Worth the money and what it helps you the labor def worth it , you can upgrade those tires to tires w air and def not for commercial use but I see home improvement guys use them for some decent jobs so I’ll keep mine for putting up a fence or off cement jobs around
Hi David ... I realize this won't help you now , but for further sonic tube jobs I have a little tip that will save you lost mix & will stop that big mess around each tube pour ...It does take a little prep work ahead of time but well worth it........ 1.) Take a circle saw & cut off several inches off a sonic tube . 2.) Take your saw & cut a split in the ring you just made , so it's expandable ... 3.) Slide it over one end of a tube ... 4.) Now cut a thick piece of plywood into a rectangle. ( if you're using 12 " tubes make it roughly 20" x 24" , measure does not have to be exact .) 5.) Stand tube on end in center of plywood & mark with a sharpie .. 6.) Take jigsaw & cut circle out ... 7.) Cut several short pieces of 2" x 4" s & line the edge of circle all the way around & screw them all down to the plywood... 8.) Now lay plywood on a flat surface ( driveway ) and start screwing the short piece of tube to 2x4 blocks , then stick a shim of some sort into the split to expand tube & fill gap between tube & plywood , then finish screwing tube to blocks & securing ..... Now that covers your over spillage loss , but if you want to finish this tool right there's more ...I know this sounds like a lot , but believe me once you start it'll only take m in nute to make & this thing just pops on & off the tubes with ease , no muss / no fuss , & best of all no wasted concrete ...Wait til you have to pour 40 Sonic Tubes , now that's a lot of lost product ... 9.) Now cut 2 pieces of ply wood the same length of the long sides of plywood...Stand up on edge on outside of hole & set short 2x4 behind for support & screw 2x4 to base plywood with the hole then secure loose piece plywood to 2x4 ... Now do the same on opposite side ... 10.) Cut 2 pieces plywood to fit in between for each end , but instead of straight up & down instead of 90 ° to the base lean them over to about 45 ° & secure with screws through the other two pieces of sidewalls plywood ..... This method will work with ANY size tubes you pour , just make a new one whenever you pour a new different diameter tunmbe ... Ihope this helps you out in future Sonic Tube adventures , or at least maybe helps out someone reading these comments for their Sonic adventures ... Materials are getting too expensive to be wasting nowadays....👍👍👍👍👍👋👋👋
@@dr.brianadams6542 Nope , have no link , that's why I made the instructions so easy & simple to follow ....Broken down to an easier instruction even further : Cut a few to several inches of sonic tube & split... Slip over a tube .Make a plywood lid & mark out the circle & cut out slip over & screw together to make a sort of flat top funnel ...Just make a plywood box & screw it to flat top & fashion a make shift funnel ...Simplitied as it gets ...Pull it up & off & move to next tube & spill no more concrete mix & don't waste any more especially at the cost of construction materials nowadays....