arefmoin I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
As a This Old House follower since the early days, this one with the history of Cape Ann is the best, makes me miss Boston and it’s surrounding towns like Rock Port. Thanks Kevin.
raymondjr. I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
euphoria I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
A 5 hp table saw would make short work of pine 2x12x2's to make studs that match the thickness of the original rough 2x4's in the wall. I make my own 2x4's on a 1 1/4 hp table saw when I need them.
I love the show, love the craftsmanship and love the old houses. What I don't like is many of the shows feature homes priced out of range for many people. How about doing some shows that cater to the rest of us?
I wish one of these guys would come to our 104 yr old house. We got screwed on our foundation, we got talked into mini splits (because no company would come out to our town or wouldn’t crawl under our house ) They have buckled our hardwood floors , the splits are leaking and of course breathing black mold. So bad one of our cats are very sick. These insurance company’s are taking there sweet time to do anything. We’re not made of money to fix the things we need fix
The house went from untouched at the end of episode 17 to fully gutted, additions already built out, tons of stuff demo'd and reconstructed at the start of episode 18... Maybe it's just me but one of my favorite parts of every season / project of TOH is the demo and beginning of new framing. Sad to see that all skipped over.
iamamish I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
With I-joists, Ive noticed over the years that most of the squeaks come from the toe nails on the bottom flange into the midspan support. Because I joists are often engineered to span a whole house, if your beams aren't perfectly flat, the recommended 8D (vs 16s to keep bottom cord from splitting) nails don't have enough holding power to make up for uneven beams. Thusly a gap is created and when you walk on them, squeeeeeeeak. Isn't an issue if you only have 1 span to carry.
@@HaploBartow through plywood, sure. But manufacturers do not spec "screws" through flanges into plate. 8D or 10D depending on size. I am not talking about squeeks in plywood connection, but rather through bottom flange into 2x that sits atop steel. Often on large homes with multiple i beams in a span, the uneven concrete basements provide a tough time making your steel and joists dead flat. If a single joist spans multiple beams, squeeks can occur easily , especially when the lumber shrinks as house dries. Those 1.5" 2xs don't stay that size for long.
A little surprised to see the stress at a building site. If the speed of work is so fast that you loose quality of build, then the speed needs to be reduced to ensure quality of build. That should be obvious to all.
For some reason, I can't be convinced that a thin piece of OSB held together by some plywood and glue sitting in on a thin sheet metal bracket mounted using nails is going to have the same strength as a solid 2x8 or 2x10 sitting directly on the frame. I get that it's renewable, I get that it's cheaper, I get that it's straight, and I'm sure engineers representing the company who sells the stuff have ran tests that show that it's adequate but my brain just can't compute it. What happens after 20 years of humidity? What happens if there is a small water leak? With traditional lumber, you just remove drywall and air it out and put in new drywall. Will this stuff just soak the water up and lose structural integrity? Maybe if I see some of these houses still held together after 20-30 years I'll be convinced. I used to not be a fan of PEX and preferred copper pipes but after the Texas freeze in February where I had to replace a bunch of frozen copper pipes while houses I knew with PEX didn't have any issues I warmed up towards the idea as well.
That stuff is better in testing than solid wood...It's not cheaper either...The stuff is pretty flimsy individually but when it becomes part of an assembly; that's where its strength becomes evident.
walterbrunswick I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
I noticed that the Silva Brothers team (father and son) have the surname Silva and by their accent I can tell that they are from the NE of the USA. Their is a large Portuguese -speaking colony of immigrants in this region and I was just wondering if their heritage is Portuguese or from the Azores. Just curious because I am a Cajun that has ved in Brazil for over thirty years and speak Portuguese fluently.
The younger Silva is Tommy’s nephew, the son of Dicky Silva, Tommy’s brother. I believe Dicky is retired from Silva Brothers now (if he has passed away I am unaware). Years ago, when Steve Thomas was host, their big project for the year was rebuilding Dicky’s house after it burned to the ground.
That’s not father and son. Charlie Silva is Tommy’s nephew. Tommy and his brother Dicky started Silva Brothers Construction decades ago. Charlie is Dicky’s son. I believe that Dicky has retired and is no actively involved (at least on TOH projects). Dicky used to be seen in the background of most projects, but almost never said anything- he doesn’t have Tommy’s presentation skills. Years ago, in the 1990s when Steve Thomas was the host, the big project of the year was to rebuild Dicky’s house after it burned to the ground in a late night house fire.
gregjohnson I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
This show should be called "The Lifestyles of the Rich and Not So Famous". How many ordinary people or even middle class people can afford to build like this? Remember, the word "mortgage" in Latin means "life debt".
@@edrcozonoking Not a bit. I earned everything I have with my own hands and value it as such. Insecure people who try to keep up with the Jones' to define their own self worth are sad creatures. TOH is nothing but a ad campaign for the building industry, but I do enjoy Ask This Old House.
