 I couldn't feel more opposites to what I felt when I did mid at the tantrum before. Right, there you go. Nike's here was on about. And the building inspector okayed it, so if you've got a problem, go talk to him. There you go, look at this. Just an extra 10 minutes and now we've got a nice surface, so our blocks won't get all muddy. I've tamped it down a little bit just with the rake, just to give it a little bit of, just a bit of compact, compactness, whatever the word is. Not a lot obviously, but it's enough just for us to get the blocks set on. And obviously it's a start as well, it's a start in this lab. My job now is I'm going to bail out all this, which I didn't think was very deep at first, but it's steep enough. So yeah, I'll get the manhole opened up and then I'll start bailing out. It looks like this is a low end here, because that must have been where I saw where I thought it wasn't too deep, so I think we must have a big drop off here. Well it is what it is, the amount of concrete that went in here, I'm not surprised there's a few dips and drops. There's the common man. All those wet commons were stacked on top of the cement. Yeah? Every bag of cement is ruined and I can't afford to go and spend another 80 quid on cement. They're still wet and they've been covered for a week. It's because the water's seeped through into the cement. Yeah. So yeah, I'm pissed off. Well, I'll get started on this. Right, there we go. A bit of a puddle there, so we've got a high spot there. We've got a high spot in the middle of that one. But a five point, over five and a half cuban in there, so it was a lot of concrete. It took a while to get in, didn't it? We'll have everyone saying, well you should have got a pump. It probably would have been a pump. It probably would have been a good one for a pump. But we're already £500 over budget, so that's another £400 for a pump. So the lads were okay with the barris, so we were okay with that. We weren't going anywhere. Right, we've got a little puddle here, so that's our low spot. Don't need a level to tell you that. We can get that with the wet drive back and we can now start loading out and getting a mix in and setting out which I'll be doing. Well Alex gets the heavy work done. Trying to get the drawer in. Take my pencil and all the commons around because I've just took them off the cement. After you've probably just seen my little tantrum. That was censored for YouTube. So yeah, we're now in a position to get going. At five past nine. I hope it's when we got here late. Not at all, we got here late, so... Yeah, we could have been doing that. Mind you, it was raining this morning, wasn't it? So it'd be filling up as we were getting rid of it. Luckily, we've had that manual close by to chuck it down. So it's all got away nicely. As long as we buy a lunchtime-ish, we get this thing out of the water. Yeah, and we need to speak to the customer about getting rid of all this because obviously we can't build with this here. Hopefully he'll say, yeah, just chuck it in the skip and doesn't want it digging up and keeping that thing. Probably needs to go as well. But anyway, we'll see when we get back. And if you're watching this, I've asked him about filming the job. We've been here three or four days now and I haven't asked him yet. I'd better get him asked. I think he kind of gave the okay. He asked me what the camera was. Oh, did he? Yeah. Well, we were just filming for YouTube. You mind? I don't mind. Cool. Hopefully that was his consent, but we can't always ask you again. Yeah, we'll have to double check. Yeah, you can just make out the old concrete of the conservatory sticking out of our concrete there. So that's the last pit that was left in. We had to take everything out, except that little bit, which is, again, pain in the arse. But yeah, we're all sorted. What was on the comments? Just spread out. You're probably best getting your sand in that barrel. We need to get that one. Yeah. We don't need comments at the door. So just spread out. So everywhere but the door. So mainly to the other this side and this side, by full doors here, big window here. So we've got the length of sort of this. We're probably going to get the steel for that because, because it's a six inch cavity. It's a big little nobody stocks them. And it's 140 pounds to create a carriage to get a one off little. So we've already gone. There's already extras gone on the job. So we can't be going back to say just give them more extras. We haven't even put a brick in the ground yet. So try and put them on the outside mate. Same as the trench block. Put the face brick on the outside as well. But face brick probably can wait for now because we only need them on the left hand side. If we get on them, we'll start on the left hand side. What are the comments for? It's trench four inch in a common. I dropped it of course. It's usually a trench in a block, isn't it? Yeah. So it's the trench and then it's 