Always remember to collect your nails and screws you remove. Tossing them is easy but later on, they can turn into missiles or get embedded in an animals foot. It is way easier to have a junk pouch than to pick them off the ground.
Your so luck to have your dad there to work with you and kinda lead you. I’ve been watching you since day 1 and I definitely enjoyed you cleaning around the spring. It’ll be great to have water so close by. Your definitely a hard worker. Can’t wait until you start on the inside. Keep going with the good job. Thanks Dad.
Be thankful for all the time that you get with your dad between your last video and this one I have lost my father cherish your time take the heart what he teaches you
I'M SO HAPPY YOU'RE BACK! I binged the process so far about 3 months ago and a few weeks back started getting worried about you since you hadn't updated since last year. I understand it was most likely due to school and life complexities, in just happy you're back 💜💜
Thanks Matt, it’s been a journey! I’m not sure if I can physically handle doing framing all the time, although your POV videos do make it look like a ton of fun! I’d love to get together and learn some tricks from the pro 😎
@@DannerCronise Anytime you’re in the area! If I find my way out your way I’ll definitely be in touch. Going to any building shows? I’d love to go grab a bite with you guys!
Just found you, looks like I’ll stay to see the fruition of your dream. I was drawn in by the beautiful blue barn. I know I would try to use a piece of that old barn wood somewhere as an accent to where this building came from.
Be careful. Old hickory logs will snatch the blade off a bandsaw and cause a circle saw to dive horribly. Hickory is best cut fresh off the stump, within a week or so
Looking good. Please make sure you take the time to play while you're out of school this summer! The project can wait. You need the rest and recharge. Sage is getting so big and is really grown into the supervisor role. He's into everything!
Been watching sets the start. It's looking really good so far. Can't wait to see more videos soon. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friend. Keep making. God bless.
You should use zip tape to seal the joints which will help with wind blowing in and will make it harder for water to also get in. Then you can wrap the house wrap around the shed.
House wrap doesn't hold up well in the sun. It needs to be covered pretty quickly. You might use felt (we normally use 30# but you can use 15# for the sides) instead, if it's going to be a while before you get your siding installed.
Cool idea using trees from your property for siding. However, after milling the lumber it will need to be dried before you can use it. If I may suggest, contact Out of he Woods sawmill up near Knoxville and see if he would trade out an equivalent amount of dried poplar in exchange for your logs.
We can put poplar up green. We’ll do board and batten and that will take care of the shrinkage. We think there’s enough 2x6 from the old lean-to shed roofs to build a solar kiln. We should be able to dry some of the other wood in under 30days for interior wood. All the barns around here put up polar green.
Kind of strange not having any windows on such a large expansive area - but I know you said you would be putting 2 upstairs, ready to see the next episode.
We did. Spiral would get into the bathroom space down stairs to meet headroom requirement at top and we are using the space under the stairs for utilities and the bath - we poured that slab with plumbing 20 years ago so I guess the location was kind of “set in concrete.” Thank you!
@@MrZZeroG decisions decisions... Somethings are meant to be.... Great build & bond between father & Son... Would like to hear a conversation between you guys... you know father & son talking about what theyre planning to do in the video...
@@speliotis yes. We will have a lot more opportunities as we move inside to finish floors, walls, ceilings, cabinets, bathroom, etc… we are still trying to figure out the best option for sawmill. We have a lot of wood to cut and mill!
This is completely backwards, but the guide lines on the OSB should be inside. You want the smooth side out for the most weather protection. (supposedly) It's how I've always done it, at least. Why they don't put the guides on both sides, I have no idea.
Yes. Well apparently the rough side goes out for traction on roof decking and that’s why the nailing guides are on the “up” side. Either way, if you’ve seen osb in the wild it doesn’t do well without protection and we are putting wrap and of course the siding. Probably doesn’t matter much in the long run. Just wait until we cut our windows out - I’m betting there will be a lot of differing opinion on THAT. thanks for watching and commenting! …that is of course assuming that we can actually buy and have windows delivered. Apparently lead times are awful.
@@MrZZeroG Don't I know it. Took months to get my windows. Cutting the Tyvek for the windows was a debate: do you cut an I or a V for the flaps to wrap inside? How should we put on the sill seal and window seal tapes? But I get differing info on OSB: one side saying the smooth side has more resin and better weatherproofing, the other side saying the whole thing is made of resin so it doesn't matter. I know that my OSB has survived 2 years without Tyvek, just needed to seal the edges with some tar. But I'm also one of those "safety? That's my job, not theirs" kinda guys so I put smooth side up for my roof.
