Modern House Part 4- Main floor joists at garage and carport

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  • Опубликовано: 17 янв 2024
  • Part 4 starts off with wrapping up some steel details left over from part 3 and then stays with joisting out the larger portion of the main floor for the remainder of a short week leading up to the New Years weekend. Lots of hangers, lots of blocks and a few goof ups. The floor system is 16" tall I-joists which is a great floor but any industry pros watching will know the struggle. Tall and tippy make them hard to walk over and the width makes them hard to get your arms around to carry them. Not complaining- the job's the job but It does not go together quite as quick a 12" system.
    As always, thanks for checking in on the build and I really appreciate all the new subs:-)

Комментарии • 90

  • @angeloc700
    @angeloc700 4 месяца назад +5

    I hear Chuck Norris looks to you for motivation.

  • @logancurtiss3957
    @logancurtiss3957 4 месяца назад +5

    Fellow Civil Engineer in Alaska and I have to say, the thoroughness and quality control you contain is so refreshing. I am sure the guy who did the structural would be pleased that you're the one putting together his/her work.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +5

      Thank you for that. I do work closely with the engineer and it's always a pleasure being able to work quickly and cleanly thru little issues that have both of us trapped between reality, desire, and the tape measure:-)

  • @MUDNROCKS
    @MUDNROCKS 4 месяца назад +12

    Lots I could comment on but more than anything I need to say I appreciate you taking the time to document your daily struggle. Can't be easy knocking up such a complicated sub floor and film it too, especially when the weather is such crap in your neck of the woods, good lord it does you no favours.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +3

      My pleasure, it was actually going fairly easy on us up until now but this week is testing my patience a little:-)

  • @libbypenrod6628
    @libbypenrod6628 Месяц назад

    This is amazing! And your skill at figuring out how to do this by yourself is admirable!

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  Месяц назад

      Just saw this, Thanks!

  • @Vanweezy_67
    @Vanweezy_67 4 месяца назад +2

    The fact that you are building this huge house by yourself is awesome, it says a lot about your skill set and I think it great a lot of carpenters can learn a lot from you, but their egos won’t let them

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Hey thanks for that, We all learn from each other I guess and we all tend to watch how others do what we do. Sometimes its to learn and sometimes it's to verify why we're glad we're going to keep doing it the way we've been doing it:-) I appreciate you tuning in.

  • @truthymchurtsalot7188
    @truthymchurtsalot7188 4 месяца назад +1

    Holy crap Jake you are a mountain goat standing on those beams with your TOES! Love your channel.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for that:-), I'm glad the bottom flange was there so I didn't have to bend all the way over to lay it out....

  • @wernerpfeifer
    @wernerpfeifer 4 месяца назад +1

    A great craftsman who takes great personal risk. Be careful and stay healthy!

  • @benalibouti8291
    @benalibouti8291 4 месяца назад +2

    excellent.travail.felicitation.bravo

  • @robertsimmons3556
    @robertsimmons3556 4 месяца назад +3

    I was watching you bang in those TJ's and I was asking myself will he put a doble of adhesive in the seat of the hanger....then 20:20 came along and yup!! What a clean job man!! Had to laugh on one of your prior posts,, someone asked if you did yoga...I was thinking ...nah this guy is a Double Century and Death Ride guy...LOL Your editing and story line is great...what flow, no boredom!!l You post a good story Jake!! Can't wait till the next one!!

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks a ton Robert! I love a good youtube watch myself and I know that anticipation feeling. It's also really hard to keep secrets when I'm a couple weeks ahead of everyone:-)

  • @glenlongstreet7
    @glenlongstreet7 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for the reply Jake. It makes sense to me and I will continue to watch your videos on all of your different projects.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      Super Glen, thanks. For my part going forwards i'll try to do better about explaining a series as I start them. There will of course continue to be fill-in videos along the way that break up regular episodes of a series but it's my wish to keep them as stand alone project videos without a date specific update that references another series. I'm sure there will be stuff that doesn't appeal to everyone but it's all fairly similar and i'll do my best to keep it interesting:-)

  • @bluelightningdt607
    @bluelightningdt607 4 месяца назад +2

    Awesome yet simple use of tech. Very much appreciate seeing your process and thought.

