3 Horse Ranch
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2017
- Messages
- 1,193
- Location
- Tonasket, WA
- Tractor
- NH B50H Cab, Ford 1715, Poulan Pro 46
With that much concrete and a budget of $10,000, your best option is to just live with it until your budget is at least double.
If there is a ready-mix plant nearby and it's clean, without rebar, they often don't charge a dump fee, but you will have to pay for trucking. In some areas, using concrete as fill is illegal, all it will take is one Karen and you might have to dig it all up again, so check local laws before you try that option. When paying for trucking, you don't want to be wasting time loading with a tractor or a skid-steer, a 120 or larger excavator with thumb can pull the concrete out of the ground and load it in one motion provided your ground is solid enough to support a loaded dump truck. If you crush it onsite yourself you will end up with a pile that is well over 100 yards probably closer to 150-200 yards of 2" minus crushed. It will make a great driveway base though.
If there is a ready-mix plant nearby and it's clean, without rebar, they often don't charge a dump fee, but you will have to pay for trucking. In some areas, using concrete as fill is illegal, all it will take is one Karen and you might have to dig it all up again, so check local laws before you try that option. When paying for trucking, you don't want to be wasting time loading with a tractor or a skid-steer, a 120 or larger excavator with thumb can pull the concrete out of the ground and load it in one motion provided your ground is solid enough to support a loaded dump truck. If you crush it onsite yourself you will end up with a pile that is well over 100 yards probably closer to 150-200 yards of 2" minus crushed. It will make a great driveway base though.