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Comparing Prices
Posted by just-a-surveyor on July 14, 2017 at 1:55 pmWhere do you buy your caps and what price do you pay per cap?
a-harris replied 6 years, 8 months ago 18 Members · 35 Replies- 35 Replies
You might want to check out this thread.
IMVHO the best are from Hanna’s in Donegal
We get most of ours from Bathey, although for specialty items I go to Berntsen.
I should probably have specified that I’m asking about your standard Plastic Cap. I see Bathey has them for about 0.29 cents a piece.
Just A. Surveyor, post: 436992, member: 12855 wrote: I should probably have specified that I’m asking about your standard Plastic Cap. I see Bathey has them for about 0.29 cents a piece.
My one regret in life is that I didn’t go with better caps from the beginning. Those plastic ones are cheap, but cheap looking. Wish I’d gone with a disk instead.
Just A. Surveyor, post: 436992, member: 12855 wrote: I should probably have specified that I’m asking about your standard Plastic Cap. I see Bathey has them for about 0.29 cents a piece.
My Standard Plastic Cap is the Morasse brand sold by Berntsen. Those $0.29 piece of c*** caps are not worth a s***. They should be prohibited from being used by all Boards. Forgive my language, but cheap caps that don’t last are a pet peeve of mine.
JPH, post: 436994, member: 6636 wrote: My one regret in life is that I didn’t go with better caps from the beginning. Those plastic ones are cheap, but cheap looking. Wish I’d gone with a disk instead.
That’s your one regret! Man I have a wheel barrel load of regrets and plastic caps is most definately not one of them.
Jim in AZ, post: 436996, member: 249 wrote: My Standard Plastic Cap is the Morasse brand sold by Berntsen. Those $0.29 piece of c*** caps are not worth a s***. They should be prohibited from being used by all Boards. Forgive my language, but cheap caps that don’t last are a pet peeve of mine.
These things take time. We’re not that far removed from setting wood hammer handles for corners. A plastic cap on top of a piece of rebar is a world of improvement.
JPH, post: 436994, member: 6636 wrote: My one regret in life is that I didn’t go with better caps from the beginning. Those plastic ones are cheap, but cheap looking. Wish I’d gone with a disk instead.
Don’t like ’em. They disappear in fires (rural) and are an attractive nuisance (urban). A stamped brass tag wired to a rebar below ground or lead & tag in hardscape for the run of the mill property corner, bronze disk grouted into bedrock or set atop a buried 2″ flared pipe for the fancy stuff.
I’ve contemplated for a few minutes and can truthfully say I’ve never set a plastic cap.
Has anyone used the Bathey laser marked rebar caps? The price is just slightly more than the plastic caps, and their stock website photos look pretty slick. I suppose the downside would be that they couldn’t be “custom stamped” like aluminum or brass for a specific corner, but for a generic lot corner they should work fine.
I am happy with the Mountain Mold & Die, Inc caps.
They are UV stabilized and they have many models.
I rarely leave any of them above sod level unless I’ve drilled into a rock or concrete.Mike Marks, post: 437013, member: 1108 wrote: Don’t like ’em. They disappear in fires (rural) and are an attractive nuisance (urban). A stamped brass tag wired to a rebar below ground or lead & tag in hardscape for the run of the mill property corner, bronze disk grouted into bedrock or set atop a buried 2″ flared pipe for the fancy stuff.
I’ve contemplated for a few minutes and can truthfully say I’ve never set a plastic cap.
Fires destroy aluminum caps and the baling wire most folks use to attach those brass tags with. We have areas with incredible dis-similar metal corrosion problems, and rebar/alum. cap just doesn’t work. The metal caps with plastic inserts fall off after a year or two. I recently recovered some 2-3/4″ diam. plastic Morasse caps I set 32 years ago that looked brand new. They have been through some harsh weather during that time, including UV at an elevation of 7000 feet. A hammer never touches them and they never come off the rebar and I will keep using them until I retire. There’s nothing better.
Second Mountain Mold and Die ( surveycaps.com).
The KGB, post: 437018, member: 10394 wrote: Has anyone used the Bathey laser marked rebar caps? The price is just slightly more than the plastic caps, and their stock website photos look pretty slick. I suppose the downside would be that they couldn’t be “custom stamped” like aluminum or brass for a specific corner, but for a generic lot corner they should work fine.
I have been using them for about 4 years and will continue to. I order 1000 at a time and they are around 80 cents each and have had much better luck that with plastic caps. I have went back on surveys that were performed 2 – 3 years a go and can still read the laser etching on the top. We have started to grind a bevel on top of our rebar that makes it easier to start the cap, but that is done during rain out days while the guys are cutting the rebar to length.
Lenggeman has lime green caps, only place I have found that color. I can’t answer about durability yet. Using 2in Bernstein alum for sec cors.
Jon Collins, post: 437049, member: 11135 wrote: Lenggeman has lime green caps, only place I have found that color. I can’t answer about durability yet. Using 2in Bernstein alum for sec cors.
Thanks for letting us know. I looked for awhile for lime green caps, and never found any when we went in business. Everyone in my area sets yellow, orange or red (one guy sets maroon because he is an Aggie grad). We wanted something different, but we settled on orange. I’m thinking we will switch to green on the next order.
I only know of 2 surveyors to set aluminum caps in our area. One retired probably 20 years ago the other 10. Their caps have always been hard to read, that’s one of the main reasons I never wanted aluminum.
I do leave caps above ground a tenth or so when around wire or steel post.
On a side note I found a plastic cap( not sure of brand) that was 15 years old that was sun rotted and could make out the name and number. I took a pic with my phone within a foot of the cap and zoomed in and was able to make out the name and number.
I would love to post a pic but I found this uncalled for rod about 12′ from a buried called for axle and the only info I can get from the surveyor that set the rod is he did that survey 15 years ago and that file is archived in a storage unit.Surv-Kap seems to be the cheapest. Their service is good.
There are a couple of guys in central Arkansas using those Morasse caps. While they may hold up well; I’ve had a terrible time excavating around them in our rocky soil to get flagging on them. Seems like a small complaint; I know. But, it’s been enough to keep me from using them.
Plastic caps:
IF you lightly spray them, witj spray paint…
It blocks the uv rays…
Probably doubles, or more their service life.KevinFoshee, post: 437167, member: 8314 wrote: I’ve had a terrible time excavating around them in our rocky soil to get flagging on them.
That is what pin flags are for…………
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