BUILDING OUR OWN DRIVEWAY DIDN'T GO EXACTLY TO PLAN | DREAM ABANDONDED PROPERTY
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- čas přidán 3. 02. 2024
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WOW !! I have never seen a cement truck driver help a homeowner screed cement.... Hats off to that Cement Truck Driver...
That's how puerto Ricans are ! 🇵🇷 🇵🇷 🇵🇷
Puerto Ricans are always willing to help out
Dude...it's Puerto Rico. That's the way they roll. Try living in a place like that. We sailed our 40ft Block Island sailboat from Panama City FL to Isla Mujeres Mexico to Middle Long Cay Belize to Livingston Guatemala and 20 miles up the Rio Dulce. Every body quits work at 1000 because of the intense heat. All you can do is lay there and sweat if you're a gringo unacclimated to the tropics. I mean to say...everybody knows how tough it can be and everybody has some sympathy and will help you out. Not like here in America. You can e dying in the street and people just walk on by without even a word.
I’ve never seen it either, buy that man a beer
I know people are saying "thats how Puerto Rico is", but I suspect that isn't how it is for the rich obnoxious Americans who go there with plenty of money and just buy what they want instead of working for it. I remember in these comments in the early homesteading videos where people were saying how tough it will be to get permits and other difficulties when building in PR. I doubt those people were working side by side with any contractor who worked the job.
Matt, all things considered, that looks awesome. As a builder of 48 years, the work you have completed is incredible. Don't worry about the Visqueen marks. In time it will be irrelevant. A thought, "can't you find one local guy for a couple hours to help you during the pour", it will make a world of difference. And I admit, you are much more brilliant than you look.😀 😀😀😀
I could get a guy to help but I try to plan the projects so we can do it just the two of us. The driver helped me with the screedboard so Kristen didn't have to but she was ready.
I can see that. As you now know, "practice makes perfect". So your future pours, will be a bit easier for you, knowing your capabilities. It's not worth killing yourself. Who would feed the chickens if something happened to you. 😀😀😀@@SailingGoodBadandUgly
ROCKIN ROLL 😊
@@SailingGoodBadandUglyconcrete takes 28 days to fully cure. Color changes are normal until cure process is done. It’ll be fine
Agree 👍
It is so refreshing to watch you two together tackle the world. Matt is not a man of many talents.. he is a Master of one specific thing in my opinion. He has mastered Self Management. He refuses to say "I Can't" and that is applicable to ANY other skill or project in life. Inspirational to say the least. You make a hell of a team!
The rain makes for a slow cure, makes for strong concrete! It's better than in the sun cure. That will last a very long time. Well done!
Ya....all that Hard work will Last, until the very First Tri Drive Mixer or the very First Pump Truck drives on it!
The Good news is, you will never ever notice all of those Stains....in all of the Broken concrete! lol
You are putting the cart before the horse.
Forget the Concrete, and just go with a Rock Driveway.
You are not living in Beverly Hills.....you are in some Jungle, in the middle of No where!
I can only imagine, what the Mixer Driver was thinking! Bahahahaha
@@raykinsellas9089 Stay in school, son. You don't know.
@@raykinsellas9089your not a very nice individual. I live in a rural farm and have a concrete driveway that leads into my garage. Ignorance is bliss. Hurting people hurt others.
I was thinking the same thing, that’s a lot weight to be putting on that drive with the truck and a full load. Maybe check into a line pump if that’s a option.And at the rate of 6 months per section your looking at 3 and half years before it’s done. You also should have put in some contraction joints unless your planning on putting them in later. Just easier to to do after you float it. Looks good.
@@joelentz2644 Of course you would let the concrete cure completely.
