Why don’t deck builders gap pressure treated decking?

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  • Опубликовано: 27 апр 2023
  • When installing pressure treated decking boards, install them tight to each other.
    Why?
    Pressure treated lumber shrinks as it dries.
    After the wood dries out, the resulting gap between decking boards will be too big.
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @myfixituplife
    @myfixituplife  Год назад +2

    👉For more deck building tips: ruclips.net/p/PLdLol426YERQNwoX_HZH0-lRRBIvAHSNe

    • @kenrussell950
      @kenrussell950 Год назад +2

      U

    • @jasonpressley5731
      @jasonpressley5731 Год назад

      You're installing that board upside down.

    • @joewalker1654
      @joewalker1654 Год назад +2

      Bad advice. I’ve been building decks with PT lumber for over 40 years. My own deck is 23 years old. I spaced the boards and they’re still fine.

    • @Joesdifferent
      @Joesdifferent Год назад

      Either you're too busy to read your messages or you just don't want to talk to me but I just talked to you 35 times about pressure treated wood and what I'm going through right now

    • @christopherhopkins5193
      @christopherhopkins5193 Год назад

      This guy lives in a box. Another basic minded “general” CTR with a tool belt. No clue why this “advice” is counter intuitive in a cold weather climate.

  • @Cardbordboxonfire
    @Cardbordboxonfire Год назад +15

    As a Non Carpenter for the past 26 years, I can say “I didn’t know that”
    Then go to the comments and see something I also didn’t know, then I realize you opened up a battle field full of carpenters, and self proclaimed carpenters. They are livid 😂
    And now I don’t know what to believe

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +7

      Lotta self-appointed super dupers out there. - I'll admit that I've never gotten "dry" PT lumber, but it appears it's possible if some of these people are to be believed. - Long story short, just check with your supplier. Tell them you saw some goofball on the internet slamming PT Southern Pine boards tight and see what their recommendation is.

    • @shelterskelter
      @shelterskelter 25 дней назад +1

      I did this last fall. Had nothing but moaning and complaining from a friend. He came back in June. Perfectly gapped lol.

  • @crhcarpentry
    @crhcarpentry Год назад +746

    As primarily a deck builder, always gap your boards. Those boards will not shrink enough to make that big of a difference. A 1/2” gap would still be fine. Just means your lumber will last longer.
    You nail that catspaw into every joist like that, water will get in the holes you create with that catspaw, and it’ll rot.
    Don’t give bad advice.

    • @JCcanU
      @JCcanU Год назад +39

      !00% In Michigan 3 foot of snow every month over 6 months i wanted a 1/2 inch gap

    • @FuzzyBears..
      @FuzzyBears.. Год назад +39

      Your absolutely right. I build in the Caribbean and lost a pressure treated deck in 5 years because of lack of spacing.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +61

      I don't like a huge gap. This PT Southern Pine gaps out to about 3/8. Big enough for rain and snow to pass along with some debris. As for the chisel mark, that's not going to allow anything to rot. Not only is the lumber rated for ground contact where microbes can get at it, but rot occurs when water (liquid or vapor) gets into a system and can't get out.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +43

      This gaps out to 3/8. I don't know the dynamics of snow melt and passage through deck boards, but assuming a gradual melt, I don't think that 1/8 is a big deal. It's a bigger deal for chair legs and comfort in bare feet. And for production. I don't need to do the extra step of gapping something that'll gap itself.

    • @berlinbarhounds5942
      @berlinbarhounds5942 Год назад

      Nah mate you’ll be fixing every job you’ve done for life, everything about what your saying is wrong.
      @crhcarpentry is right, don’t give shit advice to people.

  • @garydail290
    @garydail290 Год назад +52

    My Neighbors did this and, after 2 years, had to pay a fella to take every other board out and cut 1/2" off router the edge and reinstall . " looked like a lake on the deck when it rained"

    • @allred53
      @allred53 Год назад +4

      Yep. A lady paid me once to kinda do that. I put 2 saw blades on skil saw and ran it down every joint. She bought me 2 saws also.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +4

      Two saw blades? Creative.

    • @jonathonfrederick2062
      @jonathonfrederick2062 Год назад +2

      @@myfixituplife how can you recommend this method with stories like these?

    • @brianwoods6403
      @brianwoods6403 Год назад +4

      @@jonathonfrederick2062 he cant, he's running out of excuses. Help him come up with one please.

    • @andrewgarratt5191
      @andrewgarratt5191 Год назад

      Because who ever laid them butted them together tight while they were bone ass dry, on a bone dry ass day.

