 All right, good morning. Day after yesterday. No, why am I saying that? So it's gonna rain by for dinner, so this needs to be gone by dinner. Well, while you're away too, we had a mishap. And good morning. It is Saturday the 19th. Yes. All right, hopefully you can hear him because he's got his mic in. As do I. Two, two. Can you hear me now? One, two. Can you hear me now? I hope so, because these mics are very expensive. Yeah, I can see it. It's a Max and Paddy reference, by the way. I'm not calling me daddy. A lot of our views will get that. Good. But yeah, so as I told you yesterday, I got all this done and came back. We just come back now from like picking stuff up from fairwood. So we just had a bit of a backfill off camera. So this part's backfilled. Just a bit of that corner. So we're just using these piles. And today it is the rest of the brick and block work in and get it back filled. I've got the wacker, so we can't do that. But we can do as much as we bloody well can. With this, we're going to see we're going to figure that part out. But what we think is just do it 100 now. And if you need stepping back, we can step it back above damp then because it's just for the make room for the kitchen units, as dad said. So that's not a problem. But yeah, so that's the plan. Dad's got a mix in already. We've got loads of bricks loaded out. Dad's gets some more. I'll help him in a minute. You need to get a few more blocks and we're away. So enough dilly-dally and I'll get you set up and let's get this knocked out, shall we? So as I put in the comments about these bricks, these London brick, they had 10 packs and four of them were usable. God. I'd say a third of these were not just scratch. Yeah. Crack was on the bottom course. We've got a lot over because we're allowed to fork courses. Who do you can hear him? But yeah, so London brick or just the biggest no, no. I think last time I was using these properly, it was in college because they were just crap handydowns that we could use for building. So that's up to the stands of London brick nowadays. Like dad said, we've been struggling to get. Any usable ones try to get them in the bottom course. Oh, yeah. So it was a quick test. How are you finding these mics? OK, because maybe I've seen this for a few weeks or something. Yeah. So you need you guys to let us know if you can notice a difference to. So we've got these for you a lot. Be thankful. So yeah, so we're hoping these are working. If not, let us know when we're going to try and get that sorted. OK, mumbling. Right, I'll get you set up on time-lapse now. Here we have it. Let's just fill up the holes now before it's like the camera charge for this bit, but it's all done now. Brick and block work is done. Happy days. And while we're you're away to we had a mishap and accidentally knocked the wire. So let's just go fix that with a junction box. But it's all done and dusted. We're ready for backfilling now. We've already got the first bar in and I've got a set up ready. So I'll be doing this while dad tackles that drain. And then once he's done with that, we'll get started. Thought. When's dinner? Well, now. You were you heard it from the man himself, didn't the time? So catch after then. OK, there's our pipe, which I said we connected on to a later date. Nice, straight piece. This here is the Y. It comes across here. So it comes across here to the rodder and also takes a left to that mess there. So this is how concrete is in, but cracked. So we're going to put that on the gully on because this is a back in that gully, which is there. We're going to put that gully on to it, put all the fittings on to her and do away with this thing. What I've done is they're just smashing this out and cutting it off. I've dug behind this to see if it can carry on. Now, I'm down 700 burners, no sign of any pipe. And that one was only 450 down and well below. So I don't think I think it's the end of the line. So more than do is knock, knock this down, follow the pipe down and see if there's a certain find a wire in the bottom. Also a good way of checking is there's no external stacks. On the house and if you look in the roof, there's no soil pipe, sticking back to the roof so there's no internal soil pipes inside. Looks to me that's two bedroom on the back of the house. Yeah, it looks like the house is designed with no bathrooms at the back. So I'm thinking all the bathroom and stuff at the front of the house. I should imagine the age of the house. It's just a room bathroom, no one's sweet or anything. So yeah, there's nothing. There's no foul soil pipe coming down there from pretty sure there's nothing under the ground. We didn't, in fact, we didn't come across anything at this end. And the one for the concert was just an extension of this. That's why it's the back end of the gully. And they've just bodged together that gully when they did it. So what we're going to do is put the gully in at the same height to put an extension on it so we can cover it over for the slab and just connect new pipe down to the down to this. This little magic piece of equipment, absolutely brilliant. And just push straight into the clay and then you're ready to plastic. Got our fittings, got a bit of pipe, a bit of pipe over there. And once I've double checked this, that's getting chopped and the new pipe's going in. Meanwhile, Alex is getting, getting the demo tiering. So