With Ryan's ruclips.net/user/postUgkxy_pn55PK60wAV3X_C_RoLS_67mNonoCE plan I was like one taken by the hand and led step by step from start to finish. Thank you very much Ryan!
Thankyou for everything, just getting into carpentry and your videos mean everything to me, it is just so well thought out and well explained. Keep it up
I just found you today for the first time , no idea why RUclips took this long to recommend you. I have I my watched a few so far but your a good builder, I like your attention to details for such simple buildings . You have invested in the right equipment to really help you in the types of buildings you do. No waiting for a crane to show up , you have that solution on-site you have a well thought out bussiness it seems, and somehow found some good people to work for you, they have become very hard to find in my area , young people have no interest in construction any more.
A true craftsman is OCD 9 out of ten times...you take the crown brother. Love watching, stay safe and thanks for the vids. Edit, almost forgot to mention...I am watching you for the first time this week because I am turning my detached 1940 garage to a winterproof machine shop. I am starting with professionally installed closed foam insulation from a great local company here in western NY and then I'm doing the rest myself. On a side note... I am a John Saunders student from 2016 and just happened to be machining partners with Jimmy Diresta that very week of CNC training. I did not know who Jimmy was at the time. It took the second night at the hotel after class that I looked online and almost shit how many followers he had. Great class though and I'm in the video with Jimmy that John put up so that's kinda cool too. The reason I'm finishing my garage is so I can afford to finance a second CNC vs taking out too much for a new pole building I had quoted for me last week. So thanks for the great help just by providing knowledge just the same way John and Jimmy inspired me to grow my business.
I had a Bostitch framer do the same thing and I got one in the upper thigh. I learned a valuable lesson about where the gun was pointed when I put the air hose on, and yes this one was sent in for repairs.
I'm so happy I found your page. I love construction work and had my own small contracting business years ago. Unfortunately the body can't do it anymore as I am now 71 years old. But I do love watching you and your explanations of everything keep them coming. I look forward to more videos of the man cave.
Really happy to see the quality control and attention to detail you employ. That said, I was surprised the footers seem to be so far off from where the brackets ultimately went, some even sitting very close to the edge.
I’m building a 30’x40’ post frame with 14’ walls. My plans were to add a 12’ lean to down the 40’ side. Unfortunately like your problem, that put me over the allowed 1500sqft. I ended up getting a permit for the 30x40. Once I complete that I will resubmit for a new permit for the lean to. I’ve already told the building inspector that I’m not going to finish the 40’ wall in the area where my lean to mono truss is going to sit.
You should package up the jumbo nailer and send it off to the manufacture and a link to the video. Nail guns should never pop off like that at any time. That will help research for safer nailers. I love your videos and the straight walls too.
You should consider laser marking the sono-tube with the laser before pouring. Mark the spot through the tube with a couple two inch nails, so you can pour all piers level/place the brackets level, and go to town with your framing. Like you do!!
Hahaha, so I'm watching this sitting on the couch with my French Mastiff... As soon as you said "people say it bothers their dogs". This beast wakes up from a dead sleep to bark and try to figure out what the hell he just heard! 😂
Not easy to wake a sleeping Mastiff !! I had a Boerboel years ago that could snore through a cyclone but would jump up at the sound of my daughter coming home from school....and I still miss the big ugly bugger too....the dog that is , not the daughter 😊
Thanks for the heads-up on the Festool. I bought their track and mitre saws when they first came out and have always been impressed by them. It always seemed their battery technology was lagging some years behind the competition however.
I prefer to use concrete blocks for batter boards, 1200kg, only thing moving them are a exevator and frost, so not suitable for for elevation marks set by the surveyer, long term.. Moving it to the first poured footing/wall is first priority when it can be done. Love watching your videos, always learning something new🙂
When you seldomly use a pneumatic nailer store it upside down with the contact safety facing up, this allows the residue pneumatic tool oil to flow to the firing valve in the cap.
I can tell you're a precisionist, and a perfectionist, much like myself. My folks and I have put up a 30x60 pole barn to use for a farm shop that's about 3" out of square. Not the end of the world, but it bugs me knowing that when I go to put tin on the sides, I'm gonna have to do a lot of "fudging" to bring out the DiResta in it (if it looks straight, it is straight).
