I've been a masonry Water proofer since 1984, and I can't believe that anyone would intentionally build in this manner! I would be surprised if any of this construction last 15 years and about years for some of it. The solution that they offer is worse than the problems they all ready possess save your money until you got a skilled craftsman that you can trust.
As my cousin in N/America replaces the 2nd roof to his home with asphalt shingles ,within 20yrs, he recently asked me how often I have to change my roof in the UK. It was a easy answer...About once every 100yrs or so. Any fool can build and use gimmick products. But to not build to last makes a mockery of the very word build.
Tile roofing products don't work all that well in many parts of North America. They are fine is the warmer areas that are not prone to high winds or hail, but not very good in areas that get heavy snow loads and/or freeze thaw cycles. The weight also means that more load bearing structures are required making it more difficult and expensive to have open plan layouts. Standing seam rooves last 50 years or more, but are also expensive (not tile expensive, but still costly). When your average home is two stories and only 80 square meters the cost of a tile roof may seem reasonable.
Residential and commercial brick is not used as a weight bearing /structural component anymore. Its simply a facade / finish. Besides, the brick ledge in the concrete footing bears the weight of a brick facade, not the structure.
@@darknes7800 Since that brick veneer system seems to be hung from the stud wall, it's actually putting MORE strain on the vertical structure than is the typical brick facade that sits on a concrete brick ledge.
@@xtnuser5338 The engineering accounts for that, judging from the installers motions....its not much heavier than OSB and fiber/cement siding. Neither of which cause issues on stud walls.
@@darknes7800 Agreed. I did not suggest it would cause any issues. I just pointed out that it is more strain on the vertical structure than a ledge supported brick facade is.
I'm American and a former union carpenter. We are years behind other countries in our construction materials. I think big business likes everything to stay the same.
Some arguments go many ways on this. You can build something that lasts forever but may not be desirable in 100 years. So build something that lasts 100 years, and then with massive advancements in everything in that time, tear it all down and build with the new stuff. Maintaining and try to update old can be extremely expensive and so many things change in terms of what the masses find desirable
"The wire adapts to the movement of the concrete, preventing cracks." No it doesn't. If the concrete moves, it cracks. Wire doesn't stop it moving, or cracking. Wire provides tensile strength, so that when the concrete does move and crack, it resists the cracks separating and forming gaps.
Yeah, of course this is AI written. Like doing a report from Wikipedia. Our kids will be dumber. And that's the worst radius light gauge steel work I have seen. That guy sucks - probably his first time. LOL
1. Go back to thumbnail. 2. Left click the three vertical dots icon to the right of the thumbnail. 3. Select "Don't Recommend Channel." 4. Congratulate yourself. You will never see thumbnails from that channel again. Feel free to cut and paste the above four lines to share with the community in the war against clickbait. Cheers.
Thanks to this AI generated writing and audio presentation, I am able to kick the habit of watching hour after hour of RUclips. Thanks. Really helped me out.
way too many unfinished clips. the last one for example, whats does it look like finished. raising the house is a new construction method. just my opinion.
Click bait to market a bunch of proprietary products. I fell for that too. The problem with these systems is that many are very difficult to patch repair when damage occurs a few years down the road. You can't just buy a few reclaimed bricks or roof tiles from a builder's yard and make good.
@@GunnerLinus01 ahh good points, when I did not see the thumbnail example, I skimmed through it. I already burned enough brain cells watching "Joker 2" 🤣😂
This is American style building. Dirt-Cheap for the producers and the construction companies, super-expensive for the builder-owner, and in 30 years you can tear it down because it's piece by piece falling apart any ways. ABSOLUTELY nothing over good old brick and mortar and a little bit of concrete.
With 20 years of experience in construction, I had to click and watch when I saw cement being poured into a roll of wire. Both of you should be incredibly proud of what you’ve accomplished here, and so should your families. I admire your intelligence, skill, and the time it took to complete this project. Give yourselves a pat on the back. I hope every day you hear the laughter of those enjoying the results of your hard work. Well done!
A roll of chain-link fence comes in handy. Roll a body up in it, toss into a lake, nature takes its course, fence holds the bones in and it sinks into the mud.
my grand dad showed me that in the 60s. but everything old is rediscovered by newer generations. you should see what he taught me to do with palettes and fruit crates. Fruit crates are not wood anymore but waxed cardboard.
