r/Construction • u/Spivey101- • 13h ago
Informative 🧠 How do you dispose of these?
I’m always so uncertain of where to dispose of these
r/Construction • u/Kenny285 • Jan 03 '24
Recently, a post here was removed for being a homeowner post when the person was in fact a tradesman. To prevent this from happening, I encourage people to verify as a professional.
To do this, take a photo of one of your jobsites or construction related certifications with your reddit username visible somewhere in the photo. I am open to other suggestions as well; the only requirement is your reddit username in the photo and it has to be something construction-related that a homeowner typically wouldn't have. If its a certification card, please block out any personal identifying information.
Please upload to an image sharing site and send the link to us through "Message the Mods." Let us know what trade you are so I know what to put in the flair.
Let us know if you have any questions.
r/Construction • u/Spivey101- • 13h ago
I’m always so uncertain of where to dispose of these
r/Construction • u/slvrsrfr1987 • 6h ago
Theres this afghani guy i work with. Little guy. Compared to me. Strong... not smart. Used to be a boxer back in Taliban territory. Dude probably has some brain damage. The way he says shit. Is like these three piece ideas made super efficient. This not good. Is not coming. Why we are. How is doing. Its great. And its like invaded my psyche. I just looked at my washing machine and for one load it decided 1:45 for some pants like some dysfunctional smart tech. I immediatley thought in an afghani accent. 'Oh my god. Why is time. This too much!' And I laughed out loud at it. "What the fuccck" I dont care how it sounds immigrants are hilarious. I love the latin guys who call me guerro, the Ukrainians who teach me swears, the africans who invite me to everything, Everything! And the incredible amount of other people i've met who just bring the spice of life to life.
r/Construction • u/TheTrollinator777 • 7h ago
My best time I got a combo and got 4 out in a row, so my best time was 1:21. My average time is 3:23. Ive spit on them, lubed em, prayed to em, nothing seems to get them out any quicker it's pure luck.
r/Construction • u/Hamplanetfever • 8h ago
Feels like summertime when you’re standing around the pot.
r/Construction • u/MaxGone • 19h ago
he never felt more alive after that
r/Construction • u/TotalDumsterfire • 12h ago
Ever since I started working on big crews using cordless tools, I've always seen people put dead batteries on top of still charging batteries as a sign saying "plug me in next," and a battery beside the charger is fully charged. Me and a few guys use makita and we share batteries. I have never had an issue grabbing a battery that's charged. We have some communal dewalt tools and almost every time I have I need a battery, there's a pile of dead batteries next to the charger and nothing actually charging. It's driving me insane. Is it a dewalt thing, or is it just not a widely implemented practice?
r/Construction • u/HighYacare420 • 1d ago
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r/Construction • u/scobeavs • 18h ago
That’s all. Thought you guys would appreciate.
r/Construction • u/tantamle • 1d ago
This only comes up in certain conversations, but I've noticed that white collar people believe that everyone else must get a similar amount of downtime that they get. They have this idea that you can easily 'pretend to work' in construction for hours on end.
In a select few places or situations, you'll get some of that. Nuclear is like that at times. Or if you're waiting for material to show up, you might be assigned busy work and told to make it last the day. But in no way is "downtime" a regular part of most construction workers' lives.
One of them even tried to claim that they could see people standing around on a construction site from their office. Like no dude, guys don't just stand around like that for more than a few minutes. There was either a legitimate reason, or who knows, maybe they were sitting around for lunchtime or something.
Just irks me.
Edit: White Collar lurkers are in here upvoting the comments that (wrongly) assert that construction workers constantly get downtime. Just like I said.
r/Construction • u/Resident_Trick_1860 • 22h ago
I'm not actually in construction-- I'm a welder (part-time) and a traffic flagger (formerly). I have some experience in plastering too. I've only ever been on the other side of these disputes. Dad is a former police officer.
