1 man phd and auger from TSC

   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #1  

Soundguy

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Anyone here used the 1 man phd and 6" auger setup from TSC. I was in te store today looking at it and noticed the unit is only 208$ and the auger is 114$ They ok? I don't need something to be a familly heirloom.. just has to do the job, and live a bit longer for regular fence maintenance...

I've got to replace fencing on 10 ac, and was going to hire it out.. but with the economic times changing fast, I figure I'll take my time and save 25$ of the cost and just do it myself
(I've fenced a bit here and there, so am real familiar with the armstrong types..). I'll be fencing in areas I can't get a tractor mounted phd close too.. besides it costs as much as a big 2 man gas powerd job anyway. And I would like to spend less on tools, and more on materials if you get my drift.

Soundguy
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #2  
I used one once helping a customer out with one hole. He had the auger with an eight inch bit.

I was surprised how effecient it was. And heck, I've got one rock bit for a twelve inch auger that costs three times what that whole unit goes for.

If your ground isn't tough you'll find the machine adequate. Don't expect to beable to dig in tough ground though. You're taking a ball pein to a blacksmithing seminar so keep your expectations in line with reality.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #3  
I bought one to install a chain link fence. (About 35 holes.) Worked really well. If you have rocks be careful until the slip clutch loosens up a bit. It tried to take my arm off. /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif I ended up wearing welding gloves while using it since when it caught a rock the muffler would swing around and catch my arm. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif Lowes carries the same brand. They were more than TSC but they price match then beat the price by 10%. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

Kurt
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #4  
I don't know what the TSC brand is but I've had an "Earthquaker" (I think) with 6" auger for quite a few years. I've used quite a bit at the house and around the farm and it starts and works well. Mine doesn't have a slip clutch so I can't comment on that but as others have said the one thing that will make a man out of you in a hurry are ROCKS ... and roots aren't much better. When that auger stalls, the only thing stopping the head from rotating is YOU. The ground at the house is pretty rocky once you get down about 1', there's a hardpan layer, and when I fenced off my wife's vegetable garden I was one beaten and bruised little puppy from my ribs down to my knee on the left hand side. That's the reason I got the PHD for the CUT. No more whippings for me. At the farm where the top 3'-4' is fairly sandy and light, it works great and you can get it into places where you can't go with a 3-pt PHD.
When my brother-in-law set fence around his house he hired a one-man, gas driven, small trailer mounted unit similar to the one shown in Northern Tool. Now those were the easiest holes I ever drilled.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #5  
I've got an Earthquake digger with a 6" auger. I used to have a construction company and my Deck crew used it to put in posts. I still use it occasionally to dig holes. Works great unless it's really rocky or you run into tree roots. My wife nicknamed it a "Coyote Digger" after the first time a crew member did a Wylie Coyote spin with the digger when he tangled it up in a root. He kinda looked like a human helicopter blade. :)
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #6  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( My wife nicknamed it a "Coyote Digger" after the first time a crew member did a Wylie Coyote spin with the digger when he tangled it up in a root. He kinda looked like a human helicopter blade. :) )</font> I wish I had seen that LOL. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif I also bought one to install a fence around my house. It works great until it hits big rocks. I have heavy clay soil with rocks. I used that in conjunction with a digging bar and regular post hole digger to get the rocks out. It still beats digging them all by hand though. If you have soil with few rocks it should work very well for you.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #7  
I tried a one-man, then a two-man rig in my clay and found neither of any use. The clay was just too heavy and you couldn't hold it without spining. So I got a PHD for the tractor.

I have used in light soil and sand and they worked OK there.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC
  • Thread Starter
#8  
I mostly have sand.. with vegitation atop it.

I see they have the 12" 8" and 6" augers.. I figured the 8" was too much for it.. and figured 6" would be fine.. as the fence posts are probably 4-5. My corner posts are of course bigger.. but I figure I can drill them.. then use a manual phd to enlarge them.

So for sand I'm probably in the safe?