both on a job each, getting there bit by bit. So I'll put you back up here, carrying with the time. That's the string, look. Right, I'm back after a bit of checking, a bit of cutting. We have, right after about an hour's pretty missing about. Here's our pipe. That's our main going out. You can see, keeping my feet. That's where we're going to cut it. And then we've got this, this sweeping bend, which is an old roddy knife. And there's our, our wire going off to that gully. So new gully, new pipe down to here into a shallow bend so it can be rotted, roddable gully. The, as you can see, it's encased in concrete so it's stuck from getting out. There's the other side, which is way deeper, no sign of a pipe, and also, you can't see there, but there's no other pipe attached to that. I've had my hand down there, it sweeps around and then it's wet and muddy underneath. But yeah, so it's going to all come out. Everything will come out. To chop off nice and neat. I've pulled that rascal in. I'm renew. I'm just going to have to knock some of this bloody concrete out of the way. Let's say it's right in the bloody way. I don't know what all this concrete's all about, but it's just, the whole box, in case they need to get concrete. Eight inches thick. So here, let's get this gulley in. Right, here's the carnage. I've got the mixer now and currently I almost got the camera against my mouth. There you go. I'm going to put a new top on that. We have an extension for it, so it comes up out of the concrete. I've tried to get that as low as possible to get everything underneath the insulation and what have you. So we've cut everything back. You wouldn't have seen all the turn laps until the battery died. So all the clay's smashed out now, all the crap stuff. We've cut right back to the concrete forcing, band seal, because that fancy pushing won't fit, because the pipe is slightly too small. So band seal into a bend, straight pipe, and then this adjustable coupling, which was on before, in good condition, so we've reused that. That's very handy, that. We've dropped the gully down, like I said. We've got an extension on it now. It's a rodable gully, and that's been okay by building control to leave the gully in. So there you go. That took about two hours longer than I thought it would, as usual. Same old thing. Quarter past three now. Yeah, so we've got a good hour now, just getting some stone. I'll set the lathes level up, check what height we're going to, because we're going to be coming up above this block work, because we are following this. As you can see, house DPC, and a good 30 mil screen on top there. So we're going to have to put a piece of timber around the edge like we usually do, but we've actually got this to screen off. The only downside is, we're level. The house isn't. So when that hole comes out of this side, I think our floor's going to be slightly higher than that floor, so it'll probably need leveling just to blend it back into the original floor, because it's going to be level, drop, back round to level in this side. So it's going to need a bit of level in somewhere. So this is going to be the biggest area. So we'll get the biggest area flat, and it's just a smaller area to level then. So Alex's been getting all the MOT in, which is damp, but not too wet. And if I'm going to join in now, we're going to get some pipe bed around this pipe and get it packed filled. So let's get cracking. So ready for pipe bedding now? Yeah. Let's get this last hour in. Mm-hmm. It's nice. It's almost flooded. Yeah. Back in the van, these bags. Yeah. The Milwaukee's full of all nice, gray sludge. Start at the top. Pardon? Start at the top. Start at the top. Look at that. You get rid of the bags. It's still down here. Where's that point you're talking? I'm hoping it's not buried like your trial was. It's a trial was buried. Just found it then. I also buried a hand bus when we were digging the sanders today. That's a brush, wasn't it? Yeah. I like doing it. Yeah. Three seconds though. What we'll do is throw some of that sand on top. Yeah. Before the big stuff goes on top. And we'll just... Yeah. Right, back to sanding that, before we get left going. It's today done. And as you can see, that was not a lot of progress at all, really. Pretty... Crip day. I didn't even get half of the slab filled in, so we have to pull my finger out when we come back here. So, finish one the next day. So after a lousy day yesterday, working on another job, getting soaked all day, we're back. Still got a lot to get in here to bring it up to level. Alex is currently at the front. He's the pile. So it's going to rain by for dinner. So this needs to be gone by dinner. To excuse any audio issues, Mike's not in, but... So you missed that loss a little bit, but it's all in now. And we're ready for Waka in it. So fingers crossed that it doesn't really sink, because obviously it's been raining quite a bit these last few days, so... But push comes to show if we've got a good lot of sand to blind this with. So... And just one little thing as well. There's the gully that it's extender on. So there we have it. We are ready to Waka. There we go. Nice and flat, and from what it seems, it didn't sink so much, so... Happy days. So I just need to sand-blind that, and if you just come with me a sec, I'll take you over to the front. But the scoop's just arrived, so very happy days. Now we can get