. I'm very inspired to make the lightweight garden walls. Thank you so much.
This is how you do DIY! Thank you SO much for showing all details, and communicating your thought process, You have made me confident that what I am seeing is the real thing.
I LOVE your attention to details and the way you explain everything, Thank you!!!
Wow, your series on concrete/cement is amazingly well done. Really appreciate your detailed explanations on mix ratios, products, and test results. I made some stackable concrete planter parts a few years ago and they turned out way too heavy for me -- so if I ever do that again I'm going to try your perlite mix. Looks perfect.
Agree--exceptional detail, testing and even presentation quality...I could carry on but I won't. :D
ONE more thing: I revisit these on occasion. :D :D
Smooth professionalism of your videos make them a pleasure to watch; the researched findings are priceless.
I am glad you're continuing this series.
You are a true professional, thanks mate.
Oh boy! Kent's at it again. Yeah, glad you did this, well done.
so professional! I am simply impressed!
And yeah: I crave the new aircrete-receipts, as I was in fear, you dropped this completely, as you could not like the warping in the older samples.
THANKS FOR POSTING!!!
I remember watching the previous editions of this series and hoped that you would continue trying new materials. Thank you for the update. I'm near certain my wife will love a set of these panels for next year's garden.
Been fascinating watching the series and the results. I used a perlite/portland cement mix to lay a greenhouse base 25 years ago and it is still holding strong and stands up to wear and tear well. Where I live in the U.K. the soil is a heavy clay base. The addition of perlite helps aerate and lighten the soil giving much better growing results, over the clay soil.
Somebody, please buy this man a cement mixer. He will then create even more amazing projects for us to follow and maybe mimic. Thank you.
I have one. I don't use it when testing and prototyping though. And I'd also like to show how most people can mix concrete without one.
@@MANaboutTOOLS This is one of the things i love about how you teach! When needed you bring in the big machines too!
Post the cost of each as money is important to most folks
Thanks for the great work you have shown.
Compare such as a 4x8' garden wall 12-24" high to wood price would be a plus for me.
Dang you are good at building and me too.
Thanks
This is fantastic information! I am watching all of your videos one after the other. It's like watching a mystery and needing to see what happens at the end.
Awesome, thank you!
Now this raises the question of "what about thin csa panels with perlite?" Great video, very well done.
thin csa panels - see video #4 in this series.
Great design, nice proportions, beautifully photographed, expertly presented. This is something I have been thinking about for the past 10 years. You answered all my questions. Time to get off my butt.
Thank you very, very much! I so appreciate your positive feedback and support! Cheers, Kent
Incredibly detailed and easy to follow video, very well explained. You’re a great teacher! So many vids on yt expect us novices to know way too much stuff out of the gate, so thanks for explaning the details!
Excellent video as always. I plan to build these using this perlite mix. Thank you.
Brilliant! Ty for the research. Presented so well. I didn't have much luck with aircrete, so I'm interested in your findings.
I'm almost done editing the next part on aircrete. Worked way better this time. Stay tuned....
@@MANaboutTOOLS can't wait to see that worked out
Hi. Your videos, as usual, are a great source of inspiration. I'm placing this aside as I will definitely build some of these for my garden following your guidance. Thank you so much!
never thought about using concrete for garden boxes.. thank you for the information can hardly wait to make them myself..
Love this video. I grew up in a family of masons and your attention consolidation and curing was superb. According to a concrete engineer, the glass fibers really do not and reinforcement; they provide even curing in hopes of avoiding checking, though engineers do not guarantee against it. Steel (rebar) provides tensile strength (you can't stretch it to a fracture easily) and concrete provides compression strength, which varies to aggregate qualities and ratios of cement.
I don't have not one tool. I watched every second of parts 1, 2, and 3. Now I'm here.
I think I want to make a "shed" and use these as walls.
I was amazed with part 1 it just keeps getting better and better 🐓
I've enjoyed your series of the Garden Boxes a lot very helpful, thank you! Very high quality production and care to detail. Keep it up!
I am in ...very interesting. I built an entire garden enclosure yrs ago with methods very similar, I had fun doing it and after watching you I think I will give it another shot.
Congratulations for your efforts. I think that an update to your mix of perlite would be adding it to the aircrete, so that way you'll be adding the strength to the aircrete. Just a thought.
Keep up the good work.
Could you do a weight test across all blends. Using the 48” see how much weight can be placed on them in the middle as they span two saw horses?
I am considering using these on our 2 4’x8’ raised gardens we will be installing and have the same center dirt weight concerns.
Density of weight concrete?