Matt 46 years in construction 34 of those in site work and road construction. For a gravel driveway consider using roll of geo grid fabric to stabilize road, 3" quarry rock base (or is close to that size there) then cap with either 3/4- or 5/8- inch gravel wearing coarse. Used this method many times to build temp construction and permanent roads over wet clay soils in Oregon and Washington state. The geo grid keeps the rock and soil separated and bridges the weight of vehicles over a wider area. Geo Grid is required in many building parking lots by owners and many road projects I have done for state, county, and city road projects. Construction road built to handle loaded truck and trailer. Geo Grid fabric, 9"-12"(depending on soil) of 3" quarry rock, cap with 2-3" of 3/4-" or 5/8-" gravel wearing coarse (easy to rake and same structural support as 1 1/2-" or 1 1/4-" gravel). No Concrete boarders so water can freely drain through rock. If Concrete Boarder is desire build on 4" of base rock so water can drain through base rock. Geo Grid fabric in US comes in 12', 14', & 16' wide rolls & is not expensive. Hope it is available there if you decide on this method. If you decide on a concrete or asphalt driveway later, you just built your asphalt or concrete road base.
Listen to this guy. I'd add, you want the gravel top coat to have the fines included, not cleaned washed gravel. The fines let it all lock together, instead of being a shifting mass of loose gravel.
That's what i said in response to their last video. And of course laying concrete directly on top of that soil without any underlay or gravle that has had time to settle will most definitely crack and break. And i wont go into not preparing the terrain without any drainage first ! 😳
I agree, just be ready for all the powdery parts of the fines to wash down to the bottom over time. I live on a pretty steep hill and have to scoop/sweep up fines from the entrance to my shop building about every 6 months due to rain. I put the gravel with fines down about 10 years ago and still am dealing with it. I finally put 3/4" clean rock down and wish that was what i used instead of the gravel with screenings.@@TimTimTomTom
Yeah, what he said!
Excellent advise.... well explained and geotechnically sound.
I did alot of slabs as a young man. I don't know if you know but you can role on some diesel fuel on the inside of your forms and it will keep them from sticking to the cement and it will keep the boards clean for you to be able to reuse them. Turned out great. Great job. I don't think I've ever seen a harder working guy!!!
A standard garden sprayer works awesome in form oil application.
I would recommend hydraulic fluid rather than diesel.
You didn’t put joints in it when ready…now you must cut in joints so it cracks where YOU want it to!! … cause it WILL crack…all concrete does..you need to control where ..
@@michaeljfleming4363 You have no idea of what you are talking about.... expansion joints are not required when temperatures are within a reasonable variance ( tropical) also you have no idea of the concrete mix and if plasticizers or ash mix was employed. Modern concrete is not your grand paw's concrete. Slump and air entrainment isn't a requirement in their region. What you stated is complete nonsense. End of story.
Any oil will do (waste oil is free from the local motor mechanic, or chip fry shop), so long as it's slippery and water-resistant.
Hand prints are a must!
👍🏻
I would do them in the middle or close to the house.
My yard has kitten footprints in the concrete. You might make a roller to look like kitten prints and roll it across the steep parts for extra traction and cuteness.
Guys, dont stress the discoloration. That entryway looks amazing! You're looking at it too hard. You dont wanna spend years on it, you've got a house to build. You live in a gorgeous jungle and do you really want it to look like perfect surburbia? Honestly, I think the creative/jungle vibe/ranch owner vibe look is what I would have expected for your personalities all along. Does that make sense? 😊 Love everything you're doing there, and your channel is so fun to watch.
The only thing I will mention is maybe you should have started at the bottom, the way cement cures is with time not sure if they recommend driving on the cement especially with a cement truck. The only other way I can see is if you rent cement motorized carts to transport the cement from the road to your new slabs going down the hill. Best of luck!
I was wondering the same thing.
I gotta see how this pans out.
I thought the very same thing. Matt said you can drive on it in 28 days, but that's not heavy concrete trucks. They could wait months before being able to pour lower pads. I do think the idea of the concrete troughs on either side with gravel for the road is a good one.
Could use a concrete pump !
@@tnolan3176
yup!
