“The first job we ever did with the Stompper Mandrel for money, believe it or not, was at the Wallisville spillway and dam (Wallisville Tx.) said Sam. “When you drive down the Wallisville levee road and cross where the spillway is and the gates as you go up to the locks, underneath those gates are those vinyl sheets. They’re about thirty feet long. I originally went to work there in the 70s after I returned from Vietnam, when they were building the dam. Where the gates are is the old original river. When we came into work, we came in from the west side; that was during the time they were moving the old town of Wallisville out and building the east levee. We built the locks and a big outfit that did it was Farrell Construction; they were big in strip mining up north. They had this huge Monighan crane with about a 15 cubic yard bucket on it. A guy in Anahuac named Cooter Renfro ran it. Red King . . . Steve King, he was the master mechanic Waldo King a surveyor, Lawrence Abshier dozer operator. I worked for Bobby McDaniel, he was the foreman; I drove all the wing walls steel sheets in the locks and the staging area south of the locks and five and a half miles of wood piling on 10’ centers which was supposed to be the spillway, from where the locks are all the way to Cove. Theoretically, it would have made a complete lake. There was a road, you could come in on this side and go all the way across Old and Lost River and come out on the hill at Cove. Most people don’t know it’s a man made cut that goes across there. We had a barge we put crossways, to use as a bridge, right there at the end of where the locks are. We had put gates in all those bayous, and they almost had the locks built, but when they got the injunction, they took them all out. The plan was to take the Wallisville Dam all the way across to Cove to dam up the whole end of Old and Lost River, but when a federal injunction was filed against it stating it was a hatchery for shrimp and other things, they stopped it. I think they got an injunction against it about three different times but I left and got another job after the first injunction; I liked it out there but you never knew when they were going to shut it down. I worked there a little over a year. Stab Cat Inc. in 1997 put in the vinyl sheets using a Stompper Mandrel and vibratory hammer.). A vibratory hammer is different from an impact hammer because pulls all the moisture in the ground towards it which liquefies the soil right in front of the vinyl sheet,” explained Sam.
“There were three vinyl manufacturers in the United States at this time. One of them, CMI the other two were smaller companies. We would lease the Stompper Mandrel to them when they had a job. CMI wanted our mandrel, but we already had a patent on it. They tried every way they could to get around our patent, but after our lawyer wrote a letter to them CMI came up with the money to buy the rights to the patent. One of the big jobs we did with the Stompper Mandrel was right after 9-11. The city of New York would haul their garbage by barge out to Staten Island to the dump and it was reported there was leakage in the soil. We drove the vinyl sheets for them to seal off the leakage.”
The brothers received a fourth patent, U.S. 6,231,274 B1 on May 15, 2001, for a lifting device for composite sheet pile, and a fifth patent, U. S. 5,803,672, on September 8, 1998, for a hydraulic ram push off for composite steel.