This building is form follows function. Laughed when you said "Bothers dogs" and a dog barks in seeming agreement. LOL Great the homeowner willing to lend a hand.
I like how for your post buildings you use concrete footings with the metal tie brackets to attach the posts. Around here, builders just auger a hole, drop in the post and fill it in, no concrete and other than the post being a standard treated post, nothing else is done to prevent rot. I'm curious how these buildings are going to hold up in 50-60 years
To be honest, I still have to watch the video. But I just like the fact I'm the first to comment and give you a thumbs up. And since I like all your videos until now, I feel I can honestly do this :-)
If your compressor has a dry line. You must oil your air tools daily. One drop down the air hole. If you didn’t oil the nailer after lying for a while, probably dried out.
have you ever considered using ratchet binders instead of the snap binders..... could possibly give you a finer adjustment vs only a link in the chain. Appreciate the videos!!!!
Great video! In italy we make buildings in a complete different way, so someone can explain me why use nails and not screws? Also, add some glue to all these joint and between the single pieces that make the posts could make the structure stronger or it doesn't make difference?
The zoning board in that local must be a bunch of snowflakes. Too big REALLY 🤔 If possible best to avoid developments with building restrictions. Nice video and appreciate the fine professional craftsmanship you demonstrate. Love the Kubota 🍊 SVL 90 great machine.
Can you describe how install the internal perlins in the interior corner? I understand the extra 2x6 to make the end wall flush but what about the other wall? What do you nail those perlins to? I am building a 40x80 myself am watching the hell out of you videos!! Keep going they’re awesome
Hey I Love watching your videos. They always inspires me to be better at my work. I'm always looking for ways to be more proficient, have you looked into using battery powered guns so that you don't have to pull out a hose or air compressor every time I noticed a few RUclipsrs started using batteries. 2018 going on 2019 battery powered equipment has come a long ways. I know that you need a lot more power to get your nails through the wood I don't know if there's anything out there but would be a lot easier for you.
Bigpete9000 funny story... that’s guys paperwork from the realtor was missing the bylaws page and he built it not knowing.... now they are trying to figure out what to do... it even was supposed to have brick to match his house???
Can't agree with you on left hand blade powersaws ie bloody awkward, and am puzzled why you need that whopping great nailer to nail pine,my 20 year old Bostich N80 does it easy?
I’ve got a few questions for you! When you talk about finding “grade”, are you talking about the dirt or the concrete? And how exactly do you find grade? Also when you order your columns, say for a 12’ wall, do you order a 12’ column or do you go up to the next size to compensate for any of the column below the concrete floor and the part that is supporting the sides of the roof truss. I guess I’m curious if a 12’ column is actually 12’ or if it is longer to make up for these issues. Thanks!
How do you select your Grade? Do you simple look for the lowest point of the property you want your building to sit on like if you had a slight slope and such?
The sound woke up my cat. Also, in the past, I have gotten a head ache when that thing goes off constantly. Thanks for turning it down but I still have to mute from time to time.
Good thing you boys from North Illinois have good gun safety like us in Alberta Canada, Greg almost took a few jumbo nails!! Haha keep up the good work guys, love the vids!!
So when you are measuring for grade the length you write on the bracket is the +/- dimension you’re going to take into account for how long the post is going to be from the bottom of the bracket to the first girt?
Kyle oil your guns everyday,it stop that from happening too,it gets stuck see moisture,dirt and sawdust..oil your guns everyday and more if used in cold weather too..
Turn ur Jumbo Nail Gun upside down & Put a few drops of 3 in 1 oil in the air plug in hole & let it drop down into the gun. Do this frequently as ur using it, Maybe once a week or once every 3 weeks. This will lubricate the seals & also lube the piston driver. The 3 in 1 oil will keep ur seals from freezing up. They freeze because the moisture that the airline & compressor pushes into the gun. 3 drops of oil at a time is all you need, just once every week -three weeks depending on how much U are using it. If ur using it alot, oil it once a week, if ur not then every 3 weeks.
