Removing a LOAD BEARING WALL and Prepping for a HUGE BEAM - Ep. 2
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- Опубликовано: 28 фев 2021
- Hey Gang. In today's video we remove our first load bearing wall and prep our joists for our first beam installation. The day didn't go how we planned but that didn't stop us from completing as much as we could and getting prepped for this week! It's gonna be huge!
We also officially announced our website! Thanks for all the love and support we wouldn't be in this position without you guys! Please be patient with us as we get the website and merch fine tuned! Thanks for watching and we'll see ya in the next one!
studpack.com
Contact: studpack225@gmail.com - Хобби
You guys have already completely wiped us out of all our X-Large shirts and Large's/Mediums aren't far behind! 👀 Thanks so much everyone that's amazing. We're in the process of getting more shirts, hats and more sizes for ya'll don't worry. Thanks Again 💪
XXX please.. don't forget the fat man
XXL Please.... Great Channel!
Pixelating stepping on the top of the ladder. Lol.
😅😂😭🤣😜🇺🇸
That's the best, great joke.
Hahahaha 🤣😂🤣😂
That may be the funniest shit I've ever seen
I seen that too, but, I just laughed. I can't say anything because I'm just as guilty !
Your construction zone is cleaner than my house.
Love that 5' board, simple and awesome idea. Charles
I enjoy just how relatable you guys are representing most crews in the trades working on reasonably sized projects.
Thank you for saving the oven. I usually try to reuse or recycle as much as possible. Our local “Resource” will pickup for free. Thanks for all the good info
You guys gotta sign the Stud Packs before it's closed in the wall!
Excellent 👍
@@StudPack often times showing parts of your project in FF like in this video @ 4:45, gives a better perspective and a wider overall view of what you are doing. it was excellent. do more like that.
Can you explain a little more about finding/hiring a good engineer and roughly the costs that would be expected for that? Loving the content!
I contact my local building department at town hall. They can usually recommend someone. Also tends to help with inspections since everyone has worked together already.
I’m so glad I found your channel. Pops is a BEASt! I have learned so much.
Classic video guys! Love all the tips. Great to mention your RUclips name background for the new viewers. That ladder sensor pixel had me laughing!
Thx John 👍💪
Great job love watching you guys. The fact that you are a father and son team is heartfelt.
It's really amazing to see how two of you can accomplish so much so quickly.
Stoked to see this project through!
Fantastic content. You guys are great. Finally a channel with quality and professional rehabs that are described to a tee. Keep it up, wish you the best.
Man I wish I could have found someone like you to work for when I got out of high school. Could have learn so much the right way. I framed houses for a summer working with a bunch of meth heads.
Lol
Nice thorough planning and doing! Impressive.
Thanks for the tip -- the 5' measuring 2x4
Not sure how I found this channel, but you guys are salt of the earth.
Really fantastic content guys, thanks for everything. I hope you're stacking sats with the product of your labor!
You guys are the best.! Really take pride in your work and do an amazing job. Always learn something in every video.
Great tip on measuring got a bad back so no more bending 👍
Always get excited when I see a new video out, great work guys👍
super excited about this project tooo .... great job gents
You guys are awesome. I just came across your channel about a month and a half ago when you had around 48,000 subscribers and now you’re over 60,000. Fantastic! Love the projects and the editing deserves mentioning too. Very creative camera angles like the beam pocket walk-through. To be able to get your project done AND gather all of this content is a major achievement! 👍🏼
This is a huge job. Always professional work, you do. When the truck dumped the wood, I thought of the man I worked for and still do on occasion. He would have me put a few old boards on the ground perpendicular to the lumber being dropped to make it easier to lift them off the ground. That's the way it had to be done.... no and, ifs or buts. He would drive me batty.
Hey Guys Love what your doing very REAL explanation's that I enjoy.
Love your videos, very professional work, wealth of knowledge with your tips
Nothing more frustrating than having the wrong supplies/incomplete list of supplies delivered!! Nice work so far😁
Great tip with the 5' to help measure. Thank you
Love the content as usual and blurring out where you stepped on top of the ladder...WE ALL do that 😊. Love the little tips you give as well, especially the 5 foot board as a measuring stick. Keep up the great work and why anyone would give this video a thumbs down is beyond me.
Not only do I love the content of your videos but I’m super impressed with the production and editing you guys have done with them! Great job and please keep it up!
The tip about using a 5' board to help measure is awesome. I subscribed.
All safety all the time!
I always enjoy your videos but this one really shined for some reason! The editing and shots are on point!