  • @markstipulkoski1389
    @markstipulkoski1389 4 месяца назад +3

    Ir's just not dangerous enough carrying a SINGLE joist around on these slippery wet beams. I think I will carry THREE next time!😂

  • @user-vr8gd7eq9s
    @user-vr8gd7eq9s 4 месяца назад +1

    fun to watch you moving all over that high, tight site…after decking, anyone can do it

  • @danielhawley6817
    @danielhawley6817 4 месяца назад

    How about some safety caps on those bolts sticking up out of the wall? Even though they have nuts on the end, it would just make a bigger, nastier hole in you you if you fell on one.

  • @cjtaylor0103
    @cjtaylor0103 4 месяца назад

    Went with the ol' Herringbone joist pattern I see.....high class move.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Gah, nightmare. Couldn't get out of it.... Whatever the reason was it sure made the floor stiff. There's only about 10% of the deflection that i would've expected.

  • @gregallsup9522
    @gregallsup9522 4 месяца назад +2

    Awesome Job!!

  • @jayrodriguez497
    @jayrodriguez497 4 месяца назад

    Bold move with the name change - I’ve been watching since the second video. Great work man & I think the name change will pay off - 250k subs in no time!

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      I hope you're right but what name change? I'm wracking my brain but coming up bagels.....

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      Ok, Got it! Title change! Yup i remember now and thank you for noticing :-) Woke up out of a dead sleep with that answer....

  • @tylerbarrett6652
    @tylerbarrett6652 4 месяца назад +5

    I found your channel with this build, and I THINK I've watched it from the beginning. I can't remember if you showed us that artist's rendering of what it will look like when you get it done... from the outside, anyway. To me, it's similar to a puzzle - and I always like to look at the picture of the puzzle that's usually on the box as I put it together. If you have such a rendering, I'd love for you to show us from time to time as you build this. I'm enjoying this build, and I thank you for sharing it with us.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +5

      I think someone mentioned that last week and I plan on working that in somehow by the next video. I've been off site working on the next level of steel during this latest weather event we are having so the project will sort of catch itself into real-time briefly and that may offer a good opportunity.
      I'll do my best to answer questions but to be clear I am not the GC so all of my focus here is mostly about structure and process. Any details about finishes or applications will only be in passing as they pertain to whatever task I happen to be including in the video.
      I appreciate you returning and sticking around!

    • @tylerbarrett6652
      @tylerbarrett6652 4 месяца назад +1

      @@ShredPile - Thank you!!

    • @user-iw2qu6sh9t
      @user-iw2qu6sh9t 4 месяца назад

      ​@@ShredPile хотел бы я увидеть как это будет выглядеть в конце👍🏻

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      @@user-iw2qu6sh9t подойди друг, стой :-)

  • @president2
    @president2 4 месяца назад

    Love it so much keep it up as always 💘

  • @corzcordez1803
    @corzcordez1803 4 месяца назад

    Good job jake

  • @glenlongstreet7
    @glenlongstreet7 4 месяца назад

    Thanks Jake. I am already subscribed.

  • @kevinhornbuckle
    @kevinhornbuckle 4 месяца назад

    Nice welds.

  • @fabriziocapurro235
    @fabriziocapurro235 4 месяца назад

    Sei un grande!!!!

