Concrete bucket

   / Concrete bucket #1  

Builder

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Feb 22, 2006
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East PA or 750 mi. east of a short man named Dar__
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Kubota, AGCO, New Holland LB
Just got a job with a "remote pour" of concrete (45 K gen set on a remote pad) I get a lot of these jobs and wondered if it isn't time to get a concrete bucket. Would think it would pay for itself in wheelbarrow labor in just a few jobs.
Anyone got one?
Comments?
 
   / Concrete bucket #2  
Builder said:
Just got a job with a "remote pour" of concrete (45 K gen set on a remote pad) I get a lot of these jobs and wondered if it isn't time to get a concrete bucket. Would think it would pay for itself in wheelbarrow labor in just a few jobs.
Anyone got one?
Comments?

You'd really have to have a lot of concrete jobs. I'd see renting as a better option. Most all rentals will have them. Wouldn't be $100 per job and that would take a lot longer. Unless you really plan to do a lot more concrete.
 
   / Concrete bucket
  • Thread Starter
#3  
You'd really have to have a lot of concrete jobs. I'd see renting as a better option. Most all rentals will have them. Wouldn't be $100 per job and that would take a lot longer. Unless you really plan to do a lot more concrete.

I've been doing concrete since the 80's and always wanted one. All the wheeling has really taken it's toll on me. With most of my employees being gone in the down economy, I couldn't think of a better time to buy one as a "labor saver". Found a solid looking used one for less than 1/2 price of new. Should pay for itself in a couple jobs.
Wish I had it for those **** barn footings I did last winter. Way too far from concrete truck.....
 
   / Concrete bucket #4  
Yeah I have one, used it to pour our Hot Tub pad.
Img_3582_1.jpg Img_3584_1.jpg
Got a new one in 2008:thumbsup:
 
   / Concrete bucket #5  
Rent one an bill it straight out to the job.Clean it an return it.IMO
Army Grunt
 
   / Concrete bucket #6  
Small+Remote=Mixer, I've found.
 
   / Concrete bucket #8  
Sometimes you can't get square with what your pouring with a regular bucket and it makes a mess and more work. Also, the chute allows for better material control for pouring piers, foundations and stem walls.

I've also been looking at getting a concrete bucket. I was a concrete contractor in So Cal for a long time before moving to Texas. Concrete pump charges are relatively inexpensive and the service is available everywhere out there, but not here.

Plus, my hands don't fit around wheelbarrow handles so well anymore! :D
 
   / Concrete bucket #9  
I just use my tractor buckets. The truck drivers like it too as they don't have to frig around. I know what you mean about pouring posts though, I think it would be easy to buy an old bucket and weld a spout on it.
 
   / Concrete bucket #10  
If you can see the amount of jobs you would use it with the price of buying it to the price of a rental which you are not responsible for then I'd say go for it. I know I'd rent but depending on how many times you were going to use it. If you've been doing regular concrete contracts since the 80's I would say you are overdue.
 
 

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