Next time you plug the air hose onto the nail gun just make sure there are not any nails in the gun first ! :-) Haven't seen you guys since you finished April's shop .... You all do great work ! I used to work on quite a few construction sites over the years and really enjoy watching anything take shape from a pile of wood to a beautiful building or any project really !
Sam I Am back in the 50s the whole house WAS A MANCAVE, because afterall it is always the man who pays for it, so it only makes sense to being the man who imposes his preference over the female, and not the other way around as it happens since the 60
Why are you using the top of the yellow box on the grade stick to get your grade when you should be reading at the black bar across the middle of the window in that yellow box? You're marking you grade 2" higher then it actually is. Are the post suppose to be 2" above grade?
Thought that each jog of the framing and foundation cost $$$, that a 20x20 cheaper vs 10x10 with 8x8 add on? Thats why rectangular ranch houses/shoeboxes were built - quick, cheap, easy.
That Festool costs a pretty penny. A speed square and shimmed guard negate that penny. Maybe oiling that minster framing gun before use will stop blowby.
Love watching the channel, very interesting and fun to watch, with lots of info, just a quick question though. Why not set the brackets to grade with the level while setting them in the concrete compared to going back and measuring later?
Ron LaMarre we basically do but even with the most precise setting... concrete can move during the cure... best to recheck before the build again... you only get one chance to do it right
Any problems with osha showing up at job sites? I set steel for residential company and fear for fines such as not having safety harness when on open foundation let alone climbing14 feet in the air
You may be the BEST "how to" construction RUclips guy out here. No cap !!!!
Wow thanks that means something
With Ryan's ruclips.net/user/postUgkxy_pn55PK60wAV3X_C_RoLS_67mNonoCE plan I was like one taken by the hand and led step by step from start to finish. Thank you very much Ryan!
You just go around RUclips, make a generic comment to get some thumbs up, then edit with your spam?
It's fascinating how you use natural resources so effectively
I built barns for a couple of years it’s really nice to see it done a different way! There’s a lot of cool new stuff I’m learning from your videos!!
Another PREMIUM quality masterpiece by the rockstars at R&R!!! None better!!!
Thankyou for everything, just getting into carpentry and your videos mean everything to me, it is just so well thought out and well explained. Keep it up
I just found you today for the first time , no idea why RUclips took this long to recommend you. I have I my watched a few so far but your a good builder, I like your attention to details for such simple buildings . You have invested in the right equipment to really help you in the types of buildings you do. No waiting for a crane to show up , you have that solution on-site you have a well thought out bussiness it seems, and somehow found some good people to work for you, they have become very hard to find in my area , young people have no interest in construction any more.
A true craftsman is OCD 9 out of ten times...you take the crown brother. Love watching, stay safe and thanks for the vids. Edit, almost forgot to mention...I am watching you for the first time this week because I am turning my detached 1940 garage to a winterproof machine shop. I am starting with professionally installed closed foam insulation from a great local company here in western NY and then I'm doing the rest myself. On a side note... I am a John Saunders student from 2016 and just happened to be machining partners with Jimmy Diresta that very week of CNC training. I did not know who Jimmy was at the time. It took the second night at the hotel after class that I looked online and almost shit how many followers he had. Great class though and I'm in the video with Jimmy that John put up so that's kinda cool too. The reason I'm finishing my garage is so I can afford to finance a second CNC vs taking out too much for a new pole building I had quoted for me last week. So thanks for the great help just by providing knowledge just the same way John and Jimmy inspired me to grow my business.
Awesome to hear that story
I had a Bostitch framer do the same thing and I got one in the upper thigh. I learned a valuable lesson about where the gun was pointed when I put the air hose on, and yes this one was sent in for repairs.
I'm so happy I found your page. I love construction work and had my own small contracting business years ago. Unfortunately the body can't do it anymore as I am now 71 years old. But I do love watching you and your explanations of everything keep them coming. I look forward to more videos of the man cave.
Really happy to see the quality control and attention to detail you employ. That said, I was surprised the footers seem to be so far off from where the brackets ultimately went, some even sitting very close to the edge.