  • @micmike
    @micmike 4 месяца назад

    excellent

  • @sohailmmmughal1952
    @sohailmmmughal1952 4 месяца назад

    I love you'r videos love from pakistan🇵🇰

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      Thank you for tuning in from the other side of the world:-)

  • @roblescurbappealconcrete
    @roblescurbappealconcrete 4 месяца назад +1

    Hey Jake great video. You’re an all around type of guy. You even got some pretty good skills editing. Looks like you won’t be long before you go live.
    I hadn’t got the chance to comment to your last video I’ve been under the weather.
    Glad you have some good boots, with all that being wet.
    Do you always work alone? Is this project close to home?
    You be careful out there, friend.
    Everything looks great from here.
    Thank for posting.
    Joe

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +4

      Yeah Joe, almost always solo. I have a crew of pals that gang up together to work on the larger projects but those are usually multiple weekend type events. I will be careful, I watch every step:-) see you in a week!

  • @leonhammond602
    @leonhammond602 4 месяца назад +1

    Not sure ifvthis has been asked and answered, but is this a customers house or your own??? Either way, loving this series.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      It's probably trickled out indirectly but it is not my house. I am the subcontractor for the framing and the steel both structural and architectural. Thanks for tuning in!

  • @macshop69
    @macshop69 4 месяца назад

    Would be super helpful if you were to do a truck walkaround, trying to rig up mine currently. Building up in Whistler

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +2

      Thanks for the interest, I may get to that at some point as part of a larger video but the basics are passenger side is welding, wrenching, moving, fabrication and the drivers side is carpentry, sheet metal, odds and ends. If It was cold around here more than it is I would not do the drawers, even tho i replaced the rollers with UHMW glide surfaces the latches get really sticky when it freezes up. the back seat is removed and follows roughly the same pattern as the back but for the more sensitive tools and all the raingear and PPE.
      Front seat is office and lunchroom as well as the data center:-)
      Things to think about anyway even without a video to refer to. Oh, also the main reason it's laid out like that is I can put a full unit of ply on the two drivers side drawers if i need to and the bed and rack were custom built by myself to haul a ridiculous amount of steel and still remain forklift loadable. One last thing, When the truck was new and before I started using it I had a local spring company rip the rear apart and add leaves to the main stack and replace the factory Ram overloads with a Ford factory 4 spring progressive overload set. Works well and almost never looks maxed out.

    • @yourmother102
      @yourmother102 4 месяца назад

      I was noticing this as well, love the setup for side loading full sheets over top of the drawers. Are the racks galvanized? That would make sense for your climate.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks, yeah the whole bed and headache rack are one piece and the rear rack comes out if I need to use the gooseneck . Yes on the galvanizing. I have a trailer that i built as well that is galvanized too. Once they grey up a little bit they pretty much always look the same and you never have to repaint them.@@yourmother102

  • @douglasthompson2740
    @douglasthompson2740 4 месяца назад +2

    Were your Simpson joist hangers custom made to allow for the angle of your joists?

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +2

      Yes they were, took about 10 days to get them but the fit was great. Not a lot of room for play.

  • @douglasthompson2740
    @douglasthompson2740 4 месяца назад

    I started watching your channel a month ago with the container stacking at your property. I watched #1 and #2 but then nothing more has shown up. As the project wasn't complete I was wondering if I missed something or another video on it was in the pipeline? These home build ones are enjoyable as well so I had to subscribe.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      I appreciate the sub, It will be a bit before i'm back on the sea cans but i'll get there:-)

  • @yourmother102
    @yourmother102 4 месяца назад

    I liked the quick cutting jig you through together for the joists. Funny at the end you kept saying "WE" will be doing decking next, is there a mouse in your pocket?

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      haha, maybe I was hoping the nightshift would show up :-)

    • @yourmother102
      @yourmother102 4 месяца назад

      One could only hope

  • @FedjaXxx
    @FedjaXxx 3 месяца назад

    👍💣

  • @gabrielepandolfi1184
    @gabrielepandolfi1184 4 месяца назад

    Non amo la tecnologia di costruzione USA, tuttavia mi piace molto come lavori, sei veramente bravo. (Questo è un complimento da un architetto italiano)

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Grazie per questo, lo prendo a cuore. Sono d'accordo con te riguardo alla tecnologia. Ci sono molte cose che non sono d'accordo con me stesso e che non includerei a casa mia. Come subappaltatore posso lasciare la mia parte solo in una condizione che consenta il miglior risultato date le circostanze, quindi è quello che faccio.