Must really be nice working the easy way or use the engineered lumber....be nice if you did a job like the little guys do in areas not as well off. Let's see who can build the house and the winner is the co. who comes in the lowest.....lol
thomasfreer I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
richardkimball I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
dawnjessen I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
robinrobin I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
That plywood is now like 100 bucks a sheet...Back then it was 25 ...smh...lol...Jabroni using a 10 oz caulk gun for glue down and he's getting it everywhere it doesn't need......I'd throw him off the job...
I Watch This Old House You Tube I Watch Buffy The Vampire Slayer I Watch Buffy The Vampire Slayer I Watch Wheel Of Fortune Tonight Pat Sajak Vanna White James Bond 007 Robin Rexroad Crowd Surfing One For You
Is there anything that Tommy does not know?? Your knowledge is truly inspiring. Beautiful location and wonderful folks.
arefmoin I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Glad you post here. There are times I miss your shows on TV so I still get my fix
As a This Old House follower since the early days, this one with the history of Cape
Ann is the best, makes me miss Boston and it’s surrounding towns like Rock Port. Thanks Kevin.
echan I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
I have the same problem with my 1920 house, every dimension is +1/4" over what you buy now. Makes it such an incredible pain
"And theres other places like the upstairs, where its a whole different story."
I see what you did there, SO META!!!
I thought meta was the new normal. A new higher standard of doing things.
Are you using that word right? I could be wrong.
Nice Video. Thank You!
Charlie! And Jen!!!
Jenn Nawada is amazing!!
raymondjr. I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Gramps making bank in that machine of a excavator🤣🤣
euphoria I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
When Kevin was talking to that fishing guy who else was thinking perfect storm
A 5 hp table saw would make short work of pine 2x12x2's to make studs that match the thickness of the original rough 2x4's in the wall. I make my own 2x4's on a 1 1/4 hp table saw when I need them.
I love the show, love the craftsmanship and love the old houses. What I don't like is many of the shows feature homes priced out of range for many people. How about doing some shows that cater to the rest of us?
Lets see them do a TOH of a trailer home in downtown Miami, that be interesting.
I wish one of these guys would come to our 104 yr old house.
We got screwed on our foundation, we got talked into mini splits (because no company would come out to our town or wouldn’t crawl under our house )
They have buckled our hardwood floors , the splits are leaking and of course breathing black mold. So bad one of our cats are very sick. These insurance company’s are taking there sweet time to do anything. We’re not made of money to fix the things we need fix
The house went from untouched at the end of episode 17 to fully gutted, additions already built out, tons of stuff demo'd and reconstructed at the start of episode 18...
Maybe it's just me but one of my favorite parts of every season / project of TOH is the demo and beginning of new framing. Sad to see that all skipped over.
The moneys in the detail...
I learned so much over the years
What are they talking about when they keep referring to the 'ledge'? Are they talking about the rock in the ground?
Yes, a deep layer of rock that is exposed above ground level
iamamish I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Tom Silva is the man
as a perfectionist with OCD in HVAC, I agree
2222ww1 I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
With I-joists, Ive noticed over the years that most of the squeaks come from the toe nails on the bottom flange into the midspan support. Because I joists are often engineered to span a whole house, if your beams aren't perfectly flat, the recommended 8D (vs 16s to keep bottom cord from splitting) nails don't have enough holding power to make up for uneven beams. Thusly a gap is created and when you walk on them, squeeeeeeeak. Isn't an issue if you only have 1 span to carry.
use screws
@@HaploBartow through plywood, sure. But manufacturers do not spec "screws" through flanges into plate. 8D or 10D depending on size. I am not talking about squeeks in plywood connection, but rather through bottom flange into 2x that sits atop steel. Often on large homes with multiple i beams in a span, the uneven concrete basements provide a tough time making your steel and joists dead flat. If a single joist spans multiple beams, squeeks can occur easily , especially when the lumber shrinks as house dries. Those 1.5" 2xs don't stay that size for long.
Tommy you don't need a header for non bearing wall , double cripples either.
Tommy knew what kind of backing he wanted for the size of finish trim the house would have, almost as if he's done this before in real life.
6:20 why you nail down the subfloor instead of using screws?
Nails are faster and cheaper so most likely due that.
@@mr.wizeguy8995 yeah but… far from the best option. Also screws and adhesive will be better long term..
I'm pretty sure the same producers that do Blues Clues do this show
Glue in tongue and groove smart Idea ,, my builder did not do this 😟
But why no screws for subfloor ???
I built houses for decades. You don't glue the tongue...And you don't need screws if you're using the right nails *ring shank*...
Nails will work fine if you use ring shank galvanized. I prefer screws though. In my opinion screws are superior.
@@kalijasin Screws are superior for sure...Screw in a 2500 sq ft floor deck and you'll see why we use nails...Time is money...
This episode came up as season 18 , episode 18 . Clearly season 41.
A little surprised to see the stress at a building site. If the speed of work is so fast that you loose quality of build, then the speed needs to be reduced to ensure quality of build. That should be obvious to all.
Time is money.
@@edrcozonoking Clad i don't need work there. Here everyone values quality over quantity.
