Mayo 20, 2015

Extruding curbing.

They're making great progress on our street reconstruction with this wonderful machine that extrudes the concrete curb fully formed...

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Just a little touching up is needed...

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With hand-made carve-outs for the driveway...

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Meade took video from the other side of the street:

35 komento:

TosaGuy ayon kay ...

Nice example of a machine that eliminates about ten workers and about a week of time from a road construction job.

Original Mike ayon kay ...

I've always liked the word "extrude". Onomatopoeic.

Etienne ayon kay ...

Back in the 60's in Portland, they would dig down about 4 feet, and use plywood forms and some rebar.

You would always hear them blasting with dynamite. I could hear the difference between 1/4 stick, 1/2 stick. and full stick.

Portland is basically sitting on the biggest rock pit known since Fred and Wilma moved to Bedrock...

I guess they dug so far down, as a Union concept (more men, more pay), or maybe for the freeze.

Mike (MJB Wolf) ayon kay ...

I've always been fascinated by construction equipment and like to watch these things do their work. There are bigger versions that lay down huge swaths of new freeway at a time too.

Mike (MJB Wolf) ayon kay ...

You know, TosaGuy, these have not reduced costs on large jobs because now the labor dollar is spent on lawyers fighting the environmental challenges and scrutinizing the permitting process.

Ann Althouse ayon kay ...

The men have to work at the pace of the machine (though I assume the speed of the machine can be controlled). So it's like an assembly line that progresses through real space.

Unknown ayon kay ...

That machine is a descendant of smaller extruding machines that do curbs on top of paving (seen in market parking lots everywhere). The drawback with the older ones (and maybe the one shown)is that reinforcing bar cannot be extruded with the concrete thus making the curb unreinforced and, making matters somewhat worse) the concrete begins to cure immediately without the protection of a form. They may cover the concrete with plastic to remedy this shortcoming. Just thought you'd like to know.

Etienne ayon kay ...

One thing I can easily predict: three months after they pave the street, and you are just amazed at how nice it is, another contractor will show up and dig a trench down the middle, to replace the pipes that were too small.

Original Mike ayon kay ...

"One thing I can easily predict: three months after they pave the street, and you are just amazed at how nice it is, another contractor will show up and dig a trench down the middle, to replace the pipes that were too small."

Yep. Several examples of that on my 1 mile walk to work.

Bob R ayon kay ...

One of my least productive times at work was when they were putting up a building outside my window. Always something fascinating to watch. Hard to get work done.

Tyrone Slothrop ayon kay ...

Who does the scratching of initials?

PB ayon kay ...

Yes, it works quickly, but the concrete used today for curbs and roads is cheap and doesn't last as long as it should.

madAsHell ayon kay ...

I have never seen such a fat curb. I understand a tall curb helps contain the rain water. Why would you have a curb wider than 4 inches??

HoodlumDoodlum ayon kay ...

#WarOnWomen #70Cents

Gabriel ayon kay ...

I love those machines, I saw them at work in Wisconsin last year. They eat cement and poop curbs. They get quite a bit done in a day.

TosaGuy ayon kay ...

"You know, TosaGuy, these have not reduced costs on large jobs because now the labor dollar is spent on lawyers fighting the environmental challenges and scrutinizing the permitting process."

You will note that my post said nothing about reduced cost of the project.

I'm Full of Soup ayon kay ...

I suspect your real estate taxes will be going up.

Heartless Aztec ayon kay ...

I have an extruded sailboat mast. Does that count?

Fred Drinkwater ayon kay ...

Ah, that explains the work currently going on in Cupertino, CA. All the handicap-access curb cuts that were installed in the 80's are being removed and replaced with handicap-access curb cuts. There are minor changes, no doubt justifying the expense and disruption. Also, Cupertino is full of recent immigrant Chinese who probably think the local property taxes are nothing to complain about. The cuts are all being hand-built in the old way, with wood forms, rebar, and the whole 9 yards. No damn auto-form machines involved in these projects, no sir.
Yessir, you gotta love local government. (Though in this case, I suspect there's a Federal mandate in there somewhere.)
[Edit: Boy am I in a sour mood this afternoon. I hurt my back climbing Montebello Road yesterday, and the Advil are not curing it, despite what the Marine Corps has to say about Advil.]
[At least the Althouse robot-detector is easing off on me; I got through with a simple unverified assertion of humanity. I win.]