all that shit moved, put all the crap from our work in there now, and just get... Start getting that driveway back bit by bit, so... Happy days. Bit of floor progress, that's all we want. It's a nice day as well, so we'll be able to get that sand-blinded and Wackered, and hopefully get the viscreen over it too, because we're still waiting for the installation. Dad's needs to ring them up and see about that, because we're waiting on that now. Until we get that installation, we can't make any more progress after the sand and viscreen, so... Fingers crossed, not a thumbs up. Fingers crossed. But that's it for now, yeah? I'll catch you in a bit. Right, you probably picked that up better than my voice. Not a bloody airplane. Anyway, we're on to the blinding. Timber set. I've set the timber slightly lower than the house floor, probably about 10 mil, so that when we put this concrete floor in, we don't have water going back into the house. We've got to have it run away slightly, so 10 mil fall and that is okay. So we need to bring up to 200 with that sand. That's nice silver sand. I've started here. So I've started blinding, bit lower there, that's about 210 there. I'm gonna work my way back with a six-foot level, then go over and whack it again. That's gonna be putting bubble wrap, so we can put it in the concrete. Actually, we're gonna need another one of them. It's already low, so we're gonna need another extension on top of that, so that one can stay in. The next one, we'll have to bubble wrap round it so we can leave it proud, concrete round it. When the concrete's gone off, take it out, cut the bottom off it, and sink it down so it's level with the floor, or, well, I'll leave it for the floor people to do, so it's, they might want it a bit lower, they might want to go over the top of it with something, I don't know, maybe put a little inspection cover over the top of it. I don't know anything about that, but we'll leave that loose so it can be changed after. We're not just gonna concrete it in solid. So, yeah, I'm on with the blinding. I'm gonna get the rest of it blinded today. Insulation's getting delivered tomorrow, but we haven't been given a time, so a big wagon's bringing that. Not sure when. So I'm not booking the concrete for tomorrow, just in case, because we need this concrete to be going in about half past two, at the latest. It's gonna take a good half hour to get it in, and then probably an hour, hour and a half, until it get it leveled between us. So, this is the bit I've been dreading the floor, and it's taken a lot of time, and it's been very hard work, but you just gotta persevere and get on with it. So, I'll go back on time lapse again, probably swap ends, and hopefully get this prepped today, and get the viscreen in so it does rain, it's all protected. Oh, yeah, one other thing, the amount of rain we've had is ridiculous. We've even had a leak on the porch we've just built, so I need to go and look at that. But anyway, when there's but wacker in this, it's that good stuff. It's only a bit wet that corner, and a bit wet the rest of it's great. The wacker's gone over it fine. So, usually, if our go gets too wet, you get bogged down in it, but we've done okay. So, we're gonna get a load more of this sanding, get it nice and flat, ready for our installation tomorrow. I think I might be knocking that course of brick out in the door as well. Checking point in that place there, so that the installation can go through too, not just the slab. But we'll see, we'll see what we get to it when we get to it, so catching a bit. Oh, that was a tough one, but there we go. That's all in. Big slab, though. Yeah, big. It's 2.6 meters in that, and it's only a four inch slab. I did probably put 10 barrels of sanding to blind it, so if we hadn't checked that with a laser level, that'd have been terrible, 10 extra barrels of concrete. And you're talking like a lot of money. Oh yeah. If we had a concrete, it's probably another half cube. Builds up. But there we go, that has been doing that. And. I'm pressing somethings. Ringtone. Where was I? Yeah, and if you can see, there's not a lot of orange because we've got a way we're using the sand that we dug up, mostly. That sand we dug up, that's the one that we dug up. Yeah, it was really good stuff. Yeah, so I'll just go in the skip, which I'll take you around in a second to show you that. Because while he was doing that, I moved all this, which I thought would have took me like 20 minutes because I thought it was just like, maybe like two, three tonne. It was a lot more than that. Is this an eight tonne skip dad? Is this an eight tonne? Yes. There you go, it's an eight tonne skip and that's how full it is. And doing all that just by speed. One man. That was hard work, but that's all moved now. And then once that's all dried up tomorrow, I'll give that a good sweep up and get that cleaned. And then that's just more progress at the front. So we've gone from two big piles of crap to one skip. But yeah, so that's it for today. Thank God. Let's get tidied up and then we'll catch you tomorrow for the rest and fingers crossed for some insulation. There we go. So that's ready for insulation, which fingers crossed for us arrives quite early tomorrow. But until then, we're gonna come here, get this level down and start loading some block out. Just do what we can until it arrives. So catch you tomorrow.