ebinmaine 77,093 #76 Posted Tuesday at 02:07 PM 18 minutes ago, WHX?? said: Yeah I guess I forget that. In the plow fields we turn over very large rocks that used to be 10 ft down and now at the surface. Back in 2016 (?) Trina and I traveled to the Midwest to visit an old friend of hers. We flew to Minn/St. Paul and she drove to Mandan ND. Having both been born n raised in New England we were FLABBERGASTED by the lack of rocks out there. Every several hundred feet there would be a pile. Some that would fit in a pickup truck. Most a little larger. The biggest pile we saw was about half the size of our ranch style house. And that was HUGE to them. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handy Don 15,764 #77 Posted Tuesday at 05:03 PM 2 hours ago, ebinmaine said: born n raised in New England we were FLABBERGASTED by the lack of rocks out there. If only we could find a way to profitably export rocks! 1 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lynnmor 8,569 #78 Posted Tuesday at 05:11 PM 7 minutes ago, Handy Don said: If only we could find a way to profitably export rocks! But Maine would disappear under the sea. 1 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handy Don 15,764 #79 Posted Tuesday at 05:14 PM 2 minutes ago, lynnmor said: But Maine would disappear under the sea. Valid point, sir. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebinmaine 77,093 #80 Posted Tuesday at 05:26 PM 14 minutes ago, lynnmor said: But Maine would disappear under the sea. 11 minutes ago, Handy Don said: Valid point, sir. That's the exact phrase I was about to answer Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Blue Chips 654 #81 Posted Tuesday at 06:48 PM (edited) 7 hours ago, ebinmaine said: Remember the mountain. I don't live on flat ground like most of you do. I literally live on top of a pile of Boulders and they are CONSTANTLY MOVING. 7 hours ago, ebinmaine said: In my area you cannot dig into the land for the installation. Likewise, where we are, it wouldn't be easy to dig very far into the ground, as ledge is protruding from many places in our back yard. Relating to the thread topic, the type of subsurface under a shop/garage/home can have an effect on one's heating and cooling costs. We've pulled some big boulders out here and there, but for the most part, our land is solid ledge, with areas of shallow soil and clay. Our current house was built directly on solid ledge, and the floor of the basement is the ledge itself. Even though the basement is not heated, and there is an open vent to the outside (our rather old boiler draws its air from the basement, which draws outside air into the basement), the ledge acts as a massive, high-density heat sink that helps keep the basement much cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter than if the floor was just typical concrete over gravel and deep soil. If/when we replace the boiler with a more efficient one that uses outside air for combustion, the basement will be even cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter than it is now. Likewise, the foundation of our new garage was poured directly on ledge, which made it a challenge to fit the forms to the rock. As an aside (pardon any interruption), I made a custom scribing tool to mark the forms accurately. Here are a few photos of the forms for the footings that went under the foundation walls of the new garage. Examples of footing forms scribed to fit the convolutions in the rock: Here's the garage foundation after pouring the foundation walls on top of the concrete footings, installing interior and exterior perimeter drains, backfilling, insulating the inside of the foundation walls, and filling with compacted crushed stone: Ledge/bedrock extends all the way down to our shore on the river (photo taken about mid-tide). Edited Tuesday at 07:40 PM by Blue Chips 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebinmaine 77,093 #82 Posted Tuesday at 06:57 PM 7 minutes ago, Blue Chips said: the foundation of our new garage was poured directly on ledge, which made it a challenge to fit the forms to the rock. As an aside (pardon any interruption), Not to get too far off topic but just out of curiosity. Were you required to have the bottom of your concrete a certain amount of inches below the surface? We were told before we started the barn project that the final ground surface would need to be a minimum 36 inches above the bottom of any concrete. Bed ledge or not. