I'd vote to rent a two man setup. Used to punch ~500 holes in a one day rental session with one. Not real deep holes - we'd stick a 2' length of PVC pipe or cut up irrigation pipe in each one for standing up Christmas trees
When I built fence I had a ground hog 1 person hydraulic auger. You can rent them from Home Depot, real nice machine with foward and reverse. I would look for something with reverse, otherwise have a pipe wrench ready.
So I am going to use it tomorrow and decided I would dig a couple of teloost holes today to see how it does. I have the four inch drill and both times it went right down to about two thirds of the length before it stopped due to stones. The one I rented from home depot did the same except that one had a six inch bit. It also had the suburu 4 stroke instead of the predator 2 stroke. I would have to say on my limited use of both that power and performance is similar. Longevity ........who knows
Those two man deals are a death trap! My cousin and I are both pretty good size, 6'+ 250+ and we got wrapped up in one of those things! I will never use one again, and very cumbersome.
I got out there today and gave it a bit of a work out. Works great when the soil is clear of big rocks or roots. Otherwise it doesn't have the power to break through. I guess I said pretty much the same thing yesterday
Let's hope you don't have a lot of rocks. Definately easier. Maine is known (in most areas) as "growing" rocks in the ground. The rig I rented recently would bore a 8" hole easily until it hit rocks down a foot or so, then it would tear the hole sideways ripping any rock 6" to 8" up through... almost without breathing hard. That's really where it all counts. And, it can take an incredible amount of torque power to do that. Most of the smaller 1 and 2 man units I've rented would fetch up quick on most rocks. Always had to have a digging bar and clamshell post hole digger, to get the job done. When you don't have a lot of torque, the smallest diameter auger is best.
Any experience with equipment? If you can line up enough holes to do it is worth it to rent a Bobcat with a hole digger on it. So much less stress on your body. I dug 80 holes in one day with one guy helping me mark the holes with an 8' board. $210 for the day was worth every penny.
I've got access to a bobcat and can rent the digger. But That side of the property my grey water runs down and it's very tight to gain access just from my property (shed and all). I don't want to impact the neighbor more than I have too.....
Bobcat will tear up the yard, even if you are careful and try not do. Can't say I've seen a house setup with separate plumbing for black and grey water. Interesting!
Mine is. I went way outta my way to keep it that way too. Big drywell in the backyard for grey and typical septic for black water.
Smart move and worth the effort and $$$. Keeps all washing machine and kitchen sink goo out of the septic. Our old farm had that done in the summer of 1972. I remember the year cause I was the plumber's helper.
It's not really to code anymore. Code wants everything routed to septic. Working drywell or not. I had the main line out to the well collapse and rather than reroute grey water to septic, I opted to dig the main and replace it.
We had our separate while the four kids grew up. Now it is only the wife and me, so have reconnected it to the septic. I don't fully understand why the code is that way, but I don't want to get pinched either.
I got sick of renting one over and over ,got a 1 or 2 man earthquake with 3 auger sizes ,it does the job ,but is a workout by yourself
My Dad and I needed one at our properties......and he has a nice tractor...and I had an old 8n at the time . So I kept an eye on Craigslist....ended up finding an old Ford post hole digger for sale like 10 houses down from my parents !! It was in need of some welding and paint.....but had half of what a new one costs into it . We used the crap out of it...now i has sat for the last 2 years . Now its getting used again . I love when a plan works out . It was a fun project . This guy use to be pretty good at welding and restoring things . Ahhhh...the good old days BTW.....my dads Kubota ran that digger waaaaaayyyy better than the old 8n's hydraulics could ! The weight of the digger would bring down the old 3 point pretty quick.....so I had to keep the PTO shaft disconected and the tractor PTO running during transport . It worked..but was a pain . Im just rambling now
I picked up one of those at an estate sale a couple weeks ago; $300. When we moved here a couple years ago we threw up a t-post fence for the horses. Decided to start putting in wood posts this year. I rented a 2-man auger quite a few years ago and didn't want to do it again. I'm running it off a '44 2N.
Ok, after looking and going around and around. My options are renting: Dingo & Bit for like $200 / A little Beaver & Bit for like $95 for a day or I could still buy. Would a Dingo be worth the extra $100? If rocks are present can both of them remove them or will they be stopped? I shouldn't have any tree roots to hit, but mainly back fill debris and rocks. And it'll be 34 holes to do in a day
The one I rented to do my yard worked great I have sandy soil but we did run into a rocky patch well actually an old concrete drain pipe that shut me down and made me shift the fence. I also ran into some buried bricks and the auger worked around them pretty good but the water line was the worst it shut down the project so I recommend watching out for water lines