I’ve watched all yr reinforced concrete vids. The perlite ones look more delicate and better for my small garden veg. Thanks for the precision; it makes me more confident the recipe will work. Will find a way to add hoop loops for cover, probably based on your plastic pipe and rebar method.
Thanks for using my suggestion about using perlite
Seriously mate, your channel is awesome. I just bought your 3 version package, not so much because I couldn't figure out how to build these myself but more as an expression of thanks for all the concrete R&D you've done and your willingness to share with us all.
I do need to start replacing the Macrocarpa boxes that I made a few years ago, so these will be perfect for the job. Would make great Christmas gifts using a Nordic symbol for the inset panel for the gardeners in the family too.
Cheers from down under for the videos mate
Thanks so much! I really appreciate your kind words and support!!
Great work, I am really impressed with the effort you put into making the boxes lighter. Thank you so much for this. I am definitely going to try this process.
Only courageous people share what they know. Thanks, greetings from Turkey
Thanks for watching!
The red is my favorite! And I don’t normally prefer red bricks but this was a much lighter Adobe like appearance... stunning! Now I’d like to see lime without cement in your forms🤞🏼Lime floors are finally getting some acknowledgement as truly environmentally friendly, and can be reused unlike concrete/cement or today’s versions of an old traditional version of Rome’s concrete formerly known as Lime concrete. Besides the fact Lime gets stronger with time and moisture it’s also cooler to the touch when the sun has been bearing down on it making it perfect to be poured around pools and as back door patios. I’m curious if Lime has to be slaked at home “quicklime” or if hydrated or hydraulic lime (box store version) would function just as well? I’ve read arguments both supporting hydraulic lime and arguments that it needs to be freshly slaked... I have no idea, nor do I know what formula would make a strong block or brick for paving with hydraulic or hydrated lime. Yes ppl sometimes mix in cement/concrete but that ruins the water permeable/breathability nature of LimeCrete so I’d hate to use modern cement with lime. Seeing perlite used in this demonstration reminds me of a demonstration using powdered lime with volcanic ash as aggregate but also sand and pebbles may be necessary to make a brick/block. Anyways curious, hoping someone will take on the lime brick challenge, it’s not very popular because it’s not well known of its amazing properties and the fact that it is environmentally safe, reusable, etc. and grows in strength for 100’s and thousands of years.
Lime absorbs moisture indefintely
Thanks for all your diligence and hard work on this series Kent. I love it!
Great video, thank you. I've been looking at these lightweight concrete products and was wondering if it would be possible to use it to build walls or a roof.
It's lightweight. It should supposed to have insulation qualities so it sounds like it would be perfect, but I've watched other videos too and it showed that it usually breaks real easy or rubs off. But I think they were making more of air creed so maybe that's a different.
If you were going to build a concrete house, would you use regular concrete for the floor walls and ceiling or roof or would you use the perlite mixed with cement? Or should these lightweight concrete only be used for decorational purposes?
Hiw are they holding up
Would you comment how the cost of these lightweight panels compare to a standard sand/cement panel? I believe that the perlite would be the most expensive component of making these lightweight examples. Thank you for this very informative video.
The red is nice and seems Right. I think Green would be good too
Just downloaded your plans for later use. Thanks for the tutorial videos.
I'm probably going to make mine from your vermiculite portland mix from your other video. thank you so much for your detailed presentations. I can see your channel doing very well in the future!
I like this.
Out of all the concrete blocks that you made for the raised beds which concrete mix you think the best for durability, strength, longevity and practicality? How much each concrete block weight?
How would you add a top cover to a concrete form to make a green house and protect from animals to have an access to the garden? Thank you for all ideas you share with us.
Looking forward to seeing your aircrete tests ...Thanks Mike
Vegetable shortening is a great form oil for this too.
I used to make these with forms that were slightly flared, like the sides of a cake pan, then the panels would just drop out by flipping the form over. No disassembly required.
Seems like radiusing the ends would allow them to be connected at any angle and long serpentine beds or stand alone beds with as many sides as you want could be made.
Seems easy enough method if you did not have to have the stake holder channels molded into the ends like he does here with his panels.
Hi! I bought the plans but i have not been able to make them. I wish i was handy. I asked a woodworker to give me a quote for them. No answer so far! Anyways i found the portland cement here and i got 20 bags of it for cheap. I hope im able to get these boxes up and running before the garden season kicks in. I just hope they arent too heavy for me to carry coz if they are then i have to entice my nephews to help me out :D I am gonna stack them 3 high for height of the beds so then when i get older i wont have issues with my back, shoulders and neck. Thanks for the plans these boxes are awesome :D Much love from Norway
Nice videos. I'm an experimenter too! Sometimes a bit costly, but intriguing to me. I wonder how pinned walkway blocks would hold up on a paver sand base. Hum, may have to try it. Thanks for the motivation. Tuna out.