Is the plan to live and work from the tiny house? My company is hiring (more ME degrees but we have aero guys) and I know a guy or two who have left for engineering jobs down that way (one at Boeing). If remote work is the plan, make sure you get good high speed internet...think about applying for starlink early if cable/fiber is not available.
@@MrZZeroG I don't think you can beat the speed of fiber right now. Might be worth trenching in a wire or atleast conduit for it in the future. The downside is I don't think a homeowner can really do anything themselves as far as installing it, it takes high end equipment to tap into and splice.
@@EngineersHomestead yes. The area got the fiber grant and when we run a temp pole and the primary utilities a few hundred feet, it will be about 100 ft from the shed. We still are shooting for off grid- but to preserve the ability to bring power in later we need to get the inspection during construction. It will probably end up serving our pole barn/workshop long term, but will be convenient during construction. Generators are burning through gas right now.
@@MrZZeroG when I quoted to power a shop, the local utility would run a new service about 200' from the pole/transformer before I would have to put in a pad and transformer base (= $$$)
Probably doesn’t. But we built it like any typical wall. Perhaps it was necessary for code. Anyone else have thoughts here? I joke the upstairs wall is now much more rigid and floor has less shake.
Pointless. You already had 2 GOOD WINDOWS. FREE WINDOWS. USE THEM IN SAME SPOT. Don't Waste Money on brand new windows when you can just reuse the old ones still. Its Dumb and Complete Waste of Money.
They are 20 year old shed-grade windows - clouded and low insulation. The view is worth the expense and better windows will pay for themselves in energy saved. We aren’t tossing them, will use them in another shed-structure.
It's so refreshing to see a young man thinking about the land and his future with the land.
Bays of Hail.. such an honest and funny misspeak.
Sage is the best little gardener
Always remember to collect your nails and screws you remove. Tossing them is easy but later on, they can turn into missiles or get embedded in an animals foot. It is way easier to have a junk pouch than to pick them off the ground.
We run magnets every day… tractor tires are our biggest issue.
Nice touch with the nailgun to the beat! 😉
bays of hail
Your so luck to have your dad there to work with you and kinda lead you. I’ve been watching you since day 1 and I definitely enjoyed you cleaning around the spring. It’ll be great to have water so close by. Your definitely a hard worker. Can’t wait until you start on the inside. Keep going with the good job. Thanks Dad.
Be thankful for all the time that you get with your dad between your last video and this one I have lost my father cherish your time take the heart what he teaches you
Our condolences to you and your family. Thank you for being part of this adventure with us.
I like the attention to detail in how your music lines up with your video
Good Morning 🌄. You have learned so much from your dad. Keep up the great work.
Glad you're taking your time and considering the view!
Love how the cat helped in the garden!!!
I'M SO HAPPY YOU'RE BACK! I binged the process so far about 3 months ago and a few weeks back started getting worried about you since you hadn't updated since last year. I understand it was most likely due to school and life complexities, in just happy you're back 💜💜
You know, you have that concrete patio in front of the house. I think I'd have made a deck upstairs above it so you could walk out.
We just talked about it when Danner was laying out the desk. We will have an amazing deck on the back.
Its really nice all the time you and your dad get to spend together
I have been watching you from the beginning. I can't wait till the final transformation. Keep doing what you are doing I love it
Was getting worried, saw no updates in a while and thought something happened. Glad this project is still going strong!
Same, I missed out on 5 videos because RUclips was being youtube and not notifying.
I had to double down on school for semester but we're back for the summer! :)
It's coming along hopefully another video soon
Tiny Home is looking great. Keep up the great work. Hooyah
Love to see you and your Pops working together! Place is looking great. The bays of hail look really nice! :)
If you find yourself in California or Oregon and want a career path in construction, we'd love to have you! Keep at it, you're a smart kid.
Thanks Matt, it’s been a journey! I’m not sure if I can physically handle doing framing all the time, although your POV videos do make it look like a ton of fun! I’d love to get together and learn some tricks from the pro 😎
@@DannerCronise Anytime you’re in the area! If I find my way out your way I’ll definitely be in touch.
Going to any building shows? I’d love to go grab a bite with you guys!
These skills will serve you and serve others your whole life. Good seeing young people take pride in their hard work. 🤘🏼
You should use the liquid applied house wrap
Tell us more! Paint? 😂 really interested. Post a link.
