Building a dirt Shop Pad

   / Building a dirt Shop Pad #11  
Nice project.

We have a lawn roller but alot bigger than the ones you can buy for a garden tractor. 38" diameter 4' wide. About 240 gallons.

Same logic....we filled it with used oil. No freezing or rusting from the inside concerns.

I would have figured more than 350 yards of dirt in 40 hours. I have never used a pan before, but if my math is right this morning....you were moving less than 10 yards per hour....only two pans full per hour?
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad #12  
Cool project. So you stripped all the top soil off the back field, stockpiled it to the side, then scraped the subsoil to bring up and make the pad beside the existing shop?

Send that drone up again for the "after" shots of the new pad!
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Nice project.

We have a lawn roller but alot bigger than the ones you can buy for a garden tractor. 38" diameter 4' wide. About 240 gallons.

Same logic....we filled it with used oil. No freezing or rusting from the inside concerns.

I would have figured more than 350 yards of dirt in 40 hours. I have never used a pan before, but if my math is right this morning....you were moving less than 10 yards per hour....only two pans full per hour?
Somehow must have misunderstood. Or maybe I misspoke. When Ryan was scraping fill material he was making a round about every 4 minutes. I think in the video of me pulling the sheep's foot he almost made a lap during that time.

So, go long and say it took him 6 minutes to make a round. 13yds, ten times per hour = 130yds an hour.

If my memory serves me right it took me 25 hours to peel off and pile the top soil. Took him a short day to put it back down.

Nothing replaces a scraper in situations like this.

P.S. Great idea of filling your drum with used oil!!!!
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Cool project. So you stripped all the top soil off the back field, stockpiled it to the side, then scraped the subsoil to bring up and make the pad beside the existing shop?

Send that drone up again for the "after" shots of the new pad!
Yes, that's what we did. Even stripped the top soil off the areas that we elevated. No need in burying good top soil.

Sheldon has it seeded now. I'll try to get up there this week and take some "done" shots.

Next year he'll have a shop extension added. I'll come back with pics after it's done as well.

A Drone gives great perspective. But in this case it also "flattens" everything. Hard to envision how much fill was added at the far end and toward the borrow area.
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad #15  
Somehow must have misunderstood. Or maybe I misspoke. When Ryan was scraping fill material he was making a round about every 4 minutes. I think in the video of me pulling the sheep's foot he almost made a lap during that time.

So, go long and say it took him 6 minutes to make a round. 13yds, ten times per hour = 130yds an hour.

If my memory serves me right it took me 25 hours to peel off and pile the top soil. Took him a short day to put it back down.

Nothing replaces a scraper in situations like this.

P.S. Great idea of filling your drum with used oil!!!!
I think I missed the part where you said 1750 yds for the pad.

I only saw the 350 yards of topsoil....thought no way it should take that long.
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad
  • Thread Starter
#16  
I think I missed the part where you said 1750 yds for the pad.

I only saw the 350 yards of topsoil....thought no way it should take that long.
I didn't narrate the first video very well. Needed to speak louder to overcome the machine noises. Sorry.
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad #17  
That's one horse of a tractor and it gets bogged down a few times it's a good thing the operator knows what he's doing. That's a lot of dirt to move in that amount of time, pretty efficient.
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad #18  
Yes, that's what we did. Even stripped the top soil off the areas that we elevated. No need in burying good top soil.

Sheldon has it seeded now. I'll try to get up there this week and take some "done" shots.

Next year he'll have a shop extension added. I'll come back with pics after it's done as well.

A Drone gives great perspective. But in this case it also "flattens" everything. Hard to envision how much fill was added at the far end and toward the borrow area.
Yeah the drone fish-eye and altitude definitely flatten the view, but in your pics we can still tell there is a huge depression beside the shop that you obviously had to raise up to match the building grade. Maybe even 10 feet or more of fill to bring it up? Wow, lotta dirt. How many gallons of diesel were used to do all this?
 
   / Building a dirt Shop Pad
  • Thread Starter
#19  
Took these pics yesterday.

Farthest corner from the existing building was elevated 11ft.

Didn't keep track of diesel fuel burned. That's actually a minimal cost that's rarely tracked. :)

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