Like I say.. I figure I'll save about 25% ( not 25$ like I indicated.. in first message.. ) and thats a bit o money. When we had our house and first pasture and areena fenced in 3board black w/ 2x4 no climb wire I about fainted..

Soundguy
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #9  
Saving 25% for postholes in sand ... go get one.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #10  
I bought an Earthquake 2 man PHD with 6" auger at Home Depot some years back and used it to drill about 180 post holes for fencing, deck posts, etc. Worked fine in my clay\soil, but the clutch broke after that much use. Wasn't much to replace and get running again though. Those smaller PHD's are real time savers, in my estimation.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #11  
Here's my one man post hole digger with it's two foot auger in place. This particular hole will be just a couple of inches shy of nine feet deep. /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
 

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   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #12  
mucho dirto later
 

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   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #13  
with a twenty one foot piece of six inch pipe in place
 

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   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #14  
Are those Chinese people looking back up at the camera? /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #15  
wroughtn_harv,

I gotta ask, what were you trying to fence in, or out?

THAT is one stout fence post!


Reminds me of the posts I set for a gate to the back yard. Somebody gave me a 14' 10x10 so it started out pretty stout. One post was part of the property line fence and the other one was tight to the stone foundation of the house and the post hole sort of undermined a concrete slab too. So I just filled the entire hole with concrete.

The next summer we sold the house and the first thing the new owner did was try and put his camper in the back yard. The gate was a couple of inches too narrow. Well, he didn't want to tear up the fence so he decided to pull the post next to the house. Took him the entire weekend before he gave up digging and cut it flush with the top of the concrete.

I would recommend a similar solution if anybody ever wants to pull THAT post of yours.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #16  
I've used them in the same sandy soil condtions, a bit South of you. Or, I should say, I rented them and my son-in-law used them; getting too much for an old man to wrestle with. Worked great from my point of view /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif. You get past the roots pretty fast, and there arre no rocks or clay. /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif At around $85/day rental, that unit will pay for itself real fast, plus you could sell it when you're done.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #17  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I gotta ask, what were you trying to fence in, or out?)</font>

That post is going to be the one that holds a gate that as close as I can figure will weigh about twelve hundred pounds.

I'm doing a thread on it down in "photos" under "the gate".

Every now and then I get the opportunity to work on interesting projects. This is one of them.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #19  
Yup. That's Iris. She's this man's best friend on the job.

I was talking to a heavy equipment mechanic yesterday about working by ourselves. I told him my line was "it's either tools or fools, I'll choose tools." He agreed.
 
   / 1 man phd and auger from TSC #20  
i have the 2 man earthquaker and its adream ..have the 6 and ten in bits and the thinghas paid for itself many times over..the 2 man is actualleasier to handle with one person than the two as the wider handle stancegive you more leverage..kinda like haveing the cheater pipe on my big f3/4 in milwaulkee drill...if you dont have the handle on and the bit catches sumfns gonna break and you can bet it wont b the milwaulkee!! i've run the twoman quaker many times by myself and if the diggins good its a breeze...if your in rocky soil i stand 5'7" and you'ld better watch your ribs...but its still doable...i'd spring for the 2 man and git some brewskies and a bud 2 come over and help...the other half and i put in a new post jist the other day and her hangin on to the other end was a big help...weve got jist bout nothin but rocks here..it was a new mailbox post...ijf it kicks on u DONT TRY TO LET GO !!!
It'll nail u every time!!! know that when you seize up and u will that your ready and braced for it..ALL THE TIME!!! these quakers spin clockwise so if it catches be braced so as to absorb the thrust ..youll git it i promise..find someone at work or sumfn that needs a new fence and join sides ..a day at your place and a day at his..my fencin projects r coming up this nxt week to..wanna come to maine 4 a weekend..we can use my quaker and u dojnt have to buy one!!! the phd'r is correct way to enlarge holes 4 the corner posts too..last year had to carrry all fencin supplies in a wheelbarrow but this years tis aloader carryin my stuff hole to hole /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif

TODD oh yeah what is tsc and can u git me a link to it pls
 

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