Sorry (not sorry) Lord Gadget, my mind was not blown. But the click bait of poring cement or ???? over a roll of chain link fencing, that might have done it if you had explained that. But no, only click bait. Boo on you, and thumbs down.
Cement has virtually no tensile strength, that is why reinforcing bars and wire is used with it to hold it together. That fine wire is only really suitable for very light use, not at all suitable for flooring or anything other than decorative surfaces.
Those are cheap construction materials. Although the suppliers are making millions about It. New structures aren't cheap. Just as well to purchase good materials.
The old "Garage" becomes be a Man-Cave, Nanny Suite, or Mother-in-law Accomodation! Or, a Place to use as an Office, Studio, or other! The New Garage goes in, under it!
I can say the solar tunnel thing works . We put one in a building that has an office with no windows. When it’s sunny you have to baffle the thing because it’s to bright .
The "construction materials" in this video, are mainly aesthetic. None are built for the long haul. Fake brick, foam-fix water leaks, plastic pools, pressboard-bricks for building materials.... No wonder certain countries when hit with earthquakes are leveled from one end to the other, their building materials are lincoln logs, legos and silly putty.
Blocking this channel for using click bait when not needed. I actually enjoyed the video and would of watched another from you, but there are other channels that don't use click bait. Click the 3 dots and click don't recommend, make the internet great again. you have to do it in the previews to the right side.
One Train (3 trains wide), 1/2 a million cars, 8 billion tickets to ride The outside trains move cars left or right & change tracks front and tail The Little Engine that thinks, "I Can" (Never Stops) Screw the borders... Ride the World
There is definitely a method that is both practical and effective in most steps of any building project. I’ve worked and still sometimes work with these Hispanics dudes some of them hardly get their shirts dirty because they know the most effective method that is the least physically demanding and fastest they call it “manĩa” “ or pronounced man-yahh if that’s easier but odd see if you aren’t doing it that way it’s gonna take a toll on your body. Some these dudes are like 5’1 or 5’2 and they make the heavy lifting look like nothing and in contrast you’ll see a younger man more fit bigger more hungry struggle and battle to complete the very same task often slowing the whole crew down. These people are usually great leaders and teachers though and they will definitely teach you things you’ll carry with you for the rest of your life if you’re willing to listen and learn but you’ll still have a wayward or two too stubborn to accept the knowledge.
Just think if the Romans would have had wire, they were amazing builders but wire would have taken their building to an even higher level -- literally.
Lord Gizmo There is nothing mind blowing or new in this techniques. Since early 70-es there were Builder/technologist Engineers in former Soviet Union who built series of high rise communities using metal & concrete construction method. There were factories, where under supervision of such engineers, producing the whole walls constructed by using the metal/concrete method for future buildings. As for bricks, there are special soil and technology to create them to be more sturdy than concrete to serve and last for Centuries without collapsing , no need of metal wires there. The outer wall and the one between the neighbors were the walls of metal/concrete constructions and are called "Untouchables" i.e. nobody allowed to make any changes on these walls during the renovations
What about the cement poured into a roll of wire?
Still pouring will be in next video😂
Click Bait Mate
It really works.
Right? I let the Trump ad play to the end, then found something else to watch.
click bait
I've been a masonry Water proofer since 1984, and I can't believe that anyone would intentionally build in this manner! I would be surprised if any of this construction last 15 years and about years for some of it. The solution that they offer is worse than the problems they all ready possess save your money until you got a skilled craftsman that you can trust.
probably in an arid climate
As my cousin in N/America replaces the 2nd roof to his home with asphalt shingles ,within 20yrs, he recently asked me how often I have to change my roof in the UK. It was a easy answer...About once every 100yrs or so. Any fool can build and use gimmick products. But to not build to last makes a mockery of the very word build.
Tile roofing products don't work all that well in many parts of North America. They are fine is the warmer areas that are not prone to high winds or hail, but not very good in areas that get heavy snow loads and/or freeze thaw cycles. The weight also means that more load bearing structures are required making it more difficult and expensive to have open plan layouts.
Standing seam rooves last 50 years or more, but are also expensive (not tile expensive, but still costly). When your average home is two stories and only 80 square meters the cost of a tile roof may seem reasonable.