  • @hehe6976
    @hehe6976 4 месяца назад

    Careful daddy you are impulsive😊

  • @jamescheever7982
    @jamescheever7982 4 месяца назад

    Great use of siri!!

  • @GarrethandPipa
    @GarrethandPipa 4 месяца назад

    How the hell do you get out of bed in the morning my back hurts just watching you

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      The only reason I do is because I simply can't get over how much further away they keep putting the floor every morning ...... yup, they did it again! :-)

  • @drcluj65
    @drcluj65 4 месяца назад

    Curius why not making all this structure from cement?once and ,"forever",is it not cost-effective?

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      That style of building is not really done around here. The engineering involved would make it cost prohibitive for a single family house and It would also be difficult to achieve some of the details that they have planned. The back of the structure looking into the woods is almost entirely glass. I do appreciate you tuning in to watch though:-)

  • @kennethbarber438
    @kennethbarber438 4 месяца назад

    Curious why you work alone. Big job for one man team.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      It will make more sense within the next couple videos, It gets easier:-)

  • @mib20000
    @mib20000 4 месяца назад +1

    is this house in the Amazon rainforest? it's always raining

  • @wthomas5697
    @wthomas5697 4 месяца назад

    How is the material on the top of the I beams secured? I can't tell from the video.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for the question. There are 7/32" holes drilled down each edge of the top flanges every 6" so that's two holes every 6". the plate is then fastened with 2-1/2" simpson sd screws up from underneath. Although 1/4" holes would work I chose to go smaller so that if I need extra ooomph i can use a 1/4" floorboard screw thru the plate from the top down.
      The main floor beams are all w14 category so depending on weight per foot they all have a different height which is then dealt with by using plates of varying thicknesses to bring them all to the 16" height that the engineered floor system is.
      Most of them are right at 14 so 1/2 plywood and a 2x make it up well but the heavier beams at 132# per foot are 14.66 tall so an 1.3" thick psl rim board works perfectly other than the screws sticking thru enough to wreck your raingear :-)
      There is a bunch of footage in part 2 showing some of the drilling and a lot of the fastening. I worked the steel off-site and added the wood then to make them easier to ship as they are much less slick that way.
      Thanks for tuning in!

    • @wthomas5697
      @wthomas5697 4 месяца назад

      Great, thanks. I'm designing a home of my own with some long spans so I'm figuring on a few I beams. I figured I'd have to weld studs on the top flange, which is what I recall doing at some point in the past. I'll have to give your method some consideration and maybe run it by my structural engineer. I'm not sure where you're at but in CA they can be fairly particular about what they sign off on. @@ShredPile

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      @@wthomas5697 No worries, It all depends on the engineer. This is also an extremely restrictive area and over the years i've done it a half dozen different ways. carriage bolts, weld studs, bolt bolts, floor screws, ramset etc. sometimes they don't want the flanges perforated with holes and sometimes it doesn't matter. Better to tell the engineer your preference and let him look at the condition to see if it's ok. This project is under the constant supervision of the engineer so we speak often. Good luck on your project.

    • @wthomas5697
      @wthomas5697 4 месяца назад +1

      Yeah, that's what I was thinking. He might not go for all the holes in the top flange. @@ShredPile

  • @glenlongstreet7
    @glenlongstreet7 4 месяца назад

    I am a bit confused as well. Maybe you skipped a couple of episodes. You took us from the two-container build to something completely different where evidently you had about 50 yards of concrete poured.
    Perhaps you could do a 'fill in' video? I really like to watch this type of construction as I am not able to do this myself anymore. Thanks