You kitty has gotten so big?nice to saw it helping with the digging?😀
Y'all are bringing it all together.
Just found you, looks like I’ll stay to see the fruition of your dream. I was drawn in by the beautiful blue barn. I know I would try to use a piece of that old barn wood somewhere as an accent to where this building came from.
So happy you are back making videos...!
Thank you
Good job !
I think with the windows close together like that you're going to have a much better view.
Coming along nicely
Be careful. Old hickory logs will snatch the blade off a bandsaw and cause a circle saw to dive horribly. Hickory is best cut fresh off the stump, within a week or so
Looking good. Please make sure you take the time to play while you're out of school this summer! The project can wait. You need the rest and recharge. Sage is getting so big and is really grown into the supervisor role. He's into everything!
Thank goodness you’re back. I can’t wait to see more updates
Been watching sets the start. It's looking really good so far. Can't wait to see more videos soon. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friend. Keep making. God bless.
Great to see you back. Your skills are improving each time you do a project on here. Looking great. Thanks till next time.
Bays of hay
Good job..
Bays of hail!
That was perfect leaving that in. We've all been there, done that.
Great job man 👏 hope it turns out amazing !!! Keep it up!
Glad to see the cat carrying his weight in the garden. Are you going to install a mini split for cooling?
Good stuff Danner!
You should use zip tape to seal the joints which will help with wind blowing in and will make it harder for water to also get in. Then you can wrap the house wrap around the shed.
Love your video man and I can't wait for the next one
The Windows XP startup sound just made this the greatest video on RUclips lol.
Also, bays of hail… I doubt anyone noticed.
Woo hoo you’re back!!
House wrap doesn't hold up well in the sun. It needs to be covered pretty quickly. You might use felt (we normally use 30# but you can use 15# for the sides)
instead, if it's going to be a while before you get your siding installed.
Great work guys
Please protect your play wood may be a while before you get it sided enjoy watching and great work keep the videos coming
Love your work 👍
This is so cool! hoping to make my own tiny house one day soon
bays of hail.
hails of bay
@@DannerCronise of bay hail
Cool :)
Awesome video and your Home is Looking Awesome too! :) :)
Cool idea using trees from your property for siding. However, after milling the lumber it will need to be dried before you can use it. If I may suggest, contact Out of he Woods sawmill up near Knoxville and see if he would trade out an equivalent amount of dried poplar in exchange for your logs.
We can put poplar up green. We’ll do board and batten and that will take care of the shrinkage. We think there’s enough 2x6 from the old lean-to shed roofs to build a solar kiln. We should be able to dry some of the other wood in under 30days for interior wood. All the barns around here put up polar green.
@@MrZZeroG Thanks for the reply, see, you learn something new everyday. Will you have video of your kiln build?
A cool thing for the property might be a pond
Awesome job!
Kind of strange not having any windows on such a large expansive area - but I know you said you would be putting 2 upstairs, ready to see the next episode.
There are 12 windows. 4 on the front center (2 up, 2 down), 6 in the kitchen (5 around the table and one over sink), and 2nd upstairs back.
It looks wonderful. I’m not sure you’re going to be able to call it a tiny house though, 🤗 maybe a small house…🐝❤️🤗
Yes. It seems to have feature and square footage creep. 😬
@@MrZZeroG lol!! Welcome to home ownership!!🐝❤️🤗
If you make merch I'll buy it.
I love it. Are you going to put any windows in the front?
Yes. They aren’t cut out yet. Look at the framing for first/second floor. There are 12 windows total (3x3).
You stole the character from the shed🥺🥺
Just Curious: Did you & your dad ever consider moving the stairs to a different location? or using a spiral staircase?
We did. Spiral would get into the bathroom space down stairs to meet headroom requirement at top and we are using the space under the stairs for utilities and the bath - we poured that slab with plumbing 20 years ago so I guess the location was kind of “set in concrete.” Thank you!
@@MrZZeroG decisions decisions... Somethings are meant to be.... Great build & bond between father & Son... Would like to hear a conversation between you guys... you know father & son talking about what theyre planning to do in the video...
@@speliotis we’ve talked about that…. :) one day!
@@MrZZeroG I felt that would really be special & I noticed a lot of comments sharing the same sentiment....
@@speliotis yes. We will have a lot more opportunities as we move inside to finish floors, walls, ceilings, cabinets, bathroom, etc… we are still trying to figure out the best option for sawmill. We have a lot of wood to cut and mill!