That swimming pool a joke looks like a jacuzzi plus it's dirty when filled mean more chemicals not good
Oh shut up
@@Turfbaby831 Me?
That does not apply to every home in the UK.
Less strain on the structure but structure won't be as strong, Da !!!
Residential and commercial brick is not used as a weight bearing /structural component anymore. Its simply a facade / finish. Besides, the brick ledge in the concrete footing bears the weight of a brick facade, not the structure.
@@darknes7800 Since that brick veneer system seems to be hung from the stud wall, it's actually putting MORE strain on the vertical structure than is the typical brick facade that sits on a concrete brick ledge.
@@xtnuser5338 The engineering accounts for that, judging from the installers motions....its not much heavier than OSB and fiber/cement siding. Neither of which cause issues on stud walls.
@@darknes7800 Agreed. I did not suggest it would cause any issues. I just pointed out that it is more strain on the vertical structure than a ledge supported brick facade is.
Stucco over wire lath has been in use since WW!!
Right, it's for stucco. At least he said concrete instead of calling it cement.
And that was the cheap wire, not the galvanized steel stucco netting we use.
I'm American and a former union carpenter. We are years behind other countries in our construction materials. I think big business likes everything to stay the same.
Americans in general like things to stay the same.
Just look at yellow school buses. To people overseas they look like they came out of Noah’s Arc.
I don't know where you got your wisdom from. Compare the time and the cost of building in Europe and you might change your mind.
Some arguments go many ways on this. You can build something that lasts forever but may not be desirable in 100 years. So build something that lasts 100 years, and then with massive advancements in everything in that time, tear it all down and build with the new stuff.
Maintaining and try to update old can be extremely expensive and so many things change in terms of what the masses find desirable
"The wire adapts to the movement of the concrete, preventing cracks."
No it doesn't. If the concrete moves, it cracks. Wire doesn't stop it moving, or cracking. Wire provides tensile strength, so that when the concrete does move and crack, it resists the cracks separating and forming gaps.
Yeah, of course this is AI written. Like doing a report from Wikipedia. Our kids will be dumber. And that's the worst radius light gauge steel work I have seen. That guy sucks - probably his first time. LOL
Very nice materials
Thumbs down. Click bait.. the thumbnail isn't in the video.
Same
At least it wasn’t cement being poured over a large breasted skimpily clad female.
1. Go back to thumbnail.
2. Left click the three vertical dots icon to the right of the thumbnail.
3. Select "Don't Recommend Channel."
4. Congratulate yourself. You will never see thumbnails from that channel again.
Feel free to cut and paste the above four lines to share with the community in the war against clickbait.
Cheers.
@@tedtrash Already had.
thanks... saved me from BS click bait. BTW tedtrash is a computer wizard.
Shoring up a whole house, wow! I like that one
Thanks to this AI generated writing and audio presentation, I am able to kick the habit of watching hour after hour of RUclips. Thanks. Really helped me out.
This is getting truer by the day, lol.
You have inspired me. It is so true how we can fall into this click bait addiction. Thank you I am going to do the same.
AMAZING ENJOYED THANKYOU SIR
way too many unfinished clips. the last one for example, whats does it look like finished. raising the house is a new construction method. just my opinion.
They didn't show it because it looked like crap. 😉
I was curious what they were going to do with the garage.
Build a ramp or a car elevator
haha what happened to the thumb nail pick of cement being poured over the metal grate!?
I tried this and it really works! Wish I had known about it sooner.
Click bait to market a bunch of proprietary products. I fell for that too. The problem with these systems is that many are very difficult to patch repair when damage occurs a few years down the road. You can't just buy a few reclaimed bricks or roof tiles from a builder's yard and make good.
@@GunnerLinus01 ahh good points, when I did not see the thumbnail example, I skimmed through it. I already burned enough brain cells watching "Joker 2" 🤣😂
This is so relaxing to watch after a long day.
What are westing time. Working.😊I enjoying nature.😊
Great technologies
I love my solar tubes in my bermed house!
Need to do a follow up video 2 years later to see how these things hold up.
Those French, first the Maginot Line and now resin swimming pools, simply amazing!
I just love the innovative ideas . Will save me lots of time and energy. I'll pay for these great concepts. ❤
ماشاء الله تبارك الله بالتوفيق يا رب العالمين 👍👍👍👍👍👌👌👌👌👌💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆💡💡💡💡✍️✍️✍️✍️🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿🇩🇿
❤❤❤❤❤❤
hope we have that in the Philippines
very good, I am for any kind of recycling and innovations
Looks like a bunch of cheap ass shit that will fall apart over time.
it absolutely is. I've seen 300 year old brick walls still standing today. do it right not cheaper
😅
This is American style building. Dirt-Cheap for the producers and the construction companies, super-expensive for the builder-owner, and in 30 years you can tear it down because it's piece by piece falling apart any ways.
ABSOLUTELY nothing over good old brick and mortar and a little bit of concrete.
With 20 years of experience in construction, I had to click and watch when I saw cement being poured into a roll of wire. Both of you should be incredibly proud of what you’ve accomplished here, and so should your families. I admire your intelligence, skill, and the time it took to complete this project. Give yourselves a pat on the back. I hope every day you hear the laughter of those enjoying the results of your hard work. Well done!
Like the reuse of plastic to make pools.. cool.
The roofing tiles have exposed screws that are clearly visible
So many new technologies, yet housing is at a premium… problem NOT solved.
This was interesting from start to finish.
But the thumb was not in the video, buhhh.
A roll of chain-link fence comes in handy. Roll a body up in it, toss into a lake, nature takes its course, fence holds the bones in and it sinks into the mud.
I’d like to subscribe to your newsletter.
Lol , that's disturbing 😂
@@aquabluesea312 He probably has some experience!
😂😂😂😂
@@aquabluesea312😂
No tarp paper under the metal shingles?
my grand dad showed me that in the 60s. but everything old is rediscovered by newer generations. you should see what he taught me to do with palettes and fruit crates. Fruit crates are not wood anymore but waxed cardboard.
Is it strong enough to face floods and high velocity winds
amazing thank you maybe faults wall inside the house
Raising a house, might just build a second floor & turn the bottom floor into a concrete reinforced foundation ☝
Sorry (not sorry) Lord Gadget, my mind was not blown. But the click bait of poring cement or ???? over a roll of chain link fencing, that might have done it if you had explained that. But no, only click bait. Boo on you, and thumbs down.
Thumb up for your thumb down. I hate click bait.
I think all of this is crap. I want real bricks, not some fake panel. The pool? 👎
pretty sure the fake brick panel cost twice as much and the pool looks good for kids only.
Exactly how long is “long lasting “ ? A month, year, or 50 years ? ? ? ?
Corners to make a column or outrageously expensive
Cement has virtually no tensile strength, that is why reinforcing bars and wire is used with it to hold it together. That fine wire is only really suitable for very light use, not at all suitable for flooring or anything other than decorative surfaces.
I want brick that adds strength to my building.
❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
THIS IS USUAL BASIC CONSTRUCTION
*I need the sunlight for the roof 6:01. Great new construction techniques *
that French Swimming Pool is more like an oversize bathtub.
I thought it was a sheep dipping tank 😊
The narrator’s British accent makes everything that much more believable!
Those are cheap construction materials. Although the suppliers are making millions about It. New structures aren't cheap. Just as well to purchase good materials.
It might be a little tricky to get your car in that garage after they raised it.
LOL...True!
The old "Garage" becomes be a Man-Cave, Nanny Suite, or Mother-in-law Accomodation! Or, a Place to use as an Office, Studio, or other! The New Garage goes in, under it!
I can say the solar tunnel thing works . We put one in a building that has an office with no windows. When it’s sunny you have to baffle the thing because it’s to bright .
Min 6"46 DURISOL Insulated Concrete Forms
I like the new narrator voice. It speaks more clearer English than the last one.
The fake rocks……..how about NO…….
With the rate that planet earth's population is increasing we will need better innovations to affordably house everybody
Boat sealant works great for leaking foundations.
Looks more like a bathtub than a pool.
Love blocking BS click bait channels.
As a builder it qalways interests me to see new materials and techniques
Let's wait a couple of years to see if some of this stuff holds up to the elements before we praise them.
I’m 70 years old I don’t care about the future of building😂
How do u get in the garage with a raised house??
There is only one way to stop water coming through the wall! Fix the pipe!!!
