abcdef
2005-04-23 00:45:51 UTC
During a bad windstorm six months ago, the wind actually snapped off a
pole by my driveway, onto which was mounted a basketball hoop and
backboard.
I figured that, come spring, I'd just hacksaw the remaining stump of a
pole (about four feet above the ground) and be done. No such luck. The
pole is 1/8-inch thick hardened steel, and worse, it's filled all the
way up with cement. Besides hacksawing, I've tried:
1. Digging around the cement, in hopes of loosening the thing and
pulling it out. But even though the cement is only about 10 inches in
diameter at the surface, the more I dig, the wider the cement base seems
to spread. And goodness only knows how deep it goes. I can see myself
tearing up 15 or 20 square feet of lawn just to find the true perimeter
of the cement base, then winding up having three or four feet of cement
under the ground - way too heavy to tip or pull out.
2. Renting a reciprocating saw from Home Depot. This wasn't any better,
and in fact was pretty scary. The saw did not appear to like going
through concrete. I was able to cut off a small portion at the top
where there was no cement, but even that took two minutes at least to
cut through. When I tried cutting through the base, the saw vibrated so
much I thought my arms would fall off and I was afraid the blade would
break off and injure me. At one point, I was able to cut about a
quarter inch into the pole, a cut that was about two inches long at
most. Again though, I was afraid the rented saw (or worse, its user)
would sustain serious damage.
The only other solutions to this I've heard or read involve pulling the
pole out with a tow truck (not practical, given the amount of cement
that is still tightly buried), using a Dremel or other hand grinder to
cut through the pole (don't think so, given how even a killer saw
couldn't handle it), or renting a backhoe (too expensive, and too much
like killing a fly with an elephant gun).
Mine can't be that unusual a situation. What have other people done to
successfully remove a basketball pole, especially when faced with
circumstances like I describe?
pole by my driveway, onto which was mounted a basketball hoop and
backboard.
I figured that, come spring, I'd just hacksaw the remaining stump of a
pole (about four feet above the ground) and be done. No such luck. The
pole is 1/8-inch thick hardened steel, and worse, it's filled all the
way up with cement. Besides hacksawing, I've tried:
1. Digging around the cement, in hopes of loosening the thing and
pulling it out. But even though the cement is only about 10 inches in
diameter at the surface, the more I dig, the wider the cement base seems
to spread. And goodness only knows how deep it goes. I can see myself
tearing up 15 or 20 square feet of lawn just to find the true perimeter
of the cement base, then winding up having three or four feet of cement
under the ground - way too heavy to tip or pull out.
2. Renting a reciprocating saw from Home Depot. This wasn't any better,
and in fact was pretty scary. The saw did not appear to like going
through concrete. I was able to cut off a small portion at the top
where there was no cement, but even that took two minutes at least to
cut through. When I tried cutting through the base, the saw vibrated so
much I thought my arms would fall off and I was afraid the blade would
break off and injure me. At one point, I was able to cut about a
quarter inch into the pole, a cut that was about two inches long at
most. Again though, I was afraid the rented saw (or worse, its user)
would sustain serious damage.
The only other solutions to this I've heard or read involve pulling the
pole out with a tow truck (not practical, given the amount of cement
that is still tightly buried), using a Dremel or other hand grinder to
cut through the pole (don't think so, given how even a killer saw
couldn't handle it), or renting a backhoe (too expensive, and too much
like killing a fly with an elephant gun).
Mine can't be that unusual a situation. What have other people done to
successfully remove a basketball pole, especially when faced with
circumstances like I describe?