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Blue Chips 654 #83 Posted Tuesday at 07:02 PM (edited) 14 minutes ago, ebinmaine said: Not to get too far off topic but just out of curiosity. Were you required to have the bottom of your concrete a certain amount of inches below the surface? We were told before we started the barn project that the final ground surface would need to be a minimum 36 inches above the bottom of any concrete. Bed ledge or not. If you're talking about the garage foundation, if I recall, since 100% of the footing was poured directly on solid ledge, the freeze depth requirements didn't apply, and I cleared it with the building inspector prior to pouring. He was happy with the whole project. BTW, @ebinmaine, I don't know what he would have said if it was only partially on ledge and partially on soil. Edited Tuesday at 07:11 PM by Blue Chips 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handy Don 15,764 #84 Posted Tuesday at 07:14 PM (edited) Friends thought I was wasting money to fully seal and insulate our below-grade basement--walls and most of the floor--at the time of construction. It has made it much more livable in the play area and in my shop. Switching to sealed combustion for heat/hot water also made a big difference. Edited Tuesday at 10:41 PM by Handy Don 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
adsm08 4,156 #85 Posted Tuesday at 11:58 PM 10 hours ago, F. Marra 17 said: The data centers I have built and worked on all have 100k - 200k gallons of fuel oil underground storage tanks piped into massive generators to power them. Microsoft is literally rebuilding/reopening Three Mile Island just for a data center. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Racinbob 12,699 #86 Posted Wednesday at 06:16 PM (edited) There's a place about 5 miles from here called Baileys Discount Center. It's like a Big Lots on steroids and ya never know what you will find. Sometimes a great deal, sometimes a so-so deal and sometimes you wonder where the heck did they find that brand. Once in a while it's fun just to walk the isles to see what's there. I did just that this morning and wasn't really looking for anything. It was kinda ironic that, after this thread, they had these stacked on pallets. 4800, 7500 and 10000 watts at a very fair price. I had been thinking about one but never pulled the trigger but then they go and shove them in my face. I opted for the 7500w. I'll go ahead and hardwire it into the panel. The 3 milkhouse heaters were getting the job done but it was a pain making sure they were sitting in a safe spot (and on separate circuits). Gotta get right on it because the boss has me doing a pretty major facelift to the front entry/deck as soon as the weather breaks. Edited Wednesday at 06:16 PM by Racinbob 2 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JCM 10,652 #87 Posted 2 hours ago (edited) Keeping my promise Jim @WHX?? you wanted pictures of the 2 in 1 vent for the Modine heater with concentric on the outlet side. I used black aluminum screening with good ole aluminum tape. I had to make 2 vertical cuts on the storm collar to make it fit between the Battens on either side. Cheers Edited 2 hours ago by JCM 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WHX?? 54,573 #88 Posted 1 hour ago 10 minutes ago, JCM said: pictures of the 2 in 1 vent Interesting Plunge. Yep I could see mud daubers going in there in the off season just like a camper. Lady bugs in the fall ... Some control boards cycle the exhaust blower on every few days without firing the burners to roust them out and it really does work. Nice the way you cut that storm collar in between the R B & B for trim. A true pro & we are definitely cut of of the same cloth! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WHX?? 54,573 #89 Posted 1 hour ago (edited) On 2/11/2026 at 12:16 PM, Racinbob said: 3 milkhouse heaters Well glad to see your getting rid of those Bob. Them things burned down more milk houses than I care to count. It wasn't the heater but the plug was questionable. Bad connection in a bad duplex = heat = . Edited 1 hour ago by WHX?? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WHX?? 54,573 #90 Posted 1 hour ago (edited) On 2/10/2026 at 8:07 AM, ebinmaine said: New England we were FLABBERGASTED by the lack of rocks out there. I don't know Unit ... @Sparky s neck of the woods there are many old stone fences ... many dating back to colonial days. On 2/10/2026 at 1:14 PM, Handy Don said: insulate our below-grade basement--walls Plunge's code required here on a new build. Floor no tho. On 2/10/2026 at 12:57 PM, ebinmaine said: We were told before we started the barn project Things really sound messed up there ... as much as I would enjoy living in the woods of Maine I would be mowing a lot in the dark & The @Pullstart would be on speed dial. .. Edited 1 hour ago by WHX?? 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebinmaine 77,093 #91 Posted 47 minutes ago 41 minutes ago, WHX?? said: On 2/10/2026 at 9:07 AM, ebinmaine said: New England we were FLABBERGASTED by the lack of rocks out there. I don't know Unit ... @Sparky s neck of the woods there are many old stone fences ... many dating back to colonial days. Exactly my point. I mean the lack of rocks in the Midwest compared to here.... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites