Stop in for a cup of coffee

-
Yep, just finishing lunch break
Well hopefully this is your Friday and your off for a couple.
I worked rotating days for years and liked days off during the week when most were working. So much easier to get things done.
 
Skeleton crew here. Changed a bunch of light bulbs with scissor lift. Now hav some UV curing lights in a press to do.
 
I think this would look good with Magnum wheels.
Looks legit...

9AD9B5A5-F389-4E79-9ED3-492C04F6E5E4.jpeg
 
No guns in the house??
Make sure you have an exit plan....haha
 
Keeping the Rocks wet as it's dun is a must at times I have seen..
I would use a stone on a concrete wall and rub it as I kept it wet, then add a thin set and brush coat it out, come back a week latter and white wash it.. it payed the bills
Nice concrete finish work is half a lost art around here. Exposed aggregate finish almost only on bigger jobs spec'd for it..
I'll have to see if I have some cross section photos of the original sidewalks - it was done in two pours. I don't know whether the original finish was smooth or always exposed. But the surface is now a fine pebble exposed after 100 plus years.
 
Nice concrete finish work is half a lost art around here. Exposed aggregate finish almost only on bigger jobs spec'd for it..
I'll have to see if I have some cross section photos of the original sidewalks - it was done in two pours. I don't know whether the original finish was smooth or always exposed. But the surface is now a fine pebble exposed after 100 plus years.
And who knows what the mix was 100 years ago. Probably a lot less "stuff" in it compared to today??
 
And who knows what the mix was 100 years ago. Probably a lot less "stuff" in it compared to today??
I did find a book which described doing it this way. Have not found the patents. They're hard to find with just the dates and I haven't tried that hard.
 

-
Back
Top Bottom