A yard of concrete weighs 2000#..you put 3-4 yds on a concrete truck and drive on the new driveway after a Year of " curing" and it will ruin it! Start from the bottom..use a pump PLZ
You can make it uniform with a floor grinder. Keep the plastic on. Concrete is not supposed to dry, it's supposed to harden. The hardening stops as it dries out. So it's desirable to keep the concrete moist for the first 28 days.
Ok made it to the end... If you have access to a concrete saw.. Go back and cut yourself 2 foot x 2 foot or 4 foot by 4 foot squares... 1 1/2" to 2" deep... ( Do not cut as deep as your mesh of course) the cuts will give the pad a place to crack within the confines of the cuts.. Next pad you pour there are tools to "cut" your lines (expansion joints) directly into the cement / concrete while it is still wet ... also get yourself some kneeling pads.... when the concrete is hard enough to support your weight.. on the pads.. you go with a trowel.. and work the surface (bringing up cream) and you can achieve yourself a mirror finish before doing the broom finish.. other than that ... great work : )
Well, we've gone from one of my favorite sailing channels to my favorite Sunday morning cartoons. KEEP UPTHE GOOD WORK
That's way too tight a grid. 10x10 is perfectly fine. You want them about 1/4 of the thickness of the slab.
Don't worry about the color. You did a very good job. Move on, rain will keep changing it over time.
She had me worried, I was so relieved when I saw the small "stains", it's a driveway dear, not the new linnen😂, rain, dirt and traffic will soon make their own marks...
Matt is the only person I know where 90% of construction projects involve flip flops 😂
I was a bit disappointed he didn't tackle the concrete pour in his customers denim hot pants and cowboy boots 😂
in Florida flip flops are the state shoe! even dock builders show up to work in flip flops!
That was great that the Driver helped you ,He most likely has some experience .
Congrats on doing an awesome job at your first large concrete pour! Matt's muscles are really showing the results of his hard labor. Regarding the staining from the plastic cover, I'd leave it along and not worry about it. The next few rain storms will even out the finish. BUT please don't hit it with a pressure washer or it will ruin the concrete by blasting holes into the still uncured concrete. Please be patient with the staining, it won't be noticeable for very long. Again, congrats!
GJ Matt❕❕😉👍👍You nailed it. Don't worry about the stains their do to moisture under the plastic and the cement heating up. A pressure washer will remove it. Plus you can drive on it 48 hrs later not 30 days. The longer times are the amounts when concrete stops curing. Did you know the Hoover Dam is still curing to this day.
A man of many talents
Flip the mesh over go to each corner and pull up on each corner and it will flatten out .Be careful that wire will stab you .I did concrete and custom pool decks for 30 years in Orlando, Daytona,Palm Coast and all in-between.
Good on you for letting your wife know that she has been helpful even though she insisted that she wasn't good at it. That was my favorite part of the video.
The king and queen of their own personal tropical paradise continue to charge head on and conquer bit by bit the tasks they set before themselves!! My hat is off to you Matt and Kristen! God's blessings on your continuing adventure. 😊 👋
I don't know anything about concrete but maybe you should start at the bottom and come up - that way those super heavy concrete trucks wont damage your 6 in drive ?? LOL
If the concrete trucks could get up and down the hill as is, they wouldn't need a driveway at all -- I think.
What would he do if the trucks kept getting stuck at the bottom? Not a good idea, those trucks won't hurt the slabs if they are properly done with reinforcement wire and correct Rated Mix!
A little late for that, i'd say.
@@ironhorse3497 still, better late than never. Easier to replace a couple sections, than the whole thing.
That sure makes a lot of sense 😉
You two are the best! Thanks for my Sunday morning ☕️🙏🏻 time. 🫶🏻
Let’s go, Concrete Carl!
Highway mesh would be better for the heavy trucks you will have driving on it into the future.
Cement is just one ingredient of concrete. Concrete is cement, sand, gravel and water.
If you do a strip of concrete for a border, make it extra thick with rebar because it WILL get driven on and break up.
