Quantity recorded as supplied
The operator meters the discharge, so the quantity record reflects what was supplied rather than an assumed full load. Quoted minimums and service charges still apply.
On-site mixing
Materials remain separate until the job is ready, then the operator batches at the site. The result is practical control over timing, quantity, and selected mix adjustments—within the approved job requirements and truck capacity.
The operator meters the discharge, so the quantity record reflects what was supplied rather than an assumed full load. Quoted minimums and service charges still apply.
Materials are combined after arrival and site readiness, reducing time spent traveling as already-mixed concrete.
If field demand changes, the operator can continue batching within the truck’s material capacity and approved scope. Larger needs may require a planned reload or another truck.
Because batching starts at the job, the crew is not using part of the concrete’s working time while the load travels from a distant plant.
Within the approved design and written scope, selected slump, fiber, air, or other requirements may be managed at the truck. Project approval still controls.
When compatible materials, capacity, specifications, and documentation allow, more than one approved batch requirement may be served on a planned visit.
A short site or weather delay does not automatically create a fully mixed load. Waiting, cancellation, or rescheduling terms remain subject to the quote.
Backyards, county roads, repairs, staged work, and weekend pours are the types of projects mobile service is built to evaluate.
Measured production can reduce excess concrete compared with ordering a rounded-up full load, while proper contained washout is still required.
Send the address, timing, and a few job details. We’ll confirm the route, explain the charges, and give you a clear delivered quote before you commit.