Anyone ever see the size of actual steel road sign posts? They make consumer grade fence t-posts look like tooth picks. Lol. probably go with option 2 using my old gas powered two man earth auger that also can be quite the work out.
My two man did save me some time despite hitting lots of rocks, dropping 8" sono tubes 54" for a deck up north. I'm kind of certain I won't be able to use it like I did in the past at least with a 8" auger on it, especially in soil up there.I had a gas handheld auger. Thought it was going to save so much work. Then a few rocks convinced me otherwise.
My biggest problem with the cheap pile driver was the crappy job on welds. They left all the “bird crap” in place on the welds.Anyone ever see the size of actual steel road sign posts? They make consumer grade fence t-posts look like tooth picks. Lol. probably go with option 2 using my old gas powered two man earth auger that also can be quite the work out.
Seems most I've been looking at come with ppe including gloves which I'm sure are high quality and durable like the tool kits includedMy biggest problem with the cheap pile driver was the crappy job on welds. They left all the “bird crap” in place on the welds.
I didn’t have any work gloves up at my father in laws place a few falls ago. He asked me to drive in “consumer grade” t-posts all the way across the end of the lake up by their retirement home.
My hands were blistered and torn by the time I finished that job. Fortunately, he had ear plugs for hearing protection. Those cheap pile drivers are also very loud, especially when you work for hours, with them.
By contrast, the cheap hand-held t-post pullers work extremely well. Much better in fact, than a tractor and bucket chain and hook. So much so, that my father in law never asks me to help him with that “pulling” job.
All of those “consumer grade” t-posts are reusable when you use that, unlike the tractor for pulling (and sometimes for pushing), which can often mangle them beyond effective reuse.
No big deal with the cheap pile driver any more though. 5 minutes with a hand file (after my blisters healed), and it’s just as good as the antique “made in USA” one that I use at home. Still not good enough for my father in law to use himself though, especially now that he just turned 80.