Great work fellas! Just so you know the NEC doesn’t want outdoor receptacles on the kitchen/dining receptacle small appliance circuits.
thanks for the 5 foot measuring tip
This seems similar to our renovation; we took down an 18 ft. walk-around L-B wall (bedrooms were above, garage & shop below) between kitchen & LR and replaced it with an "upset-header" that was three HUGE 2"x12"x20' LVLs (all-hands-on-deck getting that baby up there!). So glad we didn't go with a lazy visible beam!!!
61K boys and growing! Enjoying the remodel series. Putting in beams ain’t a 1-2-3 and done operation...... Can’t wait until my shirt arrives. Keep up the good work fellas. Stay blessed.
Thx. You too TJ 👊
That's awesome you put a working appliance out at the street for someone in need of one. 🤗
Someday (hopefully soon) that may be me needing a used appliance. I'm currently in a basement in a relatives home, trying to make do with the limited space I have. An air fryer is my "oven", a George Forman is my "grill", a single induction cooktop is my "stove", etc. And with the way the breaker box is currently set up, I can use each of my little appliances ONE at a time ONLY AFTER all space heaters we use to heat the lower level of the house are turned off. Or else the breaker flips, shutting everything down & resulting in complete darkness. ("Babe? You got a flashlight handy? We must've forgotten to turn something off!")
Someone is going to be ecstatic to find that oven sitting there that's just begging for a new home. 👏👏👏
@13:14: Good for you!!! So glad to see you let some of the materials have a second life. Those of us who've lived close to the bone know how one man's trash can be another's treasure.
Awesome stuff! I want y'all at my house doing renovations.
I like! Cool project guys! Great work
I love the blur over the feet on the top of the ladder. That way it is legal.
Hey man love what you do , wish you all the success in the world. You very knowledgeable n your professional attitude shows through the camera. You are a great representative of the constitution trade. Just a Commercial electrician's humble opinion.
Much appreciated Joshua 👍
"Good tip to save you back and your knees" almost trips. Great videos btw thanks for the tips nd tricks 💪
Always good content from you fellas.
Nice work guys
the censored ladder had me confused for a second then i relized and it gave me a giggle why you did that
I don't get it :(
The pixeling might have been for his boots also
@@wombattos Warning ............not to be used as a step
@@wombattos my guess is they were blurring the fact that he was standing on the top of the ladder which is a no no for safety
@@degrom542 aaaaaah!
Looking good!!!
2 things; 1, I love the 5’ stick method for measuring things. And 2, that was clever to blur out where Paul was stepping on the top of the ladder. Safety first! LOL!
5' stud is great tip.
I do the same with baseboard. I'll cut several 10" pieces of baseboard, depending how they overlap/cope. Put a 10" piece in each corner, measure between the 2, with tape measure flat on the floor, and add 20" to the measurement.
Anytime I'm measuring inside corners, I'll make a mark from one corner at 10" then measure from the other side, to my 10" mark, and add 10" to the measurement.
Hard to measure inside corners, works great for a lot of different things.
Never though about studs though. 👍
I feel your pain with that lumber delivery. I hate surprises like that. Love how your tidy up that electrical demo. Labeling the coils with the breaker and what they feed. Also love how you walk us thru the process.
Thx 👊💪
Thumbs up for the montage music change! Get that guy a taller ladder.
Congratulations on breaking 60K subscribers. Looking forward to you hitting 100K and more.
You deliver content as well as homerenovision but do not have the corner cutting aspect. Really enjoying these series!
Thanks for the tip measuring with 5' 2"x 4" contractor 34 years that's a new tip thanks again. MMC
You’re welcome Michael 💪👍
Hey Paul, Neat old wood handle claw hammer. Don't know about yanking spikes with it though.
LOL, I love the blurring of the ladder top! Nothing to see here nannies, move along. Gotta get the job done. Nice touch.
Is there a “Renovations Anonymous” out there? I can’t stop watching and might need some help. Seriously, you guys not only do great work, you have the ability to deliver the message better than any channel I’ve encountered. Thanks for taking time to bring us into the projects.
A ha! The P on your tools stands for PAUL - it was that or Peter maybe Patrick. Hahaha 🤣
Co-vid has interrupted all kinds of manufacturing and delivery issues here in Canada, So its no doubt you have supply issues there too. Can't wait to see how you are planning to marry the cathedral ceiling to the rest of the build. well done guys.