Nice work. I am making some planters based upon your formula.
Thanks!
Love these videos and your experiment with various mixes, saves me the trouble. Perlite is a great idea due to surface area for portland or MCA to bind to. Using your idea to build forms out of steel now that wood has gotten so expensive.
Good morning. I have purchased 2 versions of your forms, and watched all your Versions of Mixes. In Part4 you made it super simple by noting the full bag mix, and only measuring out the Citric Acid. This Version (3.5) talks of the CSA and Perlite, but since using CementAll you changed the portions. Do you know (have you done) the portions for The Rapid Set Mortar Mix, Perlite and Sand? And if doing by Portions, is that so you have exact amount to fit 1 specific form size (36")?
I think I am spoiled with your vs 4 filling 2-36" or 1-24" and 1-48".
Really good stuff! Very good video. One comment: I'd try to mix the color with most of the water you plan to use to get a most even color distribution. e.g.: If you expect to use 20L of water for a batch of concrete, I'd mix the required amount of color with 18L of water first, then mix that into the dry mix. Just a thought!
I wonder if these could be used to make the walls of a garden shed
Appreciate this kind of information and quality of the video is outstanding.
Is the wire mesh really a requirement?
Wouldn't the concrete cure to a suitable strength for the designed application and considering these are not structural components?
Amazing craftsmanship. Good job
Excellent series !!! Nice choice in string trimmers too.
Thanks! I never made a conscious effort to buy DeWalt. But they were always on sale when I was looking. And once you have invested in batteries they really have ya!
I love your easy to understand instructions and easy to follow video... You might want to try an even lighter mix, using NO sand... only perlite, portland cement and water... You do not need the sand as an aggregate because the perlite becomes the aggregate... and the mix is 4 parts perlite to 1 part portland cement... the panels will be much lighter... and strong..
Thanks! I may try that mix.
I am glad to come across your video , please take care of your wheelbarrow it is a very thick plastic type material , cannot find it anymore the big box has a thin one cheaper which crack fast .
Thank you, I will
Another fine demo. Thanks
Great video !!! You did a great job of explaining your rationale on each experiment. I am ordering your plans and looking forward to mixing it up :-} Thanks again.
Awesome! Thank you!
Can you use Quikcrete (yellow bag) with the peralite?
Why do you wrap the tube? It is not an integral part of the system, if it falls out re-insert it before you put in the connecting rod. Other casting project I just use a dowel rod and knocked it out after casting. Great ideas.
I realize this video has been posted for awhile, and I hope all is well. I’m really enjoying your videos. I’ve decided I am going to use your idea for the raised garden beds. Do you know how high they can be stacked?
Great series! Do you know the average cost per 48” panel (not including the form)? I wanted to do an estimate of what it’ll cost me to make a large quantity for my home. Thanks again for the series!
I would love to know the $$$ too. I'd like to batch these out.
Could you provide some ballpark cost per panel? Without a cost I cant judge suitability for a project.
احسنت ابداع غير متناهي
hey Kent, how have these weathered over time? I'm curious to see how they withstood a could winters.
Thanks for posting, excellent video.
Always enjoy these videos!
I've always had hydration issues with perlite. Either too much water, and it's weak; or it doesn't compact well and completely. I think a 'superplasticizer' would help, but I didn't really care that much to go find some.
Be sure to wear a mask when working with dry perlite. The dust is a lung hazard, some nurseries pre-wet it to rinse out the dust before using. The volume does not change with rinsing.
Yes, put lots of tiny holes in the bottom of the bag... fill with hose... let drain...
I have no problem wearing masks with any dusty materials, and N-95 is considered a respirator and would be fine. Studies on miners in various countries have failed to show toxicity opposed to vermiculite, which often contains asbestos and requires an N-99 mask (hepa-filtered). See NIOSH-CDC.
I've found a corded or cordless hammer drill with an air hammer flathead bit settles mixes really well also.
