PeterTheCarpenter Posted March 26 Posted March 26 Hello, there is my first post on here to see how it goes. Hoping for positive and welcoming things. I’m a qualified Chippy from past years. A handy Ex sole trader. Would anyone be prepared to provide sound advice on ground works? 1
Nickfromwales Posted March 26 Posted March 26 8 minutes ago, PeterTheCarpenter said: Hello, there is my first post on here to see how it goes. Hoping for positive and welcoming things. I’m a qualified Chippy from past years. A handy Ex sole trader. Would anyone be prepared to provide sound advice on ground works? Hi Peter. Yup, loads of advice and info here on ground works so just choose the correct sub forum to post your questions in, and also read through some of the many posts here to see if that gets you some answers. 👍. 1
ToughButterCup Posted March 27 Posted March 27 Hello, welcome. My Groundworks truisms. An experienced person and his machine will do it -better- in a tenth of the time it takes you to do it on your own. Buy a digger anyway. 1
saveasteading Posted March 27 Posted March 27 1 hour ago, ToughButterCup said: Buy a digger anyway I'm resisting. I'd like a cherry picker too. I wonder if people who regret buying the toy keep quiet about it. I've seen so many 5t diggers sitting idle on site waiting for a very expensive repair. Can you buy at good value and with some guarantee? Where do they go for the last owner before scrapping? I know: my groundworkers and self builders.
Roger440 Posted March 27 Posted March 27 11 hours ago, saveasteading said: I'm resisting. I'd like a cherry picker too. I wonder if people who regret buying the toy keep quiet about it. I've seen so many 5t diggers sitting idle on site waiting for a very expensive repair. Can you buy at good value and with some guarantee? Where do they go for the last owner before scrapping? I know: my groundworkers and self builders. Any cheap digger, i think you are pretty much on your own. Older stuff is simple and reliable, but, hydraulics are expensive when they go wrong. My first digger the slew motor developed a massive leak (turned out a previous bodge). Cost abot £300 to get the motor repaired. But many hours were spent by me getting to it. Im sure its the first part they start with when building a digger. Owning an old machine, is, essentially gambling. 2
Iceverge Posted March 27 Posted March 27 Ground works. Dig hole, pour in concrete. Done, dusted , finito. Now let's talk about this digger.......
saveasteading Posted March 28 Posted March 28 8 hours ago, Iceverge said: Now let's talk about this digger... Yes please. Where to source, what to avoid? Running costs? Regrets?
ToughButterCup Posted April 2 Posted April 2 I've written a checklist about diggas here on BH somewhere...
jack Posted April 22 Posted April 22 @PeterTheCarpenter, I've moved your detailed question out of the Introduce Yourself section and into Waste & Sewerage, which might get you some more responses: If you'd prefer it in a different section (eg, Foundations), let me know by quoting this message or using the @ system to flag my attention.
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