If you do plan to use concrete, start at the far end so that the incredibly heavy concrete trucks don't destroy what's already been poured.
I'm not a "know it all" but I used to work in concrete in my younger day. Just my 2 cents.
You really did an AWESOME job! Really!!!
I don't think a concrete truck would make it up a hill with a clay base like that... even empty.
You need to cut it at 10 foot intervals, concrete always cracks at 10 foot. 2:49
@@fredrichards2203 OMG... the amount of armchair nonsense being posted here is beyond belief. NO.. concrete does not "always cracks at 10 foot"... where do you people dig this BS up? Consider the fact that modern concrete in no way resembles what your daddy of uncle were familiar with. They cast foundations now at sub zero temps with no issues. Plasticizers, fly ash content, rapid cure and slow set never mind reducers etc. ... totally affect modern concrete. Stop posting on a subject you have no valid information on.
Even with the two concrete channels. keep using rebar and connect them probably every ten feet. along with the wire down the channels. because it's possible the channels can get pushed over the cliffside. also add pvc channels to let the water flow through it. you can also dig deeper on one side and place wider pvc so you can run cables and wires. just run them later.
Dear GBU subscribers, love the thought you guys are pouring into this lovely couples channel. I fear as hard as they work, and the best, most thoughtful advice that you give, is too late. Matty is a learner by mistakes. I am as well, but cheers to everyone for just being an awesome interactive audience.❤. I am sure they can see the love. Truly inspiring 😊. Looks great though Matty….you always pull it off in the end.
We do see the love! And we learn alot, from mistakes and advice from everyone
You guys always pull it off in the end. It looks great. My best to you guys
Matt if you decide to go with stone for the rest of the driveway l would put in curb not a strip down each side if its narrow and only 6 in deep it will not be strong and crack on you I would suggest a 6 inch wide and at lest 18 inches deep so it has strength otherwise you will just push it around driving on it especially in rainy weather
If you have never done this before then I am absolutely shocked.
This was fantastic and props to that driver for helping you. Get a weed sprayer filled with diesel to spray your forms so they pop off easier. The discoloration will fade away over time and a little water while it cures is a good thing.
Love y'all and quit worrying about the little stuff.
I built pools when I was 18-21 yrs old but was more of a laborer, I've never floated or brushed before
Brush when you throw small pebble and it bounces and doesn't stick. That's pretty much the point when it's at beginning stage of setting.
Supposed to embed coins with the year it was poured.......along with the hand prints hahaa
You did a good job. Just keep it wet for a couple days it will all be one color in a couple weeks. You can drive on it in 7 days. It does get initial set in 28 days and continues to harden for 65 years.
They repoured the concrete roadway in front of my house 4 years ago. I watched it all, you did it just like the pros. They used a concrete pumper with a long remote controlled boom to do it all. The curbs were done with a concrete curb forming machine which lays it down fast, maybe 3 ft/min, no forms needed. It somewhat resembles a snow blower. Gasoline powered, self propelled, workers keep dumping buckets of concrete into its hopper.
If you'll go with gravel for most of the driveway, run drainage across on a down angle every 15 to 20 feet to help from having g the gravel washing into the jungle.
Man you guys did an excellent job, cant wait to see that house being buit in the near future, greetings from Brooklyn NY
I agree. Most cost effective way would be to run 2 concrete borders, a vehicles width apart, and fill with #2 limestone with geotextile under it to prevent the stone from sinking. Good luck. It looks good so far.
By vehicle width apart I meant trucks for future deliveries, not just your car
Matt is going to be such a good daddy. The concert looks amazing, guys! Keep up the good work!
B+ or an A- ??
you've got to be kidding me.
I've seen Pro jobs not this well done!
You both are fantastic with all you are doing.
Great video again; but please make the drone shots several seconds longer?
I am in snowy Pennsylvania and lush jungle foliage is to remind us Spring is around the corner up here.
(I am SO over Winter already.)
Thanks to both of you for putting it out there.
Blessings to you.
