Breaking Concrete

   / Breaking Concrete #11  
What you really need to hire is an old Roman.:laughing:

Seriously, Dave's recommendation might do the job. We roasted a couple of pigs in a freshly built pit a while back and the heat craked the firebrick. I can only imagine what it would have done had we'd fanned the flames and poured cold water on it.
 
   / Breaking Concrete #12  
Just had the the sewers redone around here... the crew calls it "Cutting the Cone"

Since I have 5 cones on my property and one was always too high I cut it myself... took the better part of the day.

Used my Bosch Rotary Hammer with a carbide half inch bit and just started drilling lots of holes... did the trick.
 
   / Breaking Concrete #13  
I'd dig a trench around it then use my 12 lb maul to knock it out. Since my cheeseburger belly doesn't stick out as far as yours,. I can still see the ground... but heck, I'm only 83 YO, 150 lbs and at 5'4"..........I'm a lot closer to the ground or being in the ground.:D
 
   / Breaking Concrete #14  
I'd dig a trench around it then use my 12 lb maul to knock it out. Since my cheeseburger belly doesn't stick out as far as yours,. I can still see the ground... but heck, I'm only 83 YO, 150 lbs and at 5'4"..........I'm a lot closer to the ground or being in the ground.:D

C'mon Mike, lets get our sledgehammers and go take care of that for him. I will bring the cheeseburgers...:laughing:
 
   / Breaking Concrete #15  
C'mon Mike, lets get our sledgehammers and go take care of that for him. I will bring the cheeseburgers...:laughing:

Thanks James, but I don't want to split the $40.:laughing:
 
   / Breaking Concrete #16  
If I couldn't dig it out, I would use my SDS Max rotary hammer to break off the top 4 to 6 inches. You can easily rent a SDS Max at any rental yard. They are a lot lighter and easier to handle the a jack hammer, but do the same thing on a smaller scale. I use mine all the time when moving drains around in a bathroom remodel with a concrete slab foundation. It's one of those must have tools for me.

Start at the edge and do it in small pieces. You'll find that it gets done fairly quickly if you stick with it.
 
   / Breaking Concrete
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Is there any reason to keep the old well? What will you cover it with?

You would probably be better filling in the hole and removing the top ring. Future safety. Considerations.

If you just want to remove an eight inch ring use a rotary SDS hammer drill to chip out a grove with a few verticals every two foot or so. Then dig out around the concrete ring and use the sledge. Only hit it on the inside.

When i get the concrete below grade, I will finish filling the well pit, cover it with some good soil and plant some grass. The well has already been plugged and I am trying to dress it up a little because it is in the front-side yard.

I have an SDS drill but it is an old one and the only thing it does now is hammer-drill. The 3-way switch will turn but it won't just drill or just hammer. I think I will rent one with a chipping bit and see what happens.
 
   / Breaking Concrete #19  
Looks like an awesome fire ring... I'd keep it! I might cover it with a stone face, though.
 
   / Breaking Concrete #20  
^^^ Great Idea if the placement it good.
 

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