300 to damp. So before face on the outside, a block and a concrete common on the inside. Obviously we're putting a 7 Newton block flat across the door. There's no need for a trench block there because all that goes across there is the brick work up to damp and the slab. That's it. There's nothing above that. Obviously until you get to the lintel. So there's no weight across that section even though it's still got 750 mL. And the building inspector, okay? If you've got a problem, go talk to him. Yeah. We're going off building regulations approval here. Yeah. We're just waiting to hear about what they want to do with the vertical damp stroke cavity. See what he says. Yeah. So let's stop talking and let's get cracking. Going a little high. That's where we dump the lintel. That's where we had our last minute dumping. So everything's busy a lot. It's just this bit where we've got the bonus concrete to level ourselves up. So we've just spin it around a bit more. What? Good news. Which when you consider how much concrete actually went in here, that's good that it's we managed to get it within the regions. Well, I mean, we've got... That's 10 mL higher than that. Right. We've set that. That's 50 mL of that concrete to gauge. It's 540. But we've done it to imperial gauge. So 540 is just over 20 inches. So it's nice beds to get us up because of the size. Just a little bit tighter, but it's still gauge. Everything's still gauge. Just bar this middle. And it's going to be flat blocks. And flat blocks are 95 mL, so we'll get that easy across the door. We just want to... Drawing. We've got a measurement on the drawing. We're going to try and pinch 50 mL each side. It's a bit bigger. And that cancels out the extra 50 mL light on the cavity. So we're not losing the room off the room. The photo... We're just going to check it's still on the photo. It's too close to the edge of the photo. We're going to have to keep it where it is. So that's how it looks. It's a good spread. That's decent, yeah? Yeah, you're pretty good. In fact, put a trench block in. I've actually used a wet drive back in the corners. So there's a few little very, very light puddles. Not going to put the corners back in and drive. So obviously we're putting marks on the concrete there. This is the low corner, wasn't it? Yeah. Yeah. Right, about two hours later than I was hoping. But we're set out. We're loaded. The mix is in. And we're ready to go. What we've done is we've extended it to 3.7 on the width. Pinch 50 mL each side. So that means the internal. We're not losing anything because of the extra big cavity. It's four meters of projection, so we don't have to do anything with that. The main reason we've done the front is the extra room plus it didn't work great. We had a three quarter in it. So the reason we didn't want to three quarter in it is because we've got a window in this. I've got a panel underneath the window. Window and then we've got a pike above. Or gable, some people call it. So we didn't want to three quarter like that all the way up because you've got to put three quarters in the middle. So it's in the middle. It goes right to the top, to the top of the pike. So that's the reason for that. So we've pinched a little bit of room for the customer and we've got it to work brick, which will look a lot better. So that is where we're up to. Mortar's on the board. Tool's out. And we're ready to go. Oh yeah, the other thing, I've reset the laser level to damp proof. The exact damp proof go setting. It's a true measurement we're using now. We don't have to, we know what we're going after. So that is an inch low. We're working inches on the up to deep DPC. So I've got to pick up an inch. Now it's just probably a little bit less than that. But these are big, massive blocks. So we'll easily pick it up with these. So let's get ourselves set out and crack on. If you set your iron up like that, down that side, you can, you can push it straight away. You can even pull it to tap that down a bit. D15, that's still a bit low here. That's it, it's set out. Once you've got those two in, you can cure away. So that's going to put line through here, run this in. I'm going to set a block at that end, and get this side running. And then, we'll aim for the block work in for dinner. And then we can get, I'd like to get the face work corners up, but that's the critical side to get face work up on. These sides don't matter. As we always say, the block work is the floor. Whereas there's no block work across the doors. So the face work has to be to tamp off. And luckily it's going to be nice straight forward, tamp across like the last slab we did. Which you haven't seen yet. Which I'm going to start with today. So yeah, we've got about 10 minutes now. We're all set up. So see you in a bit. Do you want to have a block work? I love a block, yeah. It's from the restaurant. Why? It's spicy, you know. Whenever you want to heat it up for your nap later. About