Dan, a buddy indeed.  Anybody who'll loan you a diamond blade is somebody whose 
friendship you should cherish.  BTW, how are you keeping water flowing while 
you're cutting.  Also, I assume you have a worm gear driven circ saw, is that 
right?




Bill Stephan 
Kansas Citty MO 
Email: [email protected] 
Phone: (816)803-2469


----- Original Message -----
From: Dan Rossi <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, September 8, 2009 2:18 pm
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Basement door project update.
> About a week ago, I borrowed a cement mixer from Breeze, another 
> Blind 
> Handyman lister.  Turns out that his mixer is significantly 
> heavier than 
> the one I rented in the past.  However, it was much cheaper, only 
> cost me 
> a couple of magazine subscriptions for his kids fund raiser, and I 
> get to 
> keep it for more than a day.  However, it did take three of us to 
> drag the 
> damn thing up the steps. 
> 
> Well, I had finally gotten the hole finished, the paver base 
> tamped, the 
> sand screeded off nice and flat and level, and the first course of 
> land 
> scaping blocks laid nice and flat and level. 
> 
> Sooo, I took Friday off, and my brother, wanting to see what it 
> might be 
> like to actually work with his hands, came over to the house 
> Friday 
> morning.  Almost everything was ready and in place.  I pulled the 
> 20 40 
> pound bags of cement from the basement and lifted them up to my 
> brother 
> who then stacked them beside the cement mixer. 
> 
> After that was done, we fired up the mixer and I was dumping the 
> bags and 
> water into the mixer five at a time.  After it was mixed, we 
> dumped the 
> mixer, my brother shoveled it into the pit, and Teresa raked it 
> out. 
> While Rob was shoveling and Teresa raking, I would get the next 
> load of 
> cement mixing. 
> 
> After we had gone through all the cement, I helped Teresa float 
> the cement 
> off.  I had set up a screed board to angle the cement down toward 
> the 
> drain, and that worked very nicely.  We then kind of puddled the 
> cement up 
> around the edges so that water would flow toward the drain from 
> any 
> position on the slab.  All went well.  There was some extra 
> cement, but I 
> plugged a few holes around the yard and disappeared it reasonably 
> well. 
> On Saturday and Sunday, I managed to lay three courses of blocks 
> and back 
> fill behind the courses with gravel.  I don't have to cut many 
> blocks but 
> have found it pretty easy, especially since a buddy at work loaned 
> me his 
> diamond blade for my circ saw. 
> 
> There is one problem corner where I have to cut the blocks in 
> strange 
> ways, and there was no way to anchor the first block, nor the 
> blocks that 
> sit above it, so I have been mortaring them to the house to keep 
> them from 
> shifting. 
> 
> the pin system works pretty well for the rest of the blocks, but 
> it can be 
> frustrating to scrape the gravel from the slots before laying the 
> next 
> course.  Then trying to get them to line up so that the pins slide 
> home is 
> usually easy, but occasionally tedious. 
> 
> The damn thing is sucking up gravel faster than my back can 
> recover from 
> hauling 60 pound bags up the steps.  I probably need another 20 
> bags 
> before I am done. 
> 
> I placed sonno tubes at the ends of the side walls in preparation 
> for 
> anchoring posts for railings.  I found a very cool device for 
> helping with 
> this.  It is a 30 inch long spike with a 4X4 box on top.  I will 
> sink the 
> spike into the cement in the middle of the sonno tube, then after 
> it is 
> set, I can just drop the 4X4 railing post into the box and bolt it 
> in 
> place. 
> 
> I should have the wall complete by the end of the weekend, but it 
> will 
> take another week or two before I get the railings in place, and 
> the two 
> wooden steps built and installed in the pit. 
> 
> -- 
> Blue skies. 
> Dan Rossi 
> Carnegie Mellon University. 
> E-Mail: [email protected] 
> Tel: (412) 268-9081 
> 

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