Until it falls down on your MILs car while she is visiting. Ask my neighbors how their install by family went. |
Amazon has a service. You can go in and select it and the guy will be out in two days |
These things are not comparable to an in-ground hoop. |
I installed an inground hoop (DIY) last year (think it's a Megaslam 72") and it took almost 20 bags of 80lb concrete bags. For a DIYer to take it easy, I'd say 1 day to dig the hole. 1 day to get concrete and prep, 1 day to pour concrete, and 1 day to assemble it (with a couple friends) after the concrete has cured.
I mixed one bag at a time in a wheelbarrow by myself and dumped it in the hole. My recommendation would be to do it with 2 people so it goes faster. It's not a "hard" job per say but a fair bit of work. Contractor pricing around here is steep (just the market these days) and I wanted it done right so I DIYd it. I hang on the rim and it hasn't budged yet, so no complaints. If you're installing a chintzy bball hoop then you can probably pour a much smaller footer and it's a much easier job. |
How many have you installed ? If none, how much concrete have you poured ? How man columns have you plumbed ? Do you have any relevant experience ? If not, then let's all agree that perhaps shouldn't opine abut the means, methods, and costs for construction items for which you have no relevant experience. |
The units today in the neighborhoods that I work in - these hoops look nothing like the hoops from when we were kids. They are big with large glass backboards - they are bigger than the ones we had in my school yard. And installing them properly is not easy for your average DIYer. |
Yep, if you get a nice hoop (which is worth it imo), they are a lot of work and very heavy. I think the footer was ~18" square and 3 or 4' deep? All the real work is in digging the hole and pouring the footer. $1500 seems a little steep to me, but if people will pay it then that's their choice. |
We used John Johnson, who has a small business doing this. playsetinstall48@gmail.com
Did it at our place in CCDC this past summer (he is based in VA). He came out, cut through the driveway concrete, dug down like 4 or 5 feet and put in the footer, then came back after the concrete cured (several days later). Knew exactly what he was doing. This is an investment, so wanted it installed correctly. |