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#1
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I need a 40' trench dug about 12" deep and no more than about 3" wide.
I'll pay someone $50 for the work. Should take about 30 minutes if someone has a mini trencher. Located in south Austin. Thanks |
#2
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I have a similar need, but will pay more.
"Robert Ramirez" wrote in message .. . I need a 40' trench dug about 12" deep and no more than about 3" wide. I'll pay someone $50 for the work. Should take about 30 minutes if someone has a mini trencher. Located in south Austin. Thanks |
#3
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$50? Re-think that one. That would require a backhoe or a days work by
hand. You better have a few hundred bucks at least. Are there trees in the area? Thats no small task. |
#4
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Go rent a trench digger at Ace, Home Depot, or Lowes and join in the
beautiful experience that IS trench diggin. Crow. "Robert Ramirez" wrote in message .. . I need a 40' trench dug about 12" deep and no more than about 3" wide. I'll pay someone $50 for the work. Should take about 30 minutes if someone has a mini trencher. Located in south Austin. Thanks |
#5
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"gologa" babbled and bored us in
: Go rent a trench digger at Ace, Home Depot, or Lowes and join in the beautiful experience that IS trench diggin. Crow. "Robert Ramirez" wrote in message .. . I need a 40' trench dug about 12" deep and no more than about 3" wide. I'll pay someone $50 for the work. Should take about 30 minutes if someone has a mini trencher. Located in south Austin. Thanks I think this guy is trolling for a moron... One time Capital Costs: Trencher $1,200-$5,000 Ditchwitch $700-$3,000 Trailor to carry it: $300-1,200 Trailor hitch to pull it $100 Vehicle: $10,000 - $20,000 Job Costs: Driving time:ave del chrg $ 60 Labor 4 hours: $25 an hour $100 So the real price to get someone to do that would be, factoring in depreciation and equipment costs, about $300-$500. But hey! $50 sounds really good. Let me get my trencher hooked up and I'll be right over! -- -Mapi The Mapanari of Usenet. |
#6
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On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari wrote:
(...) I think this guy is trolling for a moron... (...) You would be right. He is a racist moron and likes to incite anger in people. Unfortunately, it doesn't work on most people, so ignoring it will hasten the disappearance. |
#7
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animaux babbled and bored us in
: On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari wrote: (...) I think this guy is trolling for a moron... (...) You would be right. He is a racist moron and likes to incite anger in people. Unfortunately, it doesn't work on most people, so ignoring it will hasten the disappearance. Wait a minute! *I'm* a racist moron! Are you getting us confused, again? -- -Mapi The Mapanari of Usenet. |
#8
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"Jim Wild" wrote in message
... $50? Re-think that one. That would require a backhoe or a days work by hand. You better have a few hundred bucks at least. Are there trees in the area? Thats no small task. Um, yes, thus my comment about "I will pay more." |
#9
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On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari
wrote: You wouldn't, by any chance, work for the City of Austin or a large utility company, would you? This sounds like my young neighbor who is still in his "everything, but everything, must be done with the biggest possible motor and greatest number of (POWERED!) tools" phase. I believe that his toothbrush most likely is powered by a 6 Hp B&S. If you are in solid rock, nothing that you rent or buy is going to help. If not, spend a couple of your hours or hire someone who does manual work (and save your hands) to spend the couple of hours with a sharpshooter and be done with it. Sheesh. [...] I think this guy is trolling for a moron... One time Capital Costs: Trencher $1,200-$5,000 Ditchwitch $700-$3,000 Trailor to carry it: $300-1,200 Trailor hitch to pull it $100 Vehicle: $10,000 - $20,000 Job Costs: Driving time:ave del chrg $ 60 Labor 4 hours: $25 an hour $100 So the real price to get someone to do that would be, factoring in depreciation and equipment costs, about $300-$500. But hey! $50 sounds really good. Let me get my trencher hooked up and I'll be right over! |
#10
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Anyone ever tried removing all but "one set" of arms from a
tiller & running it super deep? That is, your tiller would kind of look like one of the old steel bladed edgers. I "think: it would dig a 12" x 3" ditch just fine. Gene B.Server wrote in message ... On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari wrote: You wouldn't, by any chance, work for the City of Austin or a large utility company, would you? This sounds like my young neighbor who is still in his "everything, but everything, must be done with the biggest possible motor and greatest number of (POWERED!) tools" phase. I believe that his toothbrush most likely is powered by a 6 Hp B&S. If you are in solid rock, nothing that you rent or buy is going to help. If not, spend a couple of your hours or hire someone who does manual work (and save your hands) to spend the couple of hours with a sharpshooter and be done with it. Sheesh. [...] I think this guy is trolling for a moron... One time Capital Costs: Trencher $1,200-$5,000 Ditchwitch $700-$3,000 Trailor to carry it: $300-1,200 Trailor hitch to pull it $100 Vehicle: $10,000 - $20,000 Job Costs: Driving time:ave del chrg $ 60 Labor 4 hours: $25 an hour $100 So the real price to get someone to do that would be, factoring in depreciation and equipment costs, about $300-$500. But hey! $50 sounds really good. Let me get my trencher hooked up and I'll be right over! |
#11
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B.Server wrote in message
