Sprayer 1
Member
- Location
- Tarporley, Cheshire.
The way I read it, you can't put ready mix concrete against tax, but if you buy cement, sand and grave and mix it yourself , you can. Is this correct?
I would like to concrete a yard that has been road scalping for years. Could this be classed as repairs?Surely it depends what you're doing with it?
Concrete where there was no concrete before = capital item=not allowable against tax, replacing existing concrete = repairs=allowable against tax.
I would like to concrete a yard that has been road scalping for years. Could this be classed as repairs?
Surely there was a very thin layer of concrete on top of said scalping that you have now re laid to a deapth more suitable for modern heavy equipment. .I would like to concrete a yard that has been road scalping for years. Could this be classed as repairs?
Isn’t repairs supposed to be like for like, so technically if a thin layer of concrete before, should be same again .Surely there was a very thin layer of concrete on top of said scalping that you have now re laid to a deapth more suitable for modern heavy equipment. .
£40 I remember £2.50!Isn’t repairs supposed to be like for like, so technically if a thin layer of concrete before, should be same again .
Of course anyone with any sense would puit down thicker next time, if it’s broke up it obviously wasn’t up to the job and machinery is only getting bigger.
Dad allways used to say 4inches was more than enough..............he was wrong Worse still it was under forty quid a cube back then
I did say under 40..............just not how far£40 I remember £2.50!
If it was lad on a good base , there is plenty of slabs still solid. I believe most of the local air runways and their roads were no deeperI did say under 40..............just not how far
I would like to concrete a yard that has been road scalping for years. Could this be classed as repairs?
I don't think you can pull the wool over anyones eyes these days , with the eye in the sky looking down.Not now that you have put it all over the internet
I don't think you can pull the wool over anyones eyes these days , with the eye in the sky looking down.
Exactly the same here,my father would never lay concrete at 6 inches so now i am having to do it.I'm gradually working my way through all the 4" concrete my father laid Anywhere with high traffic gets 6" reinforced now
Don’t know about Ireland but here silage pits are classed as part of plant and machinery so has the same tax reliefOur silo floor needs replaced. Its wore thin to around 2 inches deep. I take it silage effluent eats the concrete as it woulda started out deeper than that
Grey fergie,s were never renowned for cracking concrete too be fairExactly the same here,my father would never lay concrete at 6 inches so now i am having to do it.