Living in Anjou , France,
For the many not for the few
http://www.permies.com/t/80/31583/projects/Permie-Pennies-France#330873
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:Hi Richard, Welcome to Permies!!!
I have to ask before getting to excited for you...
Have you ever done any stone carving or extreme quarrying of stone?
These are massive skills with very expensive tools...and...work that takes a lot of time and/or money.
Most books that you need are very technical and aimed at Mining Engineers, and the related fields.
"Mine timber craft" is more germane than "arch carving a ceiling." There is huge PE assessment needs for such a project.
Give me specifics and I will do what I can. Bullet questions are easier for me to answer.
Regards,
j
Conceptually simple enough to practice some basic approaches while still yielding a useful final product if that is as far as it goes.
1) From my reading, it appeared that drilling a series of holes and wedge fracturing the pieces out seemed like the easiest way to begin and extend a specific shape as well as ultimately achieving the curve. Is that correct?
2) I had wondered though, if a series of horizontal blade cuts across an area to be removed and then hitting them from above (or wedging them from below) once a sufficient hole existed would be more or less efficient. It seemed like an easy method to try anywhere on the site though. Does that seem reasonable?
As for moving to a different site that already has caves, that is not as easily done as said unfortunately. This location has a 3 story near vertical drop off on 3 sides with extensive views out to sea, along a coast, across a forested valley, can't be built out, won't have neighbours etc. To try and find that with a natural cave too might take me longer than just making one. Maybe
So, Jay, I haven't yet done any extreme quarrying of stone but I'll happily reiterate that speed is not my main concern here. Precision and having a good safe outcome is. The right tools, approach and technique should make all the difference. Personally, I think this will be a truly amazing project opportunity in a location that has an incredible amount going for it.
Tell me more about the PE assessments. I'm happy to spend a long time planning before going near the rock as I won't really get a second chance with a location like this and want to do it right.
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:
Drilling "feather and wedge" holes for a quarrying and/or mining operation is not the same as even splitting a large glacial erratic. You need huge air compressors and or diesel operated 30 mm to 50 mm drill bits that can coast up to a thousand dollars or more each. Most operations now use dimon saws, cables saws, and related tools for projects such as yours. These start at $80K and go up.
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:
For house scale work you can get by with "kerfing and wedging" with a 400 mm to 500 mm hand held diamond chop saw. This is fastly quicker and more efficient than "feather and wedge" methods.
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:
Kind of...see above answer. Remember...many operations like this start with "blasting" and "mine timber framing methods." Your project is actually attempting to not fracture the rock but keep in whole and intact for structural purposes...much hard and slower work.
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:
I agree...that area sound great...but..."shafting" into solid granite is probably not the best use of your labor to build a natural house...nevertheless, if I had the time and fiscal resources...plus the kind of rock you mention...I would attempt at least a small scale project of some type under or near the permanent house.
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:
I can take you through all of this and what I don't know of the top of my head...I can point you in the correct direction...You project sound like dream...doable...and will look magical in the end...but the road is a long and expensive one...
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:
Well first you really have to "cut in" and start before actually getting an assessment from a PE (my Brother in Law's father is a Mining Engineer and I know several more.) A design with blue prints of the architecture in and above ground is also going to need to be created.
Dale Hodgins wrote:I've never tunneled through granite, but I have removed it from trenches and a basement. It recently cost my customer $1500 to remove about half a yard of granite from a narrow trench. It took 5 days. We broke 2 tips and dulled 20 others. Equipment costs ran around $400.
A few years ago, my friends were about to spend $700 more on a low profile oil furnace than it cost to get a similar upright model. It was to go into a tight crawl space. The house sat on soft shale. I was able to excavate space for the furnace and a root cellar for $300, using a 3 man crew. It took 8 hours. We saved $400 and created more room under the house.
Some rock is incredibly hard and difficult to remove. Other rock can be removed using pick, shovel and sledgehammer.
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