Me too 🤔😂
i did not see you stepping on top of that step ladder, nope.
ive never seen somone use a pre made 5ft board to measure like that great tip ill have to start doing that more
idk about you but i usually add a 16th or 8th extra to make sure its a tight fit and the ceiling doesn't drop any
Thx. Yes we add a little also to take the load on the new wall
I would like to butt an LVL up against brick (fireplace) that goes from the floor all the way up into the attic. How should I fasten the king stud(s) to the brick? Other side it straight forward as there is an existing wall to tie into with the 2 king/3 jack studs. Thanks. Great videos!
Save those 2x4’s the prices are through the roof
like gold bars right now, lol
Paul I have a strange suspicion that you're one of a kind. Born with the know how and wondering to yourself sometimes how do I do this.
🤣🤣🤣 blurs out stepping on the top step
I just ordered that laser micro adjuster you showed a couple videos age , only $35 on Amazon
That censoring bit should go viral
So how do you assemble the "studpack"?.....nail 2 Kings together and the 3 Jacks.....how do you put the two together?....or do you make it up...a stud at a time?
Aluminum SER is 100% acceptable for mechanical lug applications! Make sure it’s sized correctly.
Im working on finishing up about 75 feet worth of the same style project the longest beam was twenty two feet quadruple 16" inch lvl
Great tip on the 5' stud for measuring but I'm surprised you aren't using a measuring laser like the Bosch Blaze Pro for your studs lengths.
It’s on my list 👍
That lumber yard dropped the ball again! How about the yard letting you know what iSN'T coming. Communication is better business. Oh well, looking forward to this remod. The re-engineering of the load bearing is my fav part of these. As you know, the most important part of construction is not what you see, but, what you can not see. Structural integrity, electric, plumbing, etc. It all gets covered up by the finish bling.
You really blurred out the stepping on the top of the ladder lol
Are you nailing the temporary wall's baseplate through the tile?
kick ass
Do you cut the studs on the temporary wall just a little longer.
New Sawzall? I got my first and only in the early eighties for a job in Sacramento and it's still working.
Yep. My old porter cable was done 😩
Great job guys! I learned a thing or two. Paul, what brand of boots are you wearing?
Thx Chad 👍 I think they came from Sears. It says “elk woods” on the tongue
I will second to watch Love your skills
You don't have to use expensive copper wire for range. It is perfectly safe. Call any residential Electrician and he will explain.
Did you demo the bracing above the ceiling and move it or install the bracing on the temp wall before moving it? Thanks.
Transfer the load first then remove existing bracing 👍
@ 11:30, is the possessed fan just due to the video being sped up and frame rate starting to sync with fan rpm almost? I know, super important question.
6:05 - Why I hate attics. So much dust and the kind of dust too.
Been a tile contractor for many years and seen a lot. Your one of the best!
Thx Franklin 👍💪
Could a 6”x 4” be used instead of a stud pack?
Sorry to ask a stupid question, but why when using a nail gun the nails spark when they enter the wood?
LVL's .... I see why no joinery... Maybe next time. I wouldn't want to know what "wood" would cost..... it is like gold all of a sudden!
Hi, I am planning to remove a wall that holds my ceiling joists, the engineering told me to install a 2 ply LVL 2x9-1/2", I was planning to install 2 2x12" conventional lumber(Home Depot), is that a bad idea? The reason I am thinking about it it's price, in my city the LVL costs 5x more.
Hi : Should the footing be 12" deep or 4" deep? In a previous video, you said 4". Thanks, Rob
12” where we live in southern Louisiana
When is a vid about where has Paul worked at, how he got to the place he is at?? Past Jobs!?? positions!!??
Hey Eduardo! A lot of people have asked this question and we have plans in the future to have Q&A’s video style. This will probably be the first episode🤙🏼
What a coincidence; Im opening up a space for a client Wednesday. 2: 18” x 14’ LVL’s - holding up a 2nd floor + roof system. My wife makes fun of me for watching construction porn!
Do you use a structural engineer to design new beam and stud layout? also did you get a permit with town to do this? just curious because I am about to do the same project at my new house
Yes we hired a structural engineer and have a permit
👍
What does a remodel like this cost.
I can never decide if i would like or loathe a house built like the US
I live in the UK - here everything is all brickwork - it makes everything fare more stable and easy for heavy mountings of shelves and tv brackets etc but means that adaption for more sockets, running ethernet cables etc is far worse
We have plenty of older homes made of brick here and I hate each and every single of them. Stick housing all the way
What size is the beam?
So how long did it take for the oven to be taken?
Gone same day 😀
will you send merch to Bristol England?
Sure 👍