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  1. #1
    "Beef Bacon" Commie Grant H.'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamnanc View Post
    Thanks, I assume someone was driving on it??
    Either during backfill or after. I've had crew members destroy corrugated metal pipe immediately after installation, but it will hold up for thirty years if it's not point loaded. It looks like the dirt is very wet too. That would add a lot of pressure.
    I doubt anyone was driving on it.

    These are built to carry the load very specifically, and when the load isn't in the right places, they fail very quickly.
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  2. #2
    Machine Gunner Jamnanc's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant H. View Post
    I doubt anyone was driving on it.

    These are built to carry the load very specifically, and when the load isn't in the right places, they fail very quickly.
    Did the dirt get there by itself?

  3. #3
    Joe_K
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamnanc View Post
    Did the dirt get there by itself?
    Second the bad idea to bury Conex boxes. Plenty of info on the subject across the net.
    Use curragated metal or plastic drain pipes, they are much cheaper and resistant to crushing forces.

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  4. #4
    Machine Gunner Jamnanc's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MOLON LABE View Post
    Second the bad idea to bury Conex boxes. Plenty of info on the subject across the net.
    Use curragated metal or plastic drain pipes, they are much cheaper and resistant to crushing forces.

    Velocitas, Opprimere,
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    I don't disagree, I just bet I could do it successfully if I tried.

  5. #5
    Joe_K
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamnanc View Post
    I don't disagree, I just bet I could do it successfully if I tried.
    It can absolutely be done, it's just the additional cost of rebar, concrete, and
    I- Beams would negate any real cost savings unless the materials are free, you own the necessary equipment, and you value your own time for labor at the same rate as a Mexican lettuce picker.

    Velocitas, Opprimere,
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  6. #6
    "Beef Bacon" Commie Grant H.'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamnanc View Post
    Did the dirt get there by itself?
    Of course not, however, back filling doesn't require driving on it...

    Conex shipping containers are designed to carry the weight in the corners. The only real structural metal is the very corners of them. The walls and ceiling are 14ga corrugated steel.

    Without significant reinforcement, 8' spans of 14ga steel cannot support the weight of dirt, whether it's light sandy back fill or otherwise.
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