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Hi Glen, thanks for tuning back in.
      Although it's poorly written, the header on my channel reads 'Videos about current and ongoing work and personal projects' . The shipping container series is personal project at my house and this modern house series is following my 9-5 (more like my 6 to 6 actually:) If you feel like you missed some episodes you can look on my channel here; ruclips.net/channel/UCGituS1N8z4pkRy9OolfrYw or you can go straight to the first episode here; ruclips.net/video/USG_N8aHizI/видео.html. You might also check to see if you've subscribed as that should bring each new episode right thru your feed when I post them.
      Although I am a new channel and i've only been at it a few month I do have a dozen or so videos up and there is a bridge build series there you might find interesting as well. You can find part one right here; ruclips.net/video/eavB0_s6jZU/видео.html
      Good luck and LMK if you have any more questions.

  • @ZeZeBatata69
    @ZeZeBatata69 4 месяца назад +1

    7:24 This is scary. Specially to someone who knows how the sausage is made in the AI factory..

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      lol, ikr? It was a risk rounding up .002” each time across 20 joists but it’s my hope that some unpredictably throws its books off a little so to speak:-)

    • @ZeZeBatata69
      @ZeZeBatata69 4 месяца назад

      @@ShredPile Not this particular case but throughout many industries, people relying on "AI" to get answers on very specific components of their work and getting very convincing and very wrong answers 2% of the time.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      Interesting and good to know. I'm pretty low tech and I actually knew the answers out 7 bays or so anyways. The possibility of it was a marvel to me though, much like the first time I saw a calculator watch as a child. It also seemed like a little bit of a silent answer to the 'you'd be more efficient with a helper' gang:-)@@ZeZeBatata69

  • @cesaraugustocallecardona6339
    @cesaraugustocallecardona6339 4 месяца назад

    Hola desde Colombia, me podrían decir por qué el trabaja solo? Obviamente es un trabajador de experiencia.

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Ciertamente elijo trabajar solo porque tengo suficiente equipo para hacerlo de forma segura y es más silencioso :-) Llevo más de una década trabajando así y estoy muy acostumbrado. No todos mis trabajos son de este tamaño, pero en realidad no es gran cosa. Agradezco que te hayas tomado el tiempo de ver mi vídeo :-)

    • @GedersonZeferinodaSilva
      @GedersonZeferinodaSilva 2 месяца назад

      ​@@ShredPileHola Jake Saludos desde Brasil, eres muy detallista trabajando, a demás de muy limpio, también me preguntaba "Por que" el trabaja solo, si el cliente tiene tiempo y paciencia, para ti es bueno, así no tienes estrés con personas y tus ganancias son más 😅😅😅😅

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  2 месяца назад +1

      @@GedersonZeferinodaSilva Gracias por tus amables palabras. Sí, elijo trabajar solo porque casi no hay estrés y llevo bastante tiempo haciéndolo de esta manera tampoco hay casi misterios. Tengo otros contratistas disponibles para ayudar o formar equipo en trabajos más importantes si los necesito. ¡Gracias por ver!

    • @GedersonZeferinodaSilva
      @GedersonZeferinodaSilva 2 месяца назад

      @@ShredPilemuchas gracias a ti por brindarnos con tu inteligencia y talento, que D'IOS bendiga tu vida muchísimo.

  • @kristinjohnson3655
    @kristinjohnson3655 4 месяца назад

    There is about a 10-15 year window to work like this. Everybody around you seems lazy after two decades of working this hard. The body sets the stage. Go get em boss!

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад

      I think I follow you... If you mean 10-15 years left then yeah, that's probably accurate. but the two decades in the can already is off by almost 2 decades:-) I've coming right up on closing out my 4th decade of this. It's just too much fun to stop now:-)

  • @Z-Bart
    @Z-Bart 4 месяца назад +1

    Architects. SLDSOB'S

    • @ShredPile
      @ShredPile  4 месяца назад +1

      Lol, nah these guys are great:-) I really enjoy this type of project. Always a challenge and the payoff is a fantastic end result.

    • @Z-Bart
      @Z-Bart 4 месяца назад

      @@ShredPile I'll be here throughout.