Having been the asphalt/concrete paving industry for over forty years, I am amazed at how well your project turned out! Congrats to “Carl the Concrete Guy” on a job well done! Also, it was nice to hear your Lady complimenting your work! She has alway# been great with her jokes about you but words of praise seem to be coming your way more often! For. Big bad fighter, you sure have a warm and loving way with you fur babies!
Matt...you can toss small stones/gravel on top of the wet cement, then right when it starts to harden, spray it with water and wash some of the concrete away and 'raise' the stones.
Good job Carl!
Don't worry about the discoloration from the poly. The differential cure won't hurt anything but the initial look of the concrete and will get better over time. Better to have some discoloration and the curing help from the poly than the alternative of not using anything on the surface for curing. Tell her to relax.....
Looking great!
Great time watching you guys!
Wow good job guys God bless you keep up the good work and conquer all you desires 👍🙏
Hey guys I'm seeing the vision now, great job. Matt, you work circles around most 💪slow down brother.
We are slowing down a little
Mason Matt! Good job guys ❤
Hi Matt, with the wire once cut, flip it over and just roll back each corner at a 45' angle, just enough to take the curl out of it. As you get towards the end of the roll you can walk it back over the lower piece to take the curl out of it. When you pour you can put down a thin layer of concrete and pull the wire up so sits on top. The poly marks will eventually lighten up. That's concrete, it's a hard mistress. The curbing strip on the sides of the driveway will help contain the stone. Would make it easier for you to install as well. Good luck.
Matt You are probably the hardest working guy I have ever seen! Great job!!
Awesome job Matt. That driveway is going to look so good.
Looking Good GBU!
Embrace the colors. Good job! Coming together now! 😊
Good job, will all be good and dirty/discoloured once you start driving on it, have a great week
The 6x6x10x10 wire mesh is perfect for your driveway, as you are doing cut the mesh flip it over and each one of you grab the ends pick it up and walk back to where the mesh isn’t trying to coil up and push down as you walk forward the cut end as u bend the wire down, the wire will lay flat the more wire u install the better u will get at this technique. Great job u 2 r doing & keep up the good work!😊
I love what you guys are doing! I have a few places where you can get some good research. Putting down gravel for the driveway will work but you will need to put down geotextile driveway fabric otherwise your stone will just push down into the clay to never be seen again. Go look at diesel creek on youtube and he will explain all of it to you. The stucco I dont know anything about but I just watched Jesse Muller do his whole house and he is great about explaining the process. Good luck guys, keep up the hard work!
I really like the hybrid gravel/concrete look. Takes a lot of the stress off the sections as well since they will shift.
Hi guys! I know you have not heard from me in some time but I watch your channel every week. Matt I am very impressed with your block work and your concreate pour. I love the way your are so unintimidated about trying anything! I love the way your lovely lady always builds you up by complimenting you. You guys can be a success in life with these positive attributes that you have! Good character is worth more than a good bank account!
The concrete will look fine after it all dries. For your climate it should hold up well.
I'm in Washington state and been a mixer driver and plant manager doing concrete for 16 years, and myself and most of my drivers help home owners out on site all of the time.
Great job guys. In Colombia, I watched the crews make the town roads in concrete. A couple things I noticed was that after brushing the finish they would cover it with sand and then mist the sand with water to keep the concrete from drying out too fast. After this, they would cover everything with black plastic sheeting to let the concrete finish cure. A year later when I was back again the road still looked great.
When you're pouring a driveway downhill the runoff when it rains over the edge of the driveway will undermine it making a curb having places for the water to run off so that it does not undermine the soil good luck brother
Matt, you can do both bud. Do the concrete as a normal pour. Then sprinkle your decoratively colored gravel over it while wet. Float the gravel into the top layer and cover with cement. When it's almost cured spray the cement off the top 1/4" revealing the gravel but keeping it locked in the the cement layer.