How are you keeping the rain from hitting the concrete pad out front and soaking the will and wood?
We have a pretty aggressive pitch on it and there will be a shed roof over the porch soon. Thanks for watching!
This is completely backwards, but the guide lines on the OSB should be inside. You want the smooth side out for the most weather protection. (supposedly) It's how I've always done it, at least. Why they don't put the guides on both sides, I have no idea.
Yes. Well apparently the rough side goes out for traction on roof decking and that’s why the nailing guides are on the “up” side. Either way, if you’ve seen osb in the wild it doesn’t do well without protection and we are putting wrap and of course the siding. Probably doesn’t matter much in the long run. Just wait until we cut our windows out - I’m betting there will be a lot of differing opinion on THAT. thanks for watching and commenting!
…that is of course assuming that we can actually buy and have windows delivered. Apparently lead times are awful.
@@MrZZeroG Don't I know it. Took months to get my windows. Cutting the Tyvek for the windows was a debate: do you cut an I or a V for the flaps to wrap inside? How should we put on the sill seal and window seal tapes? But I get differing info on OSB: one side saying the smooth side has more resin and better weatherproofing, the other side saying the whole thing is made of resin so it doesn't matter. I know that my OSB has survived 2 years without Tyvek, just needed to seal the edges with some tar. But I'm also one of those "safety? That's my job, not theirs" kinda guys so I put smooth side up for my roof.
how much percent of the original shed are left? it looks like everything was replaced except the bare frame/shape
I've missed something, the barn door is missing????
Front door and windows will be added later.
Are you still going to make a pitch off the front upstairs?
Yes!!!
@@MrZZeroG I ment porch lol glad you understood.
You did appear to be much more confident up there on the ladder doing things.
I have found falling from a ladder no matter how high it is, it only hurts once
@@kred3208 falling from a ladder is completely painless. The landing however, not so much. 😏
👋😎👍
Summer doesn't start until june 21st.........
Lol. True. Let’s call it high-humidity oppressive heat late-spring. :)
@@MrZZeroG or , ahem , a lovely summer day.........
Is the plan to live and work from the tiny house? My company is hiring (more ME degrees but we have aero guys) and I know a guy or two who have left for engineering jobs down that way (one at Boeing). If remote work is the plan, make sure you get good high speed internet...think about applying for starlink early if cable/fiber is not available.
We have fiber on the pole in front of our property. When we get closer we will probably get starlink…
@@MrZZeroG I don't think you can beat the speed of fiber right now. Might be worth trenching in a wire or atleast conduit for it in the future. The downside is I don't think a homeowner can really do anything themselves as far as installing it, it takes high end equipment to tap into and splice.
@@EngineersHomestead yes. The area got the fiber grant and when we run a temp pole and the primary utilities a few hundred feet, it will be about 100 ft from the shed. We still are shooting for off grid- but to preserve the ability to bring power in later we need to get the inspection during construction. It will probably end up serving our pole barn/workshop long term, but will be convenient during construction. Generators are burning through gas right now.
@@MrZZeroG when I quoted to power a shop, the local utility would run a new service about 200' from the pole/transformer before I would have to put in a pad and transformer base (= $$$)
@@EngineersHomestead yes. They are running primary 275 ft (7.2kv) and then stepping down to 4/0 for last 100 underground. $$
Where is the main door going to be at?
It’s in the middle section, on the right side. If you watch the framing downstairs video (~3 or so ago) you’ll see it and the two windows downstairs.
#BaysOfHail
I can't get over how hot this dude keeps getting!
Why does it need such a big head above the windows it’s not structural
Probably doesn’t. But we built it like any typical wall. Perhaps it was necessary for code. Anyone else have thoughts here? I joke the upstairs wall is now much more rigid and floor has less shake.
the first 40 seconds were normal. after that you were superseded by the cat. less talk, more cat. nuff said.
Really? Home Depot shed? Try "Giving New Life to Our 20-Year Old Abandoned Shed We Built with Materials from Home Depot."
Well we got most of that stuff from Marvins.
Pointless. You already had 2 GOOD WINDOWS. FREE WINDOWS. USE THEM IN SAME SPOT. Don't Waste Money on brand new windows when you can just reuse the old ones still. Its Dumb and Complete Waste of Money.
They are 20 year old shed-grade windows - clouded and low insulation. The view is worth the expense and better windows will pay for themselves in energy saved. We aren’t tossing them, will use them in another shed-structure.
No Windows is better then getting bigger windows.@@MrZZeroG
bays of hail