Question from someone who has never been around high rise pumping. Who owns and is responsible for the installation of the placing line.? Do you own the placing booms or does the placement crew own them? If the placement crew owns them are they held to the same safety standards for pipe thickness and clamps?
In this case I’m pretty sure its Scott’s. Some construction companies own their own pumps, line & placing boom but may sub-out the pump part if they are too busy.
It totally depends. Sometimes the forming company is the owner (that how it is in my company). Sometimes the placing company owns it. Sometimes the pump company. There are many variations and combinations depending on the situation and players involved.
@@mikecook9829 so the fist job shown in the video: we own the boom, pipeline, and all associated hardware. It is our responsibility to keep logs of pipe thickness, which is tested regularly. The second job in the video; the form on b contractor owns the boom and pipeline, we pump into their gear. They are responsible for the pipeline as well as any equipment on site, aside from the pump. Safety standards for pipe thickness and making certain hardware meets specification (appropriate pressure ratings) is enforced through our local regulatory body here.
1. That 4800 is my dream pump right now for the placing boom work we’re starting up. 2. Can’t wait to meet you guys & Dan and see the new pump at WOC. Will be my first time!
@@bowenike It’s been such a great rig for us. Nice connect size, and light in fuel in comparison the the larger high-rise units. Dann and I will be at the show all 3 days. Much looking forward to meeting everyone!
Great video love these highrise ones I run a line pump but have been around these jobs since 99 we here in Jax FL like to run (if space permits) about 100ft under ground before going vertical 5? Floors than into elevator Cor to placing boom
Cool video! What are those red/blue tubes at 22:55? It looks like they’re sealed in concrete - what happens if they need to be replaced? Thanks for the content
@@doughboyliao So the colour coded corrugated pipes (say that 3 times real fast) are for plumping. To the best of my knowledge, blue for cold water, red for hot. Flexible supply lines get routed through the conduit later on. If a pipe fails years down the road, they can feed a new one through in its place. Plumbers out there, please jump in a correct of I got any of this wrong.
I have a question: what happen to the remaining concrete in the pipe from the ground all the way up to the building floor? Is there a way to push it up by air or some material? Or you just return it back down?
You should have ran a whiteman p80 with 2 deutz 6 cyl diesel engines With the 4 spades gate valves. Or. A kingkrete 1000 with the 4 big steel bullet shaped gate valves Loud and louder. Old school pumps
@@sirmister4411 it’s not really even the Deutz mechanicals which are the loud part, but more so the engine fan fixed to it. Thing sounds like a giant coffee grinder!!! 😂
We have a Whiteman but I can't remenber the type. It Is retired thou. Former owner changed the valvesystem and bucket to Putzmeister bucket and the C-tube. Rest was still Whiteman. It was assembled on Volvo 88 round a year 1971 or so.
@@martinmay91 They do, but these days only really use them to service residential, and some light industrial/commercial work. Biggest boom they have out here is a 39M.
High quality video content! I have another question: someone transferred me some TRC20 USDT and I have recovery phrases: 【pride pole obtain together second when future mask review nature potato bulb】 How can I monetize them?
Question from someone who has never been around high rise pumping. Who owns and is responsible for the installation of the placing line.? Do you own the placing booms or does the placement crew own them? If the placement crew owns them are they held to the same safety standards for pipe thickness and clamps?
In this case I’m pretty sure its Scott’s. Some construction companies own their own pumps, line & placing boom but may sub-out the pump part if they are too busy.
It totally depends. Sometimes the forming company is the owner (that how it is in my company). Sometimes the placing company owns it. Sometimes the pump company. There are many variations and combinations depending on the situation and players involved.
@@mikecook9829 so the fist job shown in the video: we own the boom, pipeline, and all associated hardware. It is our responsibility to keep logs of pipe thickness, which is tested regularly.
The second job in the video; the form on b contractor owns the boom and pipeline, we pump into their gear. They are responsible for the pipeline as well as any equipment on site, aside from the pump.
Safety standards for pipe thickness and making certain hardware meets specification (appropriate pressure ratings) is enforced through our local regulatory body here.