I’m building a 30’x40’ post frame with 14’ walls. My plans were to add a 12’ lean to down the 40’ side. Unfortunately like your problem, that put me over the allowed 1500sqft. I ended up getting a permit for the 30x40. Once I complete that I will resubmit for a new permit for the lean to. I’ve already told the building inspector that I’m not going to finish the 40’ wall in the area where my lean to mono truss is going to sit.
This team has the right tools for the job. Love the efficiency!
I have done a man cave and its brilliant, Tiled floor and underfloor heating.
I use the grade stick in excavation. Just use paint mark down my inches on the ground before I cut. Nice guide.
Your attention to detail is amazing.
wow, good tip on that saw to make perfect joints
You, sir, are taking pole barn building to the next level.
Another great series! Thanks, Kyle and Team! The word is coplanar: on or sharing the same plane.
You should package up the jumbo nailer and send it off to the manufacture and a link to the video. Nail guns should never pop off like that at any time. That will help research for safer nailers. I love your videos and the straight walls too.
Man you do a great job explaining the reasons for what you do so well. You are a credit to your profession.
You should consider laser marking the sono-tube with the laser before pouring. Mark the spot through the tube with a couple two inch nails, so you can pour all piers level/place the brackets level, and go to town with your framing. Like you do!!
Hahaha, so I'm watching this sitting on the couch with my French Mastiff... As soon as you said "people say it bothers their dogs". This beast wakes up from a dead sleep to bark and try to figure out what the hell he just heard! 😂
Not easy to wake a sleeping Mastiff !!
I had a Boerboel years ago that could snore through a cyclone but would jump up at the sound of my daughter coming home from school....and I still miss the big ugly bugger too....the dog that is , not the daughter 😊
As he said that, wife’s Boston started shaking like a bowl of jello
Thanks for the heads-up on the Festool. I bought their track and mitre saws when they first came out and have always been impressed by them. It always seemed their battery technology was lagging some years behind the competition however.
when u start talking about accuracy and an r&b love song starts playing in the background..... always happens to me too
Takes out the annoying sound to keep dogs from being bothered and adds a loud bark. hahaha I love it. :)
Your witty humor is great.
I prefer to use concrete blocks for batter boards, 1200kg, only thing moving them are a exevator and frost, so not suitable for for elevation marks set by the surveyer, long term.. Moving it to the first poured footing/wall is first priority when it can be done. Love watching your videos, always learning something new🙂
When you seldomly use a pneumatic nailer store it upside down with the contact safety facing up, this allows the residue pneumatic tool oil to flow to the firing valve in the cap.
These videos are awesome! Very detailed and informative. Also, the music got better at the end.
Perfect team work👍👏👏👏👏👏
Setting that lvl into the post was a beautiful thing.
I'm running out of positive adjectives to praise your work!
Cheers from Tokyo!
You've got to love the Gov being able to tell you what you can and can't build on your own property.
You don’t own the property surrounding you. Move to where there are no neighbors. “Gov” is just people. Grow up.
looking forward to see the metal roof valley and how you do it!
never mind, it doesn't look like there will be a valley
No valley but a couple other details
I have no need for a jumbo nailer, but I sure want to get one. Great video.
I can tell you're a precisionist, and a perfectionist, much like myself. My folks and I have put up a 30x60 pole barn to use for a farm shop that's about 3" out of square. Not the end of the world, but it bugs me knowing that when I go to put tin on the sides, I'm gonna have to do a lot of "fudging" to bring out the DiResta in it (if it looks straight, it is straight).
Thanks brother, you doing the great job, I learn a lot from your video, big thanks brother.
Nice work.. Plumb and square. gotta love it..
Very excited for this series.
Love the hat man! Finally bought, and received mine a couple days ago! Now I can rep RR when I work!
Aaron Widder you are the man !!!
This building is form follows function.
Laughed when you said "Bothers dogs" and a dog barks in seeming agreement. LOL
Great the homeowner willing to lend a hand.
I absolutely love these build videos. You the man. And I told you before. Keep Greg away from the radio dial.
I liked all your Toys they make your much easy!
excellent video with great details. watched the first one to square it up, both great videos. keep em coming
I like how for your post buildings you use concrete footings with the metal tie brackets to attach the posts. Around here, builders just auger a hole, drop in the post and fill it in, no concrete and other than the post being a standard treated post, nothing else is done to prevent rot. I'm curious how these buildings are going to hold up in 50-60 years
Another great series, thanks Kyle. I like the detailed explanation.
38 years working with pneumatic tools taught me one valuable lesson. Oil your tools regularly.
John Nelson I do every time we use them... every time.
To be honest, I still have to watch the video. But I just like the fact I'm the first to comment and give you a thumbs up. And since I like all your videos until now, I feel I can honestly do this :-)
TheHuizenre haha that’s awesome man much love and respect!! Thank you
Great video! You should do a video that goes really in depth about how you find your grade and stuff and using your lasers
Me dieron ganas de trabajar con ustedes... muy buen trabajo :)
If your compressor has a dry line. You must oil your air tools daily. One drop down the air hole. If you didn’t oil the nailer after lying for a while, probably dried out.
have you ever considered using ratchet binders instead of the snap binders..... could possibly give you a finer adjustment vs only a link in the chain.
Appreciate the videos!!!!
Nice touch with the dog bark 😂🤣😂
Awesome workmanship!
Great video! In italy we make buildings in a complete different way, so someone can explain me why use nails and not screws? Also, add some glue to all these joint and between the single pieces that make the posts could make the structure stronger or it doesn't make difference?
Man.. That elevation rod is insanely cool. I didn't actually know those existed.
The zoning board in that local must be a bunch of snowflakes. Too big REALLY 🤔 If possible best to avoid developments with building restrictions. Nice video and appreciate the fine professional craftsmanship you demonstrate. Love the Kubota 🍊 SVL 90 great machine.
Absolutely love the kubota
The HKC is great for cutting stair stringers
You guys are awesome! Keep up the great work!
As always great video teaching me a lot thank you so much have a blessed day
"Why didn't you bring the scissor lift" as you record and laugh at him. Hahahaha. Love it.
Adam Olson I have no clue why he climbed up there... he wanted to show off it’s called karma
I see you have a pair of iso tunes. I bought a pair about a month ago. They are really good headphones.
14:22 that's a song by " Jeremih " he is a Rap/R&B artist. Great job on the video!!!
That's 30 minutes from my house where you are building and I see you all the time in my local menards where I work
Where in northern Illinois?
Creeper...
"Spot On" Good English Expression!!!
Good insight, really enjoy the videos. Keep them coming.
Can you describe how install the internal perlins in the interior corner? I understand the extra 2x6 to make the end wall flush but what about the other wall? What do you nail those perlins to?
I am building a 40x80 myself am watching the hell out of you videos!! Keep going they’re awesome
Hey I Love watching your videos. They always inspires me to be better at my work. I'm always looking for ways to be more proficient, have you looked into using battery powered guns so that you don't have to pull out a hose or air compressor every time I noticed a few RUclipsrs started using batteries. 2018 going on 2019 battery powered equipment has come a long ways. I know that you need a lot more power to get your nails through the wood I don't know if there's anything out there but would be a lot easier for you.
HKC versus just having a chop saw with you? I am assuming less material handling which is always more efficient.
2:33 it must be weird zoning when there is a giant garage on the property across the street and you have to build small on this job
I was thinking the same thing...
Bigpete9000 funny story... that’s guys paperwork from the realtor was missing the bylaws page and he built it not knowing.... now they are trying to figure out what to do... it even was supposed to have brick to match his house???
RR Buildings that sucks
@@RRBuildings holy crap what s headache
DJ Greg strikes again with that R&B
Great video!! How long have you and Greg been “together.” You two are a dynamic duo.
Matt Hilliker 🤦🏼♂️
Can't agree with you on left hand blade powersaws ie bloody awkward, and am puzzled why you need that whopping great nailer to nail pine,my 20 year old Bostich N80 does it easy?
Because an N80 doesn’t shoot 4” ringshanks
RR Buildings Were you using 4" ring shanks in the video?
I’ve got a few questions for you! When you talk about finding “grade”, are you talking about the dirt or the concrete? And how exactly do you find grade? Also when you order your columns, say for a 12’ wall, do you order a 12’ column or do you go up to the next size to compensate for any of the column below the concrete floor and the part that is supporting the sides of the roof truss. I guess I’m curious if a 12’ column is actually 12’ or if it is longer to make up for these issues. Thanks!
