rjtfroggy
Gold $$ Contributor
Just a follow up to a previous post.
After searching for a couple days for "heavy sand" That I did not find I took some advice from a member and found that "leveling sand" isn't acceptable for use in a bag. When I opened the bag I found it to be damp and it had gravel in it, it would need to be dried and sifted, I now have a 50 lb. bag in the garage to be dumped out in the yard somewhere.
I ended up using a crushed black quartz from the pet supply store, normally for the bottom of fish tanks. I only got about 6.5 lbs. in the bag after roughly 2.5 hours of shaking, pounding, and molding to get it in. I will probably need to put more after I use it 1 or 2 times.
After a long winded account, I guess this post is just to say when you buy a front or rear bag buy it prefilled spend the extra couple of bucks for the shipping and filling, you will save a lot of aggravation and time, plus the bag maker probably has the heavy sand and will get it filled to the right consistency the first time.
After searching for a couple days for "heavy sand" That I did not find I took some advice from a member and found that "leveling sand" isn't acceptable for use in a bag. When I opened the bag I found it to be damp and it had gravel in it, it would need to be dried and sifted, I now have a 50 lb. bag in the garage to be dumped out in the yard somewhere.
I ended up using a crushed black quartz from the pet supply store, normally for the bottom of fish tanks. I only got about 6.5 lbs. in the bag after roughly 2.5 hours of shaking, pounding, and molding to get it in. I will probably need to put more after I use it 1 or 2 times.
After a long winded account, I guess this post is just to say when you buy a front or rear bag buy it prefilled spend the extra couple of bucks for the shipping and filling, you will save a lot of aggravation and time, plus the bag maker probably has the heavy sand and will get it filled to the right consistency the first time.