Every time you do a broom stroke dip it in a bucket a water on both sides of your brim then shake off the extra water And do that over and over😊A tip I remember from a concrete contractor friend is using a bug sprayer with diesel and spray that on your wood forms and they won’t stick to concrete and you can use the forms over and over.
Excelent choice. The whole thing is going to be awesome. Cant wait to see plans for the home.
HOUSE? You have to be kidding us!
A "HOUSE"? LOL
They will have the Driveway done.
The Horse Stalls in.
The Skate Park finished.
The Pool and Hot Tub done.
And the Barbie Pit in.....well before, even One Stud ever goes up!
Lets Start our Project at the END.....and work our way Forward from there!
Makes ....Total sense!
don't be so hard on yourselves......with time, the discoloration will blend in, especially if your plan is to stain the surface. Make sure you give it several weeks to cure, now that the surface is hard, before you mess with any finishing. Let it go! I give this a solid "A" grade. Well done!
You can walk on it after 2 days, and drive your truck on it in a week, but you'll need to give it almost a month before you can drive heavier trucks or equipment on it. I think it turned out great, and a lot of that discoloration left from the tarp will fade away once it sets up good.
I'm no concreter , but now I'll give it a go , thanks Matt . Ready mixed , only way to go !
Wow! you way exceeded my expectations, congrats on this work.
You need to use rebar not wire mesh in the driveway,
Mesh is fine for a 6" pour
Not at all. Mesh is fine for that pour.
I used to drive a cement mixer and everyone I know used the mesh in driveways
Rebar is out of style for a driveway. All the cool kids are using mesh. Seriously though mesh is just fine. Generally you only use rebar for vertical pours now.
For those that think wire mesh is fine it all depends on how far he plans to go with a concrete drive way. A driveway using wire mesh is usally good for loads up to 8,000lbs a fully loaded concrete truck can weigh over 70,000lbs, almost nine times heavier than your driveway was meant to withstand and with no other way to enter the property they will have to drive on the part that has been poured allready. See the problem?
So.... geotech here..... regarding your driveway construction with gravel.... my advise is to place clear blast rock... or 6" minus clear fractured stone (this should be available from a quarry) on any area you believe may be impacted by runoff. The gap gradation of the stone will permit water to flow freely through the rock, while impeding any erosion due to the interlocking structure of the aggregate. Gravel can be placed over the clear stone levelling course and should remain solid and dry. If you have any underlying clayey soils that are soft in nature... consider placing a geofabric cloth over those areas to prevent the clear stone from sinking into the sub lying soft clay there. Another benefit is that the stone can be used to level an area prior to gravel placement. There should be no need to compact the stone after placement. Nice work on the driveway. Looks like you had minimal slump on that concrete.
Good luck with your driveway lasting, concrete needs to be on top of gravel not dirt.
The base gravel should be about half the size of your fist, once that is compacted well, you put down the standard gravel that you would put under the concrete, then you pour the concrete. So your first step should be putting down a gravel driveway. Then at some point you put concrete on top of that.
Impressed with the concrete skills Matt, it looks awesome
I see a perfect pour myself. I believe you will see once you hose it off that it will look very well... Nice work and you seriously looked like you've been doing these pours forever... Thumbs Up!
Nice work! Thanks for sharing! Suggestions compact, moisture barrier, gravel, compact, then concrete, make some expansion groves. Pretty nice of the concrete truck guy to help.
Good job Matt
don't worry about the lines you are going to drive on it when it is dry, you are just in the admire your work mode right now so any small thing seems gigantic right now
Great job dudes...well done. Dont worry about the plastic marks, they will wear off in time
Kirsten: Look at the dictionary definition for "concrete." That is why so many laymen screw it up! (It thinks concrete and cement are the same thing!) Concrete is a solid. Cement is closer to a liquid. (Hint: think of rubber cement. A liquid.)
You guys did excellent prep for the cement pour! And the finish work was truly amazing! Concern over the color is misplaced. You can grind it off if it still bothers you in a year!
Cement is an ingredient in concrete: Portland cement, sand, aggregate & water = concrete.