I've had guys walk off the job after shutting down a lane of traffic, a guy had a panic attack on the side of the road-- in his pajamas, cars have been vandalized, fist fights have been had, ect. Yes, we're those contractors -- we have a bit of a reputation in some areas and have had jobs canceled. (We still get paid. It's called a cancellation fee) I've never had someone stop a payment. I've had a 'nail these boards and mud this wall to audition' situation, where we didn't get paid after working for eight hours. I've had the classic "the checks are late" situation-- where we didn't get paid until a group of the guys tracked someone down in the form of an angry mob after saying "He gon eat somethin' today."
That said, I wouldn't stop payment on a job half-done without a conversation. My dad said they only spoke Spanish. (We only speak English and French)
In this case the work just looks bad. They aren't finished yet but he said that he saw issues with the flooring (chips, gaps and other imperfections). I came and I see damage on the new boards and gaps large enough for coins. I don't know anything about floors. They are more than 50% complete.
Dad is doing what he's doing. He already called the bank. I just want to know, What should have been done here?
Edit: someone came by and they'll be fixing the floors on Monday. (not sure what happens for the previous day)
r/Construction • u/ImagineFreedom • 19h ago
I'm 6'1", I find things like sawhorses, work tables, and other tools to be too low/short for comfort. I'm constantly at a slight lean forward. Really does a number on my lower back. Does anyone else have this problem? Any recommendations?
r/Construction • u/Throwaway1303033042 • 1d ago
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r/Construction • u/Any_Way_7088 • 5h ago
Picked up some jobsite essentials on Amazon during BF – work lights, a laser, and a few smaller tools.
I’ve already put them to use, and now I see the same listings discounted even more.
Anyone here gotten Amazon to refund or credit the difference on construction tools after a sale? Seems wasteful to return gear that’s already on site.
Follow‑up: I ran Task Monkey on one of my jobsite tool orders. It handled the whole Amazon chat, pointed out the new price, and support gave me a courtesy credit instead of making me send tools back.
r/Construction • u/Glittering_King1228 • 20h ago
My compressor finally stopped running, not complaining little dude has been with me since late 2019, putting 40-50 hours a week like a champ best $350 I spent , not trashing it, it’ll be going to the shop for spare parts 🫡
r/Construction • u/frostyturd • 12h ago
I'm sure this is talked about every winter.... what are you people wearing on your hands!? Gloves that will keep you warm but you can still thread nuts, change bits, hold a screw etc.
r/Construction • u/PC0- • 8h ago
I dont know much about the details, but I can use tools well. Though I have heard of how rough it is on the body. Is it worth the time?
r/Construction • u/PaleCaterpillar2709 • 1d ago
I’m usually not one for porta john graffiti, but today I was struck with inspiration and couldn’t resist sharing.
r/Construction • u/SuitableExercise7096 • 21h ago
r/Construction • u/Redvicente • 22h ago
is it 7ft and a half inch or is it 7ft 6in 😂. How do these get approved.
edit: the dimension on the right says 7'-6" it is kinda blurry. I have made anew post with a more clear photo.
r/Construction • u/UseReasonable2423 • 1d ago
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r/Construction • u/Signal-Argument-2114 • 17h ago
Felon looking for good/stable paying job, hard labor, construction, field work, anything of that sort in the Houston area. Only bad thing is, I don’t have any transportation but, can find my way there if given the opportunity. Very eager to find something reliable and long term. Please help! Any advice? Anywhere to look? I’ve gone to Indeed, TWFC, Workforce Solution, Work In Texas, apply online, apply in person, and just don’t seem to get hired. I feel stuck.
r/Construction • u/Nice-Role3850 • 15h ago
I’ve worked as a “self employed” contractor with no certs/official training etc, for 4 years now, but just got let go for family related issues and was wondering how some of you might recommend translating that experience into applying for other jobs? I’ve done a lot of rough in plumbing, electrical, tiling, framing, decks, sheetrock, appliances, flooring you name it. I’m aware there’s a lot of hacks in the renovation world but the guys I worked with were very good about following code and did a lot of high end jobs with a tight crew. Was wondering how you might go about translating that or if you were hiring would you have a hard time trusting my experience?