Good tip! Thx
I keep trying to go to your website as I have several questions, but I keep getting the message that the site is unsafe and it won't let me through. I love your site as you take the time to explain what you are doing and why. I a new to working with cement, but I want to do some approx 3.5'x3.5' finished size garden boxes from the perlite mixture. I'm wondering about the need for some sort of support (?) in the bottom and sides to strengthen them and keep them from cracking. What would you recommend? Have you made any raised beds that are larger and taller ( to avoid so much bending)? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I'm borrowing your idea to make perlite concrete blocks that interlock like Legos. But only for the walls of a shed. I only have 20 forms so it's taking a while. The blocks lock together loosely with a bead of grout on the bottom and the inside. They lock together pretty tight from side to side so I'm thinking of just putting some silicone between them to make a weather seal. There is zero room for grout on the sides. Or maybe some liquid nails construction adhesive. Not sure yet. Still in the testing phase.
Excellent video Kent.....The methodical way you text and your production of the videos sets you apart.
Question: Is there an upper limit of the amount of Perlite you can use before you see a loss in durability/performance?
Thanks for all of your hard work.
Thanks for the support and kind words! I have not done extensive testing of the perlite ratios for lightweight concrete.
thanks for sharing the updates looking forward to more.
QUESTION... First, thanks for the awesome video series, I will be ordering the plans for these. I guess your plans can easily be scaled up to any size? I think I will be going with the CSA and perlite mix. Because my wife and I are tall and have some back and knee issues we would like beds 20" high by 6' wide by at least 24" long that we can sit on the edge. I weigh 260lbs are 10" x 6' long blocks an issue other than possibly needing two people to demold, move and set in place? Do you think rebar driven into the ground is enough to keep the 24' long walls vertical with rebar every 6'? Should I incorporate more tubes at the 3' mark for additional rebar or should I just make more 4' or 3' long blocks? Other than using a tub to post-cure the concrete what else do you recommend? would simply placing them on a thick plastic tarp on the ground and covering them with the same think tarp and keeping them wet be okay or do they need to be submerged in water? Do you have a spreadsheet with your results for all the different mixtures?
Did you ever try any plasticizers to reduce the amount of water needed to get the mix to flow? I have used a squirt of Dawn dish soap when mixing mortar for bricklaying, makes it gooey and easy to work
Yes I have. In Part 4 of this series I used it with the Rapid Set Mortar Mix. Works very well. Also in my video on the concrete garden bench. I also use it in an upcoming episode of making aircrete with CSA cement.
How much materials do you need for a 48" garden bed? Just got your number 2 mold plans from you last week! Thanks!
Nice experimental video.. I will do same sampling soon.. n see the results... thanks..
I wonder how this will work with a mixture of perlite and aircrete and glass fiber??? worth a try to video
I plan to start building raised garden beds this winter and I really like your design! I had planned to get a small, electric concrete mixer and am now curious -May I ask why you mix everything in a wheelbarrow instead of a concrete mixer?
I use a wheelbarrow to show that a mixer is not essential for this volume of concrete or this type of DIY project. I have a mixer myself and use it for bigger pours. Also, I like using a wheelbarrow while I'm testing new blends. Kent
just a quick thought but maybe you could use charcoal or home made charcoal as a cheap light, maybe free? medium to add to your concrete panels.
when we mix concrete we use 1:2:3
1 cement
2 sand
3 gravel
it should be possible to just replace gravel with perlite. I haven't calculated what it does in terms of weight or strength. But it should work for that.
leca balls are often used in renovations in bathrooms in apartments to save weight.
If I just keep watching the playlist eventually all of my questions will be answered LOL
I hope. But I try to answer as many questions as I can.
Great series!!!
Thanks!
I love your content! Very methodical and well structured, you have my sub!
I'm new to molding concrete and was wondering why you don't use a plasticizer to improve the flow and increase strength. Just not necessary?
Fantastic! Following since Ep. 1, and was disappointed you weren't letting them cure properly.... Only one test left, Destructive testing to see how strong they are compared to normal concrete. I mean really, how many planter boxes does Mrs. Man about Tools really need?
I would love to see a mix using Hemp and see how that compares.
That probably is with Hemp is finding a place to buy it.
great video, at 71 I have made 36 4 ft panels with concrete they are heavy, how do the light ones compare in over all durability.
Thanks! I'm impressed with the strength and durability of the vermiculite and perlite panels. In this application I'd guess that they are strong enough for the job.
@@MANaboutTOOLS Thanks,I will give it try .
Thank you for terrific presentation!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Really Cool! Thank you!
You can make it lighter by using foam in the mix. If you have a 50 gal drum you mix your concrete to 45 gal mark and then keep shooting in foam while mixing for the rest of the 5 gallon. it will make a light concrete that is still strong.
Excellent video and super useful project
Nice work!! What is the actual weights?
Does it have to be Portland cement?