They took out that beautiful rock for a mudroom? Whew they kept the rock
For some reason, I can't be convinced that a thin piece of OSB held together by some plywood and glue sitting in on a thin sheet metal bracket mounted using nails is going to have the same strength as a solid 2x8 or 2x10 sitting directly on the frame. I get that it's renewable, I get that it's cheaper, I get that it's straight, and I'm sure engineers representing the company who sells the stuff have ran tests that show that it's adequate but my brain just can't compute it. What happens after 20 years of humidity? What happens if there is a small water leak? With traditional lumber, you just remove drywall and air it out and put in new drywall. Will this stuff just soak the water up and lose structural integrity?
Maybe if I see some of these houses still held together after 20-30 years I'll be convinced. I used to not be a fan of PEX and preferred copper pipes but after the Texas freeze in February where I had to replace a bunch of frozen copper pipes while houses I knew with PEX didn't have any issues I warmed up towards the idea as well.
I'm with you on the engineered lumber. I just don't trust it.
OSB whether its engineered I-joist or sub-flooring is prone to soaking up moisture and getting mold & mildew which causes rot. Seen it many times.
That stuff is better in testing than solid wood...It's not cheaper either...The stuff is pretty flimsy individually but when it becomes part of an assembly; that's where its strength becomes evident.
From what I understand they fail faster in a fire as well
@@HandyMike78
I would imagine as they are super thin and made of glue and sawdust.
Don't care about boats ✅
Tom Silva ✅
walterbrunswick I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
I noticed that the Silva Brothers team (father and son) have the surname Silva and by their accent I can tell that they are from the NE of the USA. Their is a large Portuguese -speaking colony of immigrants in this region and I was just wondering if their heritage is Portuguese or from the Azores. Just curious because I am a Cajun that has ved in Brazil for over thirty years and speak Portuguese fluently.
Certainly makes sense - I looked to see if I could find more info on Wikipedia, but nothing about his heritage.
The younger Silva is Tommy’s nephew, the son of Dicky Silva, Tommy’s brother. I believe Dicky is retired from Silva Brothers now (if he has passed away I am unaware). Years ago, when Steve Thomas was host, their big project for the year was rebuilding Dicky’s house after it burned to the ground.
That’s not father and son. Charlie Silva is Tommy’s nephew. Tommy and his brother Dicky started Silva Brothers Construction decades ago. Charlie is Dicky’s son. I believe that Dicky has retired and is no actively involved (at least on TOH projects). Dicky used to be seen in the background of most projects, but almost never said anything- he doesn’t have Tommy’s presentation skills.
Years ago, in the 1990s when Steve Thomas was the host, the big project of the year was to rebuild Dicky’s house after it burned to the ground in a late night house fire.
gregjohnson I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Not free!!
???
you go work for free
Build me a deck for free
This show should be called "The Lifestyles of the Rich and Not So Famous". How many ordinary people or even middle class people can afford to build like this?
Remember, the word "mortgage" in Latin means "life debt".
You just come across as jealous.
@@edrcozonoking Not a bit. I earned everything I have with my own hands and value it as such. Insecure people who try to keep up with the Jones' to define their own self worth are sad creatures. TOH is nothing but a ad campaign for the building industry, but I do enjoy Ask This Old House.
Its actually season 41 episode 18 .. you guys mixed it up with a "Ask" episode
Season number is wrong, the description says [Video Title] at the bottom as a placeholder. Great otherwise!!
Is this now 2021?
Must really be nice working the easy way or use the engineered lumber....be nice if you did a job like the little guys do in areas not as well off. Let's see who can build the house and the winner is the co. who comes in the lowest.....lol
thomasfreer I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Add a comit
richardkimball I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
watch the guy nail down the porxh floor. Just before Tommy tells Kevin how to do it. That guy is not doing it the way Tommy said. Do as I say?
I want to see the boys rehab a house in the hood. They can name the episode "This Old Crack House".
Search RUclips channel “angry cops”
In this episode of This Old Hovel, Kevin wears his Gucci shoes on the construction site and drops a LVL beam on his foot
NORM AND YOU ARE MY TWO DREAM MEN AS A YOUNGER LADY I inspired to marry either one of them or someone like them 💕💕💕💕
As a man going through a divorce, it lifts my heart to read this.
dawnjessen I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Sorry, no reason to chop up the stone to make room for the garage. Place the garage elsewhere. Disgusting.
robinrobin I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
That plywood is now like 100 bucks a sheet...Back then it was 25 ...smh...lol...Jabroni using a 10 oz caulk gun for glue down and he's getting it everywhere it doesn't need......I'd throw him off the job...
Yooo brother man what it do???? Salute from jersey.. hope ur doing well..
It no channel111 Saturday morning on dish
I Watch This Old House You Tube
I Watch Buffy The Vampire Slayer
I Watch Buffy The Vampire Slayer
I Watch Wheel Of Fortune Tonight
Pat Sajak Vanna White
James Bond 007
Robin Rexroad Crowd Surfing
One For You
What's that woman taking? I want some.
Warrigt I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Crooks
Wow first!
No one cares
So?
who the f cares
@@walterbrunswick you cared enough to comment. So thank you for taking an interest 😮
@@pklemm1 ♥️