half an hour. Thank you. It's spicy, just clean it. You don't need to move that, just move this down. Who needs a level? There's quite a bit to go in there yet. Good job, we've got two piles up. Seven and a half blocks for this side. There's going to be seven. Now you can see what we're on about. There's no need for anything more than that. You could have even done a block straight up. It didn't have to be flat. Because all that's holding back is the floor. And it's holding nothing but the doors. That's how the internal is going. That's going to be the same at that end. 660 pillar, so it's a three brick pillar. Three brick pillar. Three brick pillar, three brick pillar. That's set to the level. So it's just gone one o'clock. Which is a bit disappointing. So we've got our two corners up. So now we can get the lines up. And get all the block work running. And then it's a bit of a push to get the face work done. I'm going to try and get the face corner done. But I'm really, really struggling now. I remember last time Alex did all the trench block. I was doing something else. I can't remember what, but in and out. Just listing myself out of the trench. I can't give it. So we haven't let the profiles in advance. I can't just put the profile up on the trench block. Which would have been ideal. But it's four courses. So we should be able to do a four course corner. And I'll get there. Just return once the lines up hold it to the line. So we'll see you after dinner. Right, it's two o'clock. The stage just disappeared. And we're getting not, not very far. Alex has just done that for me. I've just been driving around trying to get a signal. Send a message for me. Another job that I need to sort out. So that's a waste of another 15, 20 minutes. I'm really struggling. They'll keep asking me, have you hit done? Have you hit done? Well, I'm not going to hit done until next year. I need to do it now. I've had enough now. So. Who knows what's happening now? I don't know. We need to be prepping this tomorrow. But we can't get the brick work finished. We can't prep it. Can't prep it. We can't concrete it. We can't concrete it. We don't get paid. It's not all coming games. And I'm not going to edit this out. I'm going to be on my knees over there. I'll be trying to build a corner. Well, Alex gets as much of this running as possible. Do you feel a bit better? I couldn't feel more opposite to what I felt when I did middle of the tantrum before. I'm not expecting to get anywhere near this today. Forget this. We're completely flat. Flat start. Bucket's in the water for half an hour. We kept getting the setting out, slightly out. So we kept checking it and checking it and checking it. We didn't start properly until nearly lunchtime? No. Because it was like one o'clock we went for lunch. So it was like 12 o'clock we made the proper start. One o'clock we went for lunch where the train's blocking. And there you go. So you can show now what I meant about this section. Not going to be through. 615 o'clock wide. That's it. There's the pillars. That's just got these last two to set. And then after those are set, it's completely ready for slab. Ready for getting a load of stone truck, isn't it? Well, my mindset was we're not going home until we finish it. We needed a win. And we got one. Once you've got those two blocks in. And we had a bit of leftover water. So we've been filling up any gaps and cavities. So yeah, tomorrow's going to be very cold. But it's going to be nice later. So we're going to spend half a day blitzing it. Just getting all the much stones we can chuck in. Then take advantage of the good weather. Because after tomorrow it's scheduled to be bad for the next nine days. So if we get a lot back filled we can build from that side. Yeah. It's going to be a bit of a stretch first thing. Get down there. Put some money in return of skinning. Just do that over and first. Because it won't bother whacking anything tomorrow. And then that needs to come out first thing as well. Sozol. Are we Is this video continuing or is this the end of a video? It's done up to dampen it. So what's the DPCs? Concrete and dig and concrete. What's the DPC? Do a natural anyway. Because every video seems to be. Well just in case then because this is about to die and we've put all this stuff away. Thank you all very much for watching. If you enjoyed be sure to give a thumbs up. If you're new to the channel you want to see more. Subscribe and tap on that bell so you'll always be notified when we upload. That's always a massive help when we appreciate your support. At any additional support you can always do the super thanks under the video. Or there's a link to Dad's PayPal in the description. Which... It's called the Steve Kennedy retirement fund now. So I can retire. It's not necessary but it's very much appreciated. So thank you in advance. This has been Brickling with Steve and Alex with our little win. And we will see you in the next one.