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  • Hillsider
    Member
    • Sep 2014
    • 43

    #1

    Gas Powered digging Tools

    After reading most of the posts from folks who have contracted, or DIY ground mount arrays with trenched cable/conduit runs, I am left with the impression that power augers are not much use in rocky soil. After quite a bit of searching, I found a gas powered digger used mainly by orchard managers, that could be adapted to digging post holes & trenchers, but is not ( apparently ) available for rent in Southern California. Several local rental outfits do, however rent gas-powered breakers, primarily used for pavement breaking, but are available with a spade-type end, instead of the usual pointed gad-bit. They rent, typically for $80/day, and weight about 55#, which is a pretty good "handful", even for a large young guy ( of which I am neither ). The landscaper's Dyna-Diggr is commonly available in Florida, and weighs about 40#. If I go the gas breaker route, to speed up the earthwork part of the project, I would hire a couple of HD day-laborers to do the work ( trading off on the breaker, shovel & manual post-hole digger ). Like most on the Forum, I am most eager to hear from any of the folks who have first-hand experience with these tools, either as DIY, or by observing their installers. Any takers, please?
  • foo1bar
    Solar Fanatic
    • Aug 2014
    • 1833

    #2
    Originally posted by Hillsider
    After reading most of the posts from folks who have contracted, or DIY ground mount arrays with trenched cable/conduit runs, I am left with the impression that power augers are not much use in rocky soil. After quite a bit of searching, I found a gas powered digger used mainly by orchard managers, that could be adapted to digging post holes & trenchers, but is not
    I'd probably look at renting a post-hole auger attachment for a bob-cat(skid-steer) and the skidder to put it on.
    Or something similar.
    I think that'll work for anything that would work with a spade bit on a demo-hammer.
    And while I haven't used one, it looks a lot easier to use than a 1-person or 2-person hand-held setup. (And looks a lot faster per hole)

    If you have BIG rocks, then maybe you have to plan on a jackhammer/demohammer.
    "rocky soil" can mean a lot of things - it can mean a bunch of 3/4" and smaller gravel, which an auger would handle.
    Or it can mean large rocks that a person can't lift.

    Comment

    • Mike90250
      Moderator
      • May 2009
      • 16020

      #3
      We have rocky gravel soil. 4 beefy people on a 2 man auger will still break hips when it hits a rock. We found a small tow-behind auger at a rental place, on 2 small wheels, and just takes 2 people to roll it around and it digs down in just a couple minutes, same hole the 4 person auger took 30 minutes for.

      There are also augers for skid steer/bobcat that would make quick work.

      Trenches - found hitting a good size rock would throw the belt off a Ditch Witch, and spend 40 min taking it apart and back together, a mini-excavator on treads was much faster.
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      Comment

      • bcroe
        Solar Fanatic
        • Jan 2012
        • 5205

        #4
        On some areas I have a great density of rocks, though they are pretty much small
        enough to lift easily with 2 hands. Post hole diggers are marginally successful. It
        seems like digging a trench with a back hoe works better. Bruce Roe

        Comment

        • russ
          Solar Fanatic
          • Jul 2009
          • 10360

          #5
          Originally posted by Mike90250
          We have rocky gravel soil. 4 beefy people on a 2 man auger will still break hips when it hits a rock. We found a small tow-behind auger at a rental place, on 2 small wheels, and just takes 2 people to roll it around and it digs down in just a couple minutes, same hole the 4 person auger took 30 minutes for.

          There are also augers for skid steer/bobcat that would make quick work.

          Trenches - found hitting a good size rock would throw the belt off a Ditch Witch, and spend 40 min taking it apart and back together, a mini-excavator on treads was much faster.
          Right - an augur where rocks are larger (hard to move in the ground) is useless and dangerous. The mounts such as a tractor are easier but the trencher seems the best bet.
          [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

          Comment

          • peakbagger
            Solar Fanatic
            • Jun 2010
            • 1566

            #6
            Up in New Hampshire where the soil is mostly rock with soil mixed in between the cracks, the only option is a backhoe or crawler loader. Many contractors have tried trenchers and most have given up quickly.

            Comment

            • bberry
              Member
              • May 2015
              • 76

              #7
              Don't reinvent the wheel. Your local rental place can tell you what works in your location for the depths you need. How deep are the footings?

              In socal you should be able to find a trenching subcontractor.

              Comment

              • Alisobob
                Banned
                • Sep 2014
                • 605

                #8
                Bean and Rice powered digging tools are cheaper and more reliable in rocky conditions.... than gas.

                Comment

                • russ
                  Solar Fanatic
                  • Jul 2009
                  • 10360

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Alisobob
                  Bean and Rice powered digging tools are cheaper and more reliable in rocky conditions.... than gas.
                  As long as it is someone else's beans and gas!
                  [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

                  Comment

                  • Hillsider
                    Member
                    • Sep 2014
                    • 43

                    #10
                    Reply to Comments

                    With reference to an earlier post, I noted that my conglomerate soil is evenly graded, from silt up to 15" rocks. With the emphasis on "evenly", percentage of soil "particles" of a specific sieve-size is pretty much inversely proportional to size. Over 50% of my test sample had particles < 1/2" in diameter. Of the remaining 50%, half were < 1" & so-forth. With eight 16"x42" pier holes, as proposed, I would expect to find 6-8 8" rocks that needed to be pulled out by hand, but enough 4-6" ones to predictably freeze a 5.5HP gas auger several times, in the course of digging eight holes. Over the last year I explored both the possibility of renting suitable ride-on trenchers & medium duty towable power augers, & subcontracting out the whole shebang. At that time, all the local reputable landscape contractors were booked solid, but the situation may have changed, so that option is still on the table. Subcontract earthwork has the advantage of putting the Workers Comp monkey on their back, instead of mine. A towable power auger seems viable, as I can winch it down 60' from the road above, down to the level array site. On the other hand, there is no way I am going to put an inexperienced bozo behind a walk-behind wheeled trencher or Bobcat, on my 27* crumbly hillside ( my homeowner's insurance is high-enough already ). Tracked rental trenchers are hard to find in my area, & very expensive.

                    Comment

                    • NiHaoMike
                      Banned
                      • Nov 2021
                      • 25

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Hillsider
                      After reading most of the posts from folks who have contracted, or DIY ground mount arrays with trenched cable/conduit runs, I am left with the impression that power augers are not much use in rocky soil. After quite a bit of searching, I found a gas powered digger used mainly by orchard managers, that could be adapted to digging post holes & trenchers, but is not ( apparently ) available for rent in Southern California. Several local rental outfits do, however rent gas-powered breakers, primarily used for pavement breaking, but are available with a spade-type end, instead of the usual pointed gad-bit. They rent, typically for $80/day power tools for digging soil, and weight about 55#, which is a pretty good "handful", even for a large young guy ( of which I am neither ). The landscaper's Dyna-Diggr is commonly available in Florida, and weighs about 40#. If I go the gas breaker route, to speed up the earthwork part of the project, I would hire a couple of HD day-laborers to do the work ( trading off on the breaker, shovel & manual post-hole digger ). Like most on the Forum, I am most eager to hear from any of the folks who have first-hand experience with these tools, either as DIY, or by observing their installers. Any takers, please?
                      Hello. I am also here for the recommendation for the best tools.

                      Comment

                      • sdold
                        Moderator
                        • Jun 2014
                        • 1443

                        #12
                        Originally posted by NiHaoMike

                        Hello. I am also here for the recommendation for the best tools.
                        Please describe your project, what are you looking to do?

                        Comment

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