Fred Drinkwater ayon kay ...

surfed: No.
Anyway, you should be sailing in a one-design fleet with wood masts, like 470, for instance. [Anyone in the SF Bay Area need a foredeck monkey or mainmast grinder?]

Fred Drinkwater ayon kay ...

Anybody have a link to a video of the German machine that lays herringbone-pattern road brick pavement? Now, THAT'S cool tech.

campy ayon kay ...

They put in a granite curb down the street from me. Better than concrete in every way.

chickelit ayon kay ...

And yet:

Woman 1: "What does your husband do?"

Woman 2: "He's in construction"

Woman 1 (with disappointment) "Oh"

(overheard conversation in the grocery store checkout line about 20 minutes ago)

Hagar ayon kay ...

Our hostess' kind words for nice work the project are appreciated.

As for the rest of you guys, there is not one of you with any idea of what you are talking about.

Etienne ayon kay ...

madAsHell said......Why would you have a curb wider than 4 inches??

So the snow plows stay on asphalt and not destroy the tender curb (no rebar).

Just a guess...

Ann Althouse ayon kay ...

I'm guessing the curb is made wide to allow for more relayering of asphalt over the years.

alan markus ayon kay ...

That looks like an integrated curb & gutter - that is why it is so wide.

Hagar ayon kay ...

If it is the gutter pan you are talking about, it is for carrying street runoff and should be shaped to maximize water carrying capacity. (Though many public works departments do not realize that, and it is no help that neither does the FHWA. Handshaping a good section takes considerable skill, but there is absolutely no reason why the mule on an extruded curb machine should not be properly shaped.)

I do not say that there are no street curbs with rebar in them somewhere, but I have never seen or heard of such, since there is no purpose in it.

Concrete is not cheap, but it is better now than ever and longer lasting. If it isn't, then either someone was not paying attention or was getting paid off. (That happens - particularly not paying attention.)

These days, they do not just add layers of asphalt, but grind down the existing surface, recycle the removed material, and lay down a new surface.

Etienne ayon kay ...

Hagar said...... I have never seen or heard of such

I haven't seen rebar used since they did our neighborhood back in the 60's. Course I haven't paid that much attention since.

Here's a pic, of the kind of rebar I saw, only the forms went below grade.

rebar in curbs (gutter)

Hagar ayon kay ...

That is a valley gutter, which is normally constructed across an intersection. This location looks like something special - half an intersection, and then the gutter continues around the curve.
The reinforcement is very heavy for a valley gutter; in Albuquerque the Standard Details call for 4/4x4/4 mesh.
(Which being New Mexico, does not get properly installed and really does not do much to reinforce the concrete anyway. However, it is policy, and does not have to make sense.)

The Std. Curb & Gutter (out of the picture) was not reinforced, I bet you.

Hagar ayon kay ...

Oh, and yes, I have seen rebar in planter curbs and header curbs, but these are designed by architects.

Oh, and I had a brainfart above. It has been a while since I did City work.
Albuquerque call for 6/6x6/6 mesh, which is absolutely useless in 8" thick, 4000# concrete, even if it was propely installed, but as I said, it is policy, and that is the way we always did it, so that is what we will always do.

Curious George ayon kay ...

"AJ Lynch said...
I suspect your real estate taxes will be going up."

It's Madison, WI. That's a foregone conclusion Carnac.

Curious George ayon kay ...
Naalis ng may-ari ang komentong ito.
Hagar ayon kay ...

If so, it should be time for hot tar and pitchforks.
I think AA said before she was paying $10,000 or so in real estate tax, and it made me blink. It is a nice house, but no Hollywood mansion.

Aussie Pundit ayon kay ...

Welcome to the future!

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