  • @abacab87
    @abacab87 Год назад +57

    As someone with 40 years experience, you can never predict how much they will shrink, and 1/8" is not enough. Even 1/4" a lot of tree debris and leaves will get caught. I leave an 1/8th inch, and end up with 1/4-3/8" but even 1/2" is fine, and is what I try to do on my own decks.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +3

      I'm in 30. I'm also in a number of Facebook groups with deck builder who think their sh++ don't stink. They post pictures of PT decks with miters all over the place. They 100%look awesome when the leave. But two weeks later...forget it. - I also work alone and am a fiend for saved steps. The PT I get gaps 3/8 all day and I have to do nothing. Nothing is faster than something. - Still, 40-years is beast mode. Keep hammerin'. I'm happy to follow along. Chime in any time

    •  Год назад +1

      You can sort of predict how much they Will shrink, just measure the moisture!

    • @greghenner4978
      @greghenner4978 Год назад +3

      1/2" is toe stub city!

    • @deanarnold10
      @deanarnold10 Год назад

      ​@@myfixituplifeThe building trade is the same in England..full of smart arse dickheads.. every one better than the last...keep smashing it 🙌

    • @sidewaysrain7609
      @sidewaysrain7609 Год назад +2

      Not building a dock. 2 x 6 decking. Toenail to but side-by-side you indeed every single time will get 1/8" shrinkage with fresh PT pine. Will leave a uniform gap. A half inch is way to excessive. Just enough for a child to get some fingers caught or someone to get a toe caught + aesthetics!
      I finished cap should never be wider than a #2 pencil.

  • @jmcguire5548
    @jmcguire5548 Год назад +122

    So this is the guy who's decks I have to keep rebuilding.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +11

      Yeah, that's me. You must be Quantum Man or something because mine only last 30-years or so.

    • @ihave35cents95
      @ihave35cents95 Год назад +3

      You must be the guy that keeps breaking all the children's toes.

    • @justrelax9501
      @justrelax9501 Год назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @josephdavis1087
      @josephdavis1087 Год назад +1

      he clearly doesnt need you lmao

    • @onetimewesawgod
      @onetimewesawgod 6 месяцев назад +1

      You have to rebuild every deck ever built

  • @arcadiagreen150
    @arcadiagreen150 Год назад +7

    I can confirm this. I recently built my uncles deck this way with heavy "wet" boards and butted them all together. Now that it's dried out a few weeks later it has excellent gapping

  • @thanos2149
    @thanos2149 Год назад +2

    Best advice ever. I’ve built hundreds of P/T decks. Ensure what side of the board goes up first to prevent cupping and it’s much better to toe nail then face nail, but this is actually better with no gaps if the moister content of the boards are very obvious. Face nailing of a dryer board may result in squeaking once expansion & contraction occurs multiple times and some small splitting. But over all yes it is better to bring the. Boards together tight. 👍

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Experience and knowledge for the win! Thank you.

  • @paulmryglod4802
    @paulmryglod4802 Год назад +2

    Ive done it both ways, and thankfully the customers were happy with the results. I think a larger gap up north is a better idea for leaves, snow, etc.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      Phewwwww....Sometimes we get lucky. We get a 3/8-inch gap here that seems to work for all seasons and locations. For really under cover decks, they need to be blown off from time to time.

  • @IIIIIIPETEIIIIII
    @IIIIIIPETEIIIIII Год назад +22

    And if the boards are partially dried out when you lay them, if you don’t leave expansion gaps, they will buckle! Also, narrow gaps trap rotting plant material which holds moisture. In icy conditions, damage may occur and despite being treated, the wood is more likely to rot.
    Always leave 3-5mm gap when laying decking like this!!

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +2

      We probably don't get the same species or moisture content of lumber. This is pressure treated Southern Pine in the US. If you gap this at installation, you'll end up with 1/2-inch or larger gaps when they dry out. Too big for my liking.

    • @IIIIIIPETEIIIIII
      @IIIIIIPETEIIIIII Год назад +4

      @@myfixituplife the solution is to get a moisture meter. It all depends on time of year, where the wood is stored, how much rain there has been. I have had the materials for 100ft of cant rail fencing sat outside for a month. It’s been bone dry, apart from a downpour a week ago. The weather has been hot and sunny and I boarded the fence on Friday. Three days later and most of the 6” boards have shrunk by 1/4”. It’s difficult to air 200 feather boards, but decking is much easier.

    • @Truckn_G
      @Truckn_G Год назад

      ​@@IIIIIIPETEIIIIIII've found the best thing to do is to lay the boards on the deck and let the sun dry them out for about a week.

