Bringing Power In

/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#21  
James, your more then welcome to stop by anytime. Just tell me when, and I'll have the gate open for ya!!!

Eddie
 
/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#22  
When I tried to glue my conduit toghether I found out the glue had dried out on me. OOPS!! Anyway, I was heading to town anyway, might as well add glue to my list.

This is the 3 inch conduit that will bring the power to the meter box from the pole.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#23  
The trench is 8ft deep. I'm running this pair of conduits so deep because I'll be running my sewer main across here at 4 ft deep along with my water main, wich will be 3ft deep. There will also be electrical runs and some one inch water lines crossing it.

My reasoning is to make it deep enough that it won't be in the way when I start installing those other lines.

I'll keep it this deep for about a hundred feet, then bring it up to about 4 ft until I hit the workshop.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#24  
My electrician decided the distance he wants the conduit spaced. I decided what I need power for, and when I'll need it. The buckets are to mark the end of the lines for easy location when I get ready to use them.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#25  
I used a 2x2 as a story board to mark the spacing of the conduit. Then I put screws into it on either side of the pipes and wraped them with duct tape.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#26  
The shovel is on one bucket, and you can see the other bucket up close. They are really nice for digging up buried lines in the future.

The pad is built up a few inches above grade, and ready for the next step.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#27  
Now that the conduit is in place, I can measure the locations of the pipes for the utility boxes. Each box will get two pipes.

The middle two are pretty close together, so I'll drill one hole and expand it with my clam shell.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#28  
A 2x6 was the perfect size for a spacer from the conduit to the pipes. I created a story board on it also to line up the location of the pipes.

You can see how close these middle ones are and how they fit in the same hole.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#29  
You can see the 12 sacks of redi-mix concrete in the back of my truck. My goal for the day was to get thise pipes set in concrete so I could form out the pad and pour sometime this weekend.

The pad will be a seperate pour and will just lay on top of this pour. I'm not concerned with strength on this since it will only be supporting two electrical boxes and a pad to stand on while working, or service them.
 

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/ Bringing Power In #30  
Eddie you are a lucky man. What a nice clean trench that is. It's not posible to trench like that any where around here. We end up with major side excursions because of these (download).
Our trench looks like a string of bomb craters, not nice and clean and straight sided like yours.
Do you have a target completion date or do you just keep your own pace?

All the best,
Martin
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#31  
Martin,

At first I wasn't very happy with the soil I have. It's all red clay with a few spots of iron ore and as of now, one area with a some sand.

The more I work with it, the better I like it. It holds water really well, both for ponds and moisture content for plants. It builds great. Roads, pads and landscaping. And of course, as you noticed, it digs real nice.

In another post, I'm bringing water in . When it gets too hot to function, I sometimes jump on the backhoe and dig on my water line trench. Maybe 50 or 60 feet at a time. It's 4 feet deep and about 600 feet long now. In the month that it's been open, I haven't had a single instance of any cave ins along it's length.

As for a completion date, I'm shooting for next summer. I have short term goals. Get the home finished in August. My lease expires Sep 1, so that's a priority.

Then I want the trees cleared by the end of the year and the lake done early next year. Once those basics are finished, I'll proceed with the financing of the RV Park.

I've had two banks aprove construction loans on it with a previous partner, who kept creating reasons not to go forward. He's no longer a partner.

When I go back to the bank for the loan, I'll have the high labor items done, and an enormous amount of equity into the land, which is paid for, and be ready to move quickly on the development.

Thanks for the interest,
Eddie
 
/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#33  
Bill,

Yes, but only parts by myself. Other sections my girlfriend helped, and parts my Dad helped. Anybody that comes to visit is fair game for help. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

I've got some pics of us doing it in a thread called, creating an entrance here in the Porjects forum. I'm not sure how far back you'd have to look, maybe somebody can give you a link.

Eddie
 
/ Bringing Power In #34  
Eddie, do they not run the phone lines on the power lines where you're at allowing pole sharing?
 
/ Bringing Power In #36  
</font><font color="blueclass=small">( Eddie you are a lucky man. What a nice clean trench that is. It's not posible to trench like that any where around here. We end up with major side excursions because of these (download).
Our trench looks like a string of bomb craters, not nice and clean and straight sided like yours.
Do you have a target completion date or do you just keep your own pace?

All the best,
Martin
)</font>

Martin, I know what you mean about obstacles! Luckily, and believe it or not, we didn't hit one rock despite boulders being all around. You don't need a licensed electrician, you just have to pass inspection here.
Trenchsep3.jpg
 
/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#37  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Eddie, do they not run the phone lines on the power lines where you're at allowing pole sharing?

)</font>

From what I understand, all the phone company lines coming into an property are trenched.

Eddie
 
/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#38  
I formed up the pad and added some left over rebar from my workshop project. For chairs, I just used some pieces of concrete from the workshop also.

Quikcrete.com has a calculator on how many sacks it will take to do an area. I put my measurements in and they said 17 sacks. The bottom was flat, I used chunks of concrete for chairs, and I have seven large pipes sticking through the pour. 20 sacks should be plenty.

As you can tell, I'm getting lots of use out of that trailer I found New Years Day. Generator is on it, so I just fired it up and start mixing.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#39  
A few hours later, and I got me a pad.

For whatever reason, I always seem to get my mix a little wet with sacks of mix. I'm ok with mortor, stucco and mixing myself, but readi mix just gives me issues.

It didn't take long for the surface water to evaporate, and I got a decent finish on it.

The 3inch grey pipe will be exposed for about a foot before it enteres the meter box. This will be my high voltage in line.

The six 2 inch lines will each contain a single 200 amp line. The conduit will get cut off flush, or maybe with a small lip. The disconnect box will rest on the pad with the pipes coming in from the bottom.
 

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/ Bringing Power In
  • Thread Starter
#40  
Turns out 20 sacks is about one sack short.

As I was getting closere to finishing, I kept thinkig I didn't have enough. As I worried about this, I left the area that will be covered by the disconnect box alone. If I had enought it wouldn't matter, but if I came up short, I wanted to be able to hide the patch.
 

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