this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2025
3 points (100.0% liked)

DIY

1439 readers
6 users here now

For DIY - this is also a placeholder.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Hi Lemmy,

I want to do a project that involves concrete. Basically I am making steps, giving them texture and stamping them so it looks somewhat like stones.

I have watched a million videos and I feel I can tackle this, plus I have a lot of areas to practice that won't be too visible so if the steps look a bit amateur it's fine.

My biggest question is about the effort of mixing concrete. I have a corded drill with a mixing paddle and most steps won't require much. However a few are larger and I would have to mix 10 bags or so. The drying time allows me to work one at a time and then do my stamping but I was wondering if this is feasible from an effort perspective.

I am an experienced DIYer but have not worked much with concrete, I made a coffee table, post bases, etc but never something that requires so many bags... am I setting myself up for failure / a broken back? hehehe

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 hours ago (3 children)

from my experience of mixing 4-5 bags a day for several weeks, the drill option is cheap, but the lateral drag got quickly heavy on the wrists. You can rent a concrete mixer for probably not too much money at a hardware store, or use a cheap dedicated device https://www.amazon.com/s?k=handheld+cement+mixer

we use the concrete mixer when mixing cement and shoveling sand to make big quantities to pour slabs, and the handheld to mix quickcrete bags in a bassin for laying bricks and other smaller tasks

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

Thanks for your reply!

I will likely make 1 step per month or so (I'd like one step to be fully dry before moving on to the next). The initial steps I will practice with are single steps to the shed and side door (back of the house) which are not very visible. If I dare, I would do some steps in the front of the house, these are larger but only 4 of them so I have the luxury to dismantle and pour one at a time a allow them to dry fully before moving on to the next.

Those mixers seem cheap, if they are better than my drill I would not mind getting one.

Finally, I can buy a concrete mixer (something not fully pro but I believe enough for this project) and then sell it after the project to recover some of the money as I can't imagine I would to tons of concrete work after this. (wife already approved that idea since contracting to do these steps is SUPER expensive)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

You will save a lot of money doing it yourself, artisans are pricy, and usually you also need to understand their job to be able to check if it was done right.

We bought all the equipment because we do stuff for a couple of hours early in the morning or after work, so renting wouldn't be worth the trouble. everything's going back on craigslist when we're done.

Even if there are small imperfections, the satisfaction of doing something with your own hands gives so much pride and confidence, it's worth it.

Every time we finish something, that's pretty much the point where we acquired enough experience, that doing it again would feel comfortable/easy, and then we never do xD

[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 hours ago

Buddy, you and I definitely think alike when it comes to DIY projects!

load more comments (1 replies)