How about we make brick from recycled materials?
What does the mighty mean Australian h height any think about this modern building materials ?
"Making the screws invisible from the outside". *proceeds to screw in many screws from the outside that are visible*
0:25 Wire resistant to corrosion? So, when did lime get replaced in the composition of cement? 🤔🤔
😮
I always want such info but a big no to robot voice.
The "construction materials" in this video, are mainly aesthetic. None are built for the long haul.
Fake brick, foam-fix water leaks, plastic pools, pressboard-bricks for building materials....
No wonder certain countries when hit with earthquakes are leveled from one end to the other, their building materials are lincoln logs, legos and silly putty.
I like most of what I saw.
Still I'm having difficulty not calling this another clickbait production.
Am sure people aren’t going to look up at a roof and say my god you can’t even see any screws in that roof
So what a. Little clickbait the information is still good
I hate videos that spend 98% of the time showing the labor, and then for 1 second they show the final results.🙄
Blocking this channel for using click bait when not needed. I actually enjoyed the video and would of watched another from you, but there are other channels that don't use click bait. Click the 3 dots and click don't recommend, make the internet great again. you have to do it in the previews to the right side.
Thanks👍 I read the comments anymore before I watch ,life is to short for wasted time
Love the AI voice over and paid for bot views/likes. Keep up the great work!
Mind-Blowing Click-Bait Thumb-Nail...
If those solar lights aren’t dimmable, I’m gonna have to pass.
Unfortunately, most of these amazing products/techniques aren’t available in the United States!
Dear Sir, I am a civil Engineer in India. Do you have any representatives in India
that ramp going up to the garage on the house is gonna be like a hundred feet long. lol
Every processed material, like food, is more impact on the environment and more toxic (cradle to grave) than the "old" less processed material/s.
One Train (3 trains wide), 1/2 a million cars, 8 billion tickets to ride
The outside trains move cars left or right & change tracks front and tail
The Little Engine that thinks, "I Can" (Never Stops)
Screw the borders... Ride the World
Is your mind blowing up or still waiting to blow up?
The mighty mean Australian wight Ant think about these new building products, it gives me pause and many thoughts ?
There is definitely a method that is both practical and effective in most steps of any building project. I’ve worked and still sometimes work with these Hispanics dudes some of them hardly get their shirts dirty because they know the most effective method that is the least physically demanding and fastest they call it “manĩa” “ or pronounced man-yahh if that’s easier but odd see if you aren’t doing it that way it’s gonna take a toll on your body. Some these dudes are like 5’1 or 5’2 and they make the heavy lifting look like nothing and in contrast you’ll see a younger man more fit bigger more hungry struggle and battle to complete the very same task often slowing the whole crew down. These people are usually great leaders and teachers though and they will definitely teach you things you’ll carry with you for the rest of your life if you’re willing to listen and learn but you’ll still have a wayward or two too stubborn to accept the knowledge.
they actually moved a house, it was amazing (8:08)
That's a bath tub, not a pool.
Just think if the Romans would have had wire, they were amazing builders but wire would have taken their building to an even higher level -- literally.
Mucho expensive - trying to find a company who will actually do quality work is 1 in a million.
Can only screw where the 2×4 is cobra designs
Downvoted for misleading thumbnail.
NO to plastic roofs!
All of this is crap product. I wouldn’t use any of that in a build
Why no sound to explain the bucket of stuff?
Howto speed up wiring an old house.
Lord Gizmo
There is nothing mind blowing or new in this techniques.
Since early 70-es there were Builder/technologist Engineers in former Soviet Union who built series of high rise communities using metal & concrete construction method.
There were factories, where under supervision of such engineers, producing the whole walls constructed by using the metal/concrete method for future buildings.
As for bricks, there are special soil and technology to create them to be more sturdy than concrete to serve and last for Centuries without collapsing , no need of metal wires there.
The outer wall and the one between the neighbors were the walls of metal/concrete constructions and are called "Untouchables" i.e. nobody allowed to make any changes on these walls during the renovations
"makes screws invisible from the outside" then goes on the show you visible screws from the outside.
Like this only they made , the banglore flat came out
Flipping right and lef sides of video definitely prevent us from reading brand names like Patterson or Isover.. Yeah...
Is there anything on RUclips that isn’t mine blowing😂