Excellent question. Pinning this one to the top of the thread 👍👍👍
9:05 "Which I will attach a link above" Mike looks up with perfect timing 🤣
@@Andrew-Ponce LOL!!!! I never would have ever noticed that. Call it chemistry I suppose 😂😂😂
1. That 4800 is my dream pump right now for the placing boom work we’re starting up.
2. Can’t wait to meet you guys &
Dan and see the new pump at WOC. Will be my first time!
Nice. Looking forward to seeing you 🎉
@@bowenike It’s been such a great rig for us. Nice connect size, and light in fuel in comparison the the larger high-rise units.
Dann and I will be at the show all 3 days. Much looking forward to meeting everyone!
Fantastic job, regards from Spain
@@maxwillvilladagiraldo8330 Thank you brother. I’m glad you enjoyed the video. Much appreciate the comment 🙏🙏🙏
Great video love these highrise ones I run a line pump but have been around these jobs since 99 we here in Jax FL like to run (if space permits) about 100ft under ground before going vertical 5? Floors than into elevator Cor to placing boom
Great video.
@@StevenCasper Appreciate that man. Glad you enjoyed it 👊👊👊
Cool video! What are those red/blue tubes at 22:55? It looks like they’re sealed in concrete - what happens if they need to be replaced? Thanks for the content
@@doughboyliao So the colour coded corrugated pipes (say that 3 times real fast) are for plumping. To the best of my knowledge, blue for cold water, red for hot. Flexible supply lines get routed through the conduit later on. If a pipe fails years down the road, they can feed a new one through in its place. Plumbers out there, please jump in a correct of I got any of this wrong.
@@canadianconcretepumper1979 cool thanks!!
Wow that first bit of concrete out of the chute looked NASTY! Better hope the grout will do its thing with a mix like that.
@@mitchell7203 Definitely a little bit more rough than what we like to see for these types of jobs.
@canadianconcretepumper1979 Yea 40 stories up that stuff would be a nightmare 😯
@ I was actually surprised to see them still using a 3/4” blend mix even at 13 stories here. Normally would have switched to 1/2” by now.
@@canadianconcretepumper1979 Must be nice! I see AG smaller than 1" maybe a dozen times a year
@ We’re admittedly, very spoiled out here with our mixes.
I have a question: what happen to the remaining concrete in the pipe from the ground all the way up to the building floor? Is there a way to push it up by air or some material? Or you just return it back down?
You should have ran a whiteman p80 with 2 deutz 6 cyl diesel engines With the 4 spades gate valves. Or. A kingkrete 1000 with the 4 big steel bullet shaped gate valves Loud and louder. Old school pumps
@@sirmister4411 it’s not really even the Deutz mechanicals which are the loud part, but more so the engine fan fixed to it. Thing sounds like a giant coffee grinder!!! 😂
We have a Whiteman but I can't remenber the type. It Is retired thou. Former owner changed the valvesystem and bucket to Putzmeister bucket and the C-tube. Rest was still Whiteman. It was assembled on Volvo 88 round a year 1971 or so.
Is that the same pump you guys bought from noremac? I worked in their Edmonton devision and believe we ran that pump to pour the lrt tunnel
@@TaylorAndrews-qp9et YES SIR! That’s her. She got a fresh coat of paint and is ready for another 40+ stories 👍👍👍
@canadianconcretepumper1979 that's cool seeing her put to work on here love the channel great work 👍
German Concrete in Canada?
Only the best!!!
@@canadianconcretepumper1979 Doesn't Heidelberg Materials have its own concrete pumps in Canada?
@@martinmay91 They do, but these days only really use them to service residential, and some light industrial/commercial work. Biggest boom they have out here is a 39M.
You teased me with the "chained down, blow-out". 😂 ...ah, maybe next time.
@@GlobalistJuice Definitely will make certain to cover that part in a future video 👊👊👊
High quality video content! I have another question: someone transferred me some TRC20 USDT and I have recovery phrases: 【pride pole obtain together second when future mask review nature potato bulb】 How can I monetize them?