Wall & entry driveway looks great.
You may be bummed about what that plastic did to the surface of your driveway but think of the alternative. With that much rain you would probably be repouring, had you not cover it. After some more rains and traffic on it a lot of that's going to vanish. You're done good! A+++
Much respect to the concrete driver for assisting with the screed.
Matt, i hope you're making the driveway thick and reinforced enough, that as you work towards the rear of the property, the concrete mixer trucks dont break what you have already done. If it were me i probably would have started at the other end. Hopefully you have taken that into consideration as i would hate to see it get broken.
A+ My Main Man Matt. I have colored an older large drive way and it took longer than if I would have poured a new one. The best way is to roll it on. so using one of the pump rollers is the way to go. I would get some powder color and throw it down and be done. A dark color wold look high end. Great Video.
You gotta put your hand prints, initials, AND the date. YESSS, Kristen! YOU DID THIS! Take pride in it and commemorate your achievement for posterity. You gotta give Matty this one. He deserves it. Matt: I would recommend you put it on the garage apron upon completion of the house slab, however. PS: Drainage will be the key to a good roadway in your area. The subject of gravel led me to the idea of french drains. Curbs on each side with a french drain down the middle ...Just a thought...
It turned out great! Nothing major there to be concerned with any discoloration. It'll be fine. That's a big pour to do yourself. Kudos to the driver for helping screed.
Kristen, you can only get good at doing that work by working through it. And thanks for asking about concrete vs cement. Calling concrete "cement" is like calling it "sand" or "gravel". All three are ingredients in concrete.
Y'all are doing great. Keep on keeping on. The place is getting better all the time.
You guy's are great !... Matt I was a GC for most of my career and almost never used Architects unless needed ... And did well ... Common sense makes the world go round and you have it my friend !... So don't ever be afraid to tackle your projects ... Kirsten you have a Good Man ... And nice HOOTS by the way !... HA
Matt, you are a prepared and talented guy. Awesome job!
Great job on the driveway. Give the concrete time to cure the color will even out!
If your gonna have concrete trucks running over your driveway, you should put down some 3/4 plywood down, that’s why they normally do the drive after the construction is done. Good job 👍 Matt on what you’ve done this far, don’t forget to put some stress lines in 😊
Still looks good! The driving on it will leave marks..no worries, y'all did great!!
You two are such an awesome dynamic! Great video!
Nice job Matt.
Those lines will wear off. Good job jumping in and figuring shit out!! Place is gonna be killer!
You guys are always busting your butts! You are doing a great job! Congrats!!!!!
Good job. It will blend as time goes by. In a few weeks you won’t even notice. Great start to your project.
No worries about the marks left by the plastic, it gon help in some way or the other... great job and keep up the good work...💯💯
Drill footing for the steep section & fill the footings first with Reo coming out of those footings to tie into your main slab, drill dowels & Chemset into your previous pour ( even have the slab slightly thicker on the marring edge, use fibre crete rather then that chicken wire.
Yall it is beautiful 😍.
I poured my 1st concrete in November 1984.
Officially.
I sold or built 250 houses prior to 2005....
I am 57 and it looks great.
I just wish you had started the 400' away from the 1st but don't worry about it....
The only concrete that I have ever seen that didn't Crack was in Jamaica in the Spring of 2004 with my wife on a 2 day vacation.
I added a 3rd day but Hurricane Ivan hit Gulf Shores, Alabama in September 2004 and ruined my life...
I ❤️ love yall...
Have a great 2024.
-Cliff
Battleship Marine Supply
Fairhope, Alabama USA 🇺🇸
I installed rebar commercially for 23 years. My best advice on a concrete driveway over 100ft long...hire the pros. That's a Shit ton of work. Literally. Love you guys! Good luck! From Canada 🇨🇦❤
Pressure wash it once dry, then spread some dry concrete mix on it and lightly dampen it.
Great job
The color will even out in time
Don't stress it.