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#81
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I like it a lot and it makes a hell of a difference. Going over a curb used to be painful and now I don't even think about it.
I've put close to 60 hours on the machine so far. My only complaint is if you have a tall beverage in the cup holder and you have the seat all the way forward then they hit sometimes. ![]() This guy sucks at driving, so I took a picture ![]() ![]() ![]() Moving day... I'm finally done with this site! Over 13,000 square feet later. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Last wall finished: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Yeah yeah I know the tracks weren't shoveled on the 160 before I left. But the next site is literally 3 miles away and I needed to get the machines out before small utilities came through and made leaving harder. I shoveled them out at the new site though. |
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#82
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Small wall at the new site:
![]() ![]() ![]() I'll finish that tomorrow. ANNNNNND the foreman from the dirt moving company almost tipped over their packer. I wish he had because he's an ******* to everyone.
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#83
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Awesome. Just curious how do you guys charge for these kind of walls? I'm assuming by the square foot? What's the ballpark figure for price per square foot? (If that's how you guys charge)
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www.CavanaughLandEscapes.com |
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#84
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CAT 345C and two CAT 740 site trucks are making the cut for one of the many large walls on this site: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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#85
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That was an oops dropping the rocks... Does the grapple leave scratch marks on the rocks? How about showing/explaining the joystick controls for the excavators/Towtem?You did 13,000 square feet in that one subdivision?
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Do or do not. There is no try. yoda |
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#86
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Quote:
![]() I went through my notes today to organize them and the total square footage of walls I billed out for that development was 15,315. Twelve walls total. Oh and trust me, that curb is really green still and I threw out a couple swear words. Got out and inspected after I shut the video off and to my surprise it didn't chip. Usually if you just breathe on it something cracks. The controls for the CX75 and CX160 are completely different but I don't have any issues switching between the two. The CX75 uses the aux foot pedal on the floor to the right to control the grapple. Push pedal towards you - close Push pedal away from you - open Then there is a button on the right joystick that you hold down and then the pedal rotates clockwise when pushed towards and counterclockwise when pushed away. It sucks sometimes because you can't do both functions at once. The CX160 has 2 replacement joysticks with 2 thumb buttons on each Right Joystick Top Button - Open Grapple Bottom Button - Close Grapple Left Joystick Top Button - Counter-clockwise rotation of Grapple Bottom Button - Clockwise rotation of Grapple. The 160 is great because you can open/close and rotate at the same time. Only thing is the solenoids we bought with the grapple were a pretty penny. They are proven though as some guys have 8-9 years on the solenoids and the only thing that goes bad with them is the electronic boards and they are 70 bucks to replace. Not a big deal at all considering the abuse they take. I'm pushing to have the same control setup in the 75 when we replace the rotobec. I have no problems switching between the machines but our other employees don't find it so easy. The development I am in now has 32,000 square feet of walls (11,320 linear feet), and it is bound to go up because we are the last straw for making grade work on these topographically extreme sites. What the engineers put on paper doesn't always work on the site. That wall I did today ended up being 8 feet tall and it was supposed to be 4 feet max with a foot buried on the plans.
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#87
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Thanks for explaining the controls, that was another part Towtem said it was worth spending the money on. I could see how it would be frustrating if you go back and forth between the 75 and 160. How long before you get a 225 setup?
__________________
Do or do not. There is no try. yoda |
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#88
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Would be nice to have a little bigger machine, especially for the 20 foot tall wall I have to do. But even though we have been blessed with work this year we don't want to get ahead of ourselves with payments. All of our stuff belongs to us finally besides the new Bobcat and the packer we bought for it. It's been a tough couple of years and things are finally looking a bit better. Plus if we went any bigger than a 160 we would need overweight permits to move it all the time. Granted I stay on a site for awhile but that could get annoying. Being busy and buried in work is nice but at the end of the day it's a deal where we need to step back and separate what we need from what we want as far as equipment and new stuff goes. Last edited by Advanced Wall Structures; 07-30-2011 at 12:30 AM. |
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#89
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It is nice to not have to worry about hitting things with the excavator tail. I can see the pain in the permits, especially in the Cities. It must have been a huge jump in productivity when you got the 160 setup. It's weird, here I never hear(or see) about any boulder work like what you are doing. It's hard to keep things reined in and is so easy to get too much equipment or grow too much I think.
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Do or do not. There is no try. yoda |
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#90
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I'm really enjoying these pictures. You do good work. We have a high need for rockeries in WA too due to our topography but our rock is more pointed and rouch due to the type of rock we get when we blast. Have you guys looked at Deere/Hitachi hoes as well?
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but it didn't chip it and the tar is just a temporary wear layer.
Does the grapple leave scratch marks on the rocks? How about showing/explaining the joystick controls for the excavators/Towtem?





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