Phil Swift showed up with some of the flex seal tape sh** and made a couple wraps around the bin, fixed it like new. Don't believe me? He made a screen door into a boat with his spray crap.
I took a chance on a spray can of Flex Seal for a camper roof leak that always came back and it's been good for three years now. No cracking, splitting or peeling like the other $200 worth of worthlessness I bought.
@@camdenneilan9349 if there was 5 potholes beside each other. Me with a rake and wheelbarrow would have them all filled in levelled wackerd and brushed up clean and tidy before he would have one complete. Price of bobcat and setup compared to one man with wheelbarrow with rake shovel and wacker... do the math buddy. I work at this stuff everyday thats how i know
Looks like it was cold when bin gave away. Some metals dont do well in sub zero temps, it is too brittle. Doesn't flex without breaking. Steels for subzero are softer. Any chance that was a factor?
spelling was not your forte in school..and i am guessing that you never took public speaking courses either...these and your other videos would have been interesting had you chosen a better narrator..but..it is your channel..and your videos so que sera sera...
Started watching some of these videos and this one has been the most boring one BY FAR; watching radioactive decay is more exciting Thanx from the left coast near the Krapitol of California
At 8:51ish I’ve found the ignition source the guy with the hose in hand and cigarette in mouth Thanx from the left coast near the Krapitol of California
This the result of crap Chinese steel? Interesting how that subject came too light after a hole was punched in a US destroyer that should have not failed,were it not for weak Chinese steel
Narration asked at end to contact with any questions...I have a lot of questions...How much did that salvage operation cost...is litigation ongoing? Cause determined? etc, etc. BTW, I'm amazed they were able to do this in such a short period of time....fortunately, it looked like they had good weather the whole time and didn't have any rain....impressive operation....
2:30 ish suction machine with 3 cyclone filter to keep dust to a minimum!!! Hahaha no dust coming from it but heaps of dust coming from the discharge auge😷😷😷😷😷
I remember in the 80’s watching a news clip of a helicopter directly above a similar grain bin that was suspecting a failure. The helicopter rotated as some guy on the ground was watching. Then right there the bin collapsed. The guy on the ground had to run for it and he barely escaped. I think the weight of the air pressure created by the helicopter made the grain bin collapse and the helicopter pilot was doing something really dangerous and foolish.
A cheaper alternative: cover the entire silo with plastic, hook up some massive air pumps, and suck out the majority of the oxygen over the course of a day or so...any ember will be extinguished. Solved for 1/10 the cost of this operation....you're welcome.
This isn't unusual at all. When you get a cold snap and the grain is warm because it is so dense it will keep pressure on the bin while the outer bin cools and shrinks causing shear forces that exceed the designed strength of the metal. Outcome is seem failure and once it starts it is like a tin can pushed open. I was physically at a location I cannot name and watched a 1M bushel corn tank when it go super cold split while the tank beside it remained intact. The failure cause is supposition but likely accurate given that the little research I have done doesn't show tank failure in warm weather....