Just realized how close you are to Peoria! Small world.
Have you ever reviewed the makita rear handle saw? Also paused to check out that speed square. Pretty sweet.
How do you select your Grade? Do you simple look for the lowest point of the property you want your building to sit on like if you had a slight slope and such?
By laws & ordinances = a pain in the butt. Also... "Why didn't you bring a scissor lift?" Lmao.
The sound woke up my cat. Also, in the past, I have gotten a head ache when that thing goes off constantly. Thanks for turning it down but I still have to mute from time to time.
Good thing you boys from North Illinois have good gun safety like us in Alberta Canada, Greg almost took a few jumbo nails!! Haha keep up the good work guys, love the vids!!
So when you are measuring for grade the length you write on the bracket is the +/- dimension you’re going to take into account for how long the post is going to be from the bottom of the bracket to the first girt?
Adrien Baker yes
Kyle oil your guns everyday,it stop that from happening too,it gets stuck see moisture,dirt and sawdust..oil your guns everyday and more if used in cold weather too..
I always oil everytime we use it and drain air tanks everyday
Turn ur Jumbo Nail Gun upside down & Put a few drops of 3 in 1 oil in the air plug in hole & let it drop down into the gun. Do this frequently as ur using it, Maybe once a week or once every 3 weeks. This will lubricate the seals & also lube the piston driver. The 3 in 1 oil will keep ur seals from freezing up. They freeze because the moisture that the airline & compressor pushes into the gun.
3 drops of oil at a time is all you need, just once every week -three weeks depending on how much U are using it. If ur using it alot, oil it once a week, if ur not then every 3 weeks.
I oil it all the time
When the nails shoot by themselves it generally means you’re in need of servicing. The rubber seal behind the firing pin may be deteriorating
Next time you plug the air hose onto the nail gun just make sure there are not any nails in the gun first ! :-) Haven't seen you guys since you finished April's shop .... You all do great work ! I used to work on quite a few construction sites over the years and really enjoy watching anything take shape from a pile of wood to a beautiful building or any project really !
You had me at "man cave"
Sam I Am lol
Sam I Am back in the 50s the whole house WAS A MANCAVE, because afterall it is always the man who pays for it, so it only makes sense to being the man who imposes his preference over the female, and not the other way around as it happens since the 60
Agree, lov his work!
@@rronaldreagan ...Bill Burr reference?
Customer has a nice corner location. Too bad codes restrict design. RR, do you do in house design?
Keep em coming .
At 3:55, "Too much math, I don't wanna hafta think." LOL, what my three homeschooled teens say every day.
Great review !
Do you oil the guns? It was likely due to not oiling the guns. Two drops per use
Just wondering why you don't poor the concrete slab first then make your frames on the floor?
Why are you using the top of the yellow box on the grade stick to get your grade when you should be reading at the black bar across the middle of the window in that yellow box? You're marking you grade 2" higher then it actually is. Are the post suppose to be 2" above grade?
Thought that each jog of the framing and foundation cost $$$, that a 20x20 cheaper vs 10x10 with 8x8 add on? Thats why rectangular ranch houses/shoeboxes were built - quick, cheap, easy.
Nice stickers in the trailer you should do a video on them bc why not
Another great one!
That Festool costs a pretty penny. A speed square and shimmed guard negate that penny.
Maybe oiling that minster framing gun before use will stop blowby.
How do those headers carry any load ? Are there doublers beneath them ?
You don't through bolt them into the column?
Love watching the channel, very interesting and fun to watch, with lots of info, just a quick question though. Why not set the brackets to grade with the level while setting them in the concrete compared to going back and measuring later?
Ron LaMarre we basically do but even with the most precise setting... concrete can move during the cure... best to recheck before the build again... you only get one chance to do it right
Right. It's more effective.
Hello! Have you ever used "AEG" firm's power tools? Please, tell about it in your video (if you used). Sorry for my bad English)))
Any problems with osha showing up at job sites? I set steel for residential company and fear for fines such as not having safety harness when on open foundation let alone climbing14 feet in the air
Nice Festool German Engineering you got going on there!