... If you are in solid rock, nothing that you rent or buy is going to help. If he has solid rock around here, it is limestone and a rock saw will do the job just fine. |
#12
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It wouldn't work. You will be pulled all over the place. Trench diggers
generally have closed loop, chain driven tines. On Mon, 16 Jun 2003 12:48:37 -0500, wrote: Anyone ever tried removing all but "one set" of arms from a tiller & running it super deep? That is, your tiller would kind of look like one of the old steel bladed edgers. I "think: it would dig a 12" x 3" ditch just fine. Gene B.Server wrote in message .. . On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari wrote: You wouldn't, by any chance, work for the City of Austin or a large utility company, would you? This sounds like my young neighbor who is still in his "everything, but everything, must be done with the biggest possible motor and greatest number of (POWERED!) tools" phase. I believe that his toothbrush most likely is powered by a 6 Hp B&S. If you are in solid rock, nothing that you rent or buy is going to help. If not, spend a couple of your hours or hire someone who does manual work (and save your hands) to spend the couple of hours with a sharpshooter and be done with it. Sheesh. [...] I think this guy is trolling for a moron... One time Capital Costs: Trencher $1,200-$5,000 Ditchwitch $700-$3,000 Trailor to carry it: $300-1,200 Trailor hitch to pull it $100 Vehicle: $10,000 - $20,000 Job Costs: Driving time:ave del chrg $ 60 Labor 4 hours: $25 an hour $100 So the real price to get someone to do that would be, factoring in depreciation and equipment costs, about $300-$500. But hey! $50 sounds really good. Let me get my trencher hooked up and I'll be right over! |
#13
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Assuming it's soil & not rock, seems to me that just one set of diggers
pulling would be less force than a full set pulling. In the past, when I have removed all but two sets, it was much easier. One set would be off-balance - will just have to try it some day. Possibly using two sets, with the ends turned in? "animaux" wrote in message ... It wouldn't work. You will be pulled all over the place. Trench diggers generally have closed loop, chain driven tines. On Mon, 16 Jun 2003 12:48:37 -0500, wrote: Anyone ever tried removing all but "one set" of arms from a tiller & running it super deep? That is, your tiller would kind of look like one of the old steel bladed edgers. I "think: it would dig a 12" x 3" ditch just fine. Gene B.Server wrote in message .. . On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari wrote: You wouldn't, by any chance, work for the City of Austin or a large utility company, would you? This sounds like my young neighbor who is still in his "everything, but everything, must be done with the biggest possible motor and greatest number of (POWERED!) tools" phase. I believe that his toothbrush most likely is powered by a 6 Hp B&S. If you are in solid rock, nothing that you rent or buy is going to help. If not, spend a couple of your hours or hire someone who does manual work (and save your hands) to spend the couple of hours with a sharpshooter and be done with it. Sheesh. [...] I think this guy is trolling for a moron... One time Capital Costs: Trencher $1,200-$5,000 Ditchwitch $700-$3,000 Trailor to carry it: $300-1,200 Trailor hitch to pull it $100 Vehicle: $10,000 - $20,000 Job Costs: Driving time:ave del chrg $ 60 Labor 4 hours: $25 an hour $100 So the real price to get someone to do that would be, factoring in depreciation and equipment costs, about $300-$500. But hey! $50 sounds really good. Let me get my trencher hooked up and I'll be right over! |
#14
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It can be done, but you will not achieve a trench, which generally has a desired
straight line to it. It would be ragged and your arms will be so sore from trying to hold it straight. I'm assuming you mean a rear end tiller. A front end tiller would be extremely difficult to use as a straight trencher. On Mon, 16 Jun 2003 17:12:25 -0500, wrote: Assuming it's soil & not rock, seems to me that just one set of diggers pulling would be less force than a full set pulling. In the past, when I have removed all but two sets, it was much easier. One set would be off-balance - will just have to try it some day. Possibly using two sets, with the ends turned in? "animaux" wrote in message .. . It wouldn't work. You will be pulled all over the place. Trench diggers generally have closed loop, chain driven tines. On Mon, 16 Jun 2003 12:48:37 -0500, wrote: Anyone ever tried removing all but "one set" of arms from a tiller & running it super deep? That is, your tiller would kind of look like one of the old steel bladed edgers. I "think: it would dig a 12" x 3" ditch just fine. Gene B.Server wrote in message .. . On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:56:28 GMT, Mapanari wrote: You wouldn't, by any chance, work for the City of Austin or a large utility company, would you? This sounds like my young neighbor who is still in his "everything, but everything, must be done with the biggest possible motor and greatest number of (POWERED!) tools" phase. I believe that his toothbrush most likely is powered by a 6 Hp B&S. If you are in solid rock, nothing that you rent or buy is going to help. If not, spend a couple of your hours or hire someone who does manual work (and save your hands) to spend the couple of hours with a sharpshooter and be done with it. Sheesh. [...] I think this guy is trolling for a moron... One time Capital Costs: Trencher $1,200-$5,000 Ditchwitch $700-$3,000 Trailor to carry it: $300-1,200 Trailor hitch to pull it $100 Vehicle: $10,000 - $20,000 Job Costs: Driving time:ave del chrg $ 60 Labor 4 hours: $25 an hour $100 So the real price to get someone to do that would be, factoring in depreciation and equipment costs, about $300-$500. But hey! $50 sounds really good. Let me get my trencher hooked up and I'll be right over! |
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