    • @IIIIIIPETEIIIIII
      @IIIIIIPETEIIIIII Год назад

      @@Truckn_G I find the best thing to achieve that is to lay battens between layers of boards and strap the battens to keep the bundle tight. That way they get to dry out gently without warping. Loose laying on a deck can result in warping and buckling, but you could weight them down with something heavy. If stacking isn’t an option, probably best to just screw them down.

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn Год назад

      You've never seen pressure-treated wood buckle because they didn't leave a gap. I've been putting them together tight for 30 years and it's never happened. I would have been getting all kinds of callbacks if that was true. Everybody that puts a gap ends up with an excessive Gap when it dries out.

  • @ahamichiana
    @ahamichiana Год назад +32

    Use a standard 16D framing nail as a gap on fresh PT green boards.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +3

      You can. You'll get a gap that's at least 1/2-inch, maybe closer to 5/8, which is too big for me. The wood gaps itself and I like the look of a 3/8-inch gap, so I skip fumbling around with nails.

    • @choccolocco
      @choccolocco Год назад +8

      @@myfixituplife
      “Half inch to 5/8 with a 16”???
      Nonsense.

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn Год назад +3

      Deck boards do not need a half inch gap which is what your ending up with after a few years. You put them together and when they shrank at leaves a perfect gap. I've been doing it for 30 years and I see what a lot of my decks look like years later. There's no advantage to having a huge ass Gap where things fall down in there. Water has no problem flowing through.

    • @abc-ed1nr
      @abc-ed1nr Год назад +5

      A 5.5” deck board will not shrink a half inch.

    • @oldgringo66
      @oldgringo66 Год назад +2

      @@abc-ed1nrI been installing pressure treated boards for 50 years. Never seen them shrink that much. A 16 penny sinker is about right. If it’s in the shade all day you can use a fatter 16 penny common mail. Too small of a gap collects crap.

  • @ultimatefishkeeping
    @ultimatefishkeeping 16 дней назад

    This is what I have been trying to explain to my Dad, yet he thinks that I should leave a gap because the heat will cause the boards to expand.
    Now that I have stumbled across this video, I will show him with the hope that he will believe why it is better to have the boards touching together. 🤙🏼🙂🤙🏼❤️

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  16 дней назад

      @@ultimatefishkeeping Yup. There are some guys who were taught to gap them, but the reality is ALL WET LUMBER shrinks. And the PT we get comes super-soaked. It-and this includes all miters-is going to shrink. Miters will open up. There’s a way around this, though.

    • @ultimatefishkeeping
      @ultimatefishkeeping 16 дней назад

      @myfixituplife Thankyou very much for sharing this information.
      I shall be sure to explain to my Dad.
      I understand. I know a joiner who believes that the side with the groves should face up, whereas I know that the correct way is to have the groves facing down and the flat side facing up. 🤙🏼🙂🤙🏼❤️

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  15 дней назад

      @@ultimatefishkeeping “grooves”? You mean Annual rings? - That doesn’t matter. Pick the good side of the board and put that up. Fasten properly and you should be good to go.

    • @ultimatefishkeeping
      @ultimatefishkeeping 14 дней назад

      @myfixituplife. My apologies. Yes, indeed, I do mean Annual Rings.
      In the U.K. things are said different. 🤙🏼🙂🤙🏼❤️

  • @bryenlink
    @bryenlink Год назад +1

    Installed them nice and tight last summer. This summer it’s been hot without any rain, and some of the gaps are good 1/2”. Keep ‘em tight boys and girls.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Tight is right. Nice work. We sure could use some rain around here too.

  • @michaelmckay1907
    @michaelmckay1907 Год назад +26

    If the gap is too small, the boards will rot from the sides as water and debris is trapped between them. The gap should be large enough that the debris will fall through or be easily cleaned out.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      100% This is built into the supply chain--AMAZING THIS IS POSSIBLE--for PT Southern Pine. - Also, it won't rot. PT SP is rated for ground contact. Debris build up is a maintenance issue.

  • @alm7707
    @alm7707 Год назад +6

    well you keep on building them the way you like. Myself I use a Camo tool which gaps the boards uniformly and you don't see any screws.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      I will. If you're using a Camo tool and wet Southern Pine, your gaps are about 1/2-inch. Might no be able to see screw heads under tables and chair and outdoor rugs, but you can see the mud under the deck. - And maybe it's OK, bit I don't see how Camos resist cupping.

  • @AikiNinja1
    @AikiNinja1 Месяц назад

    I'm currently doing a DIY project. I'm replacing the deckboard and reusing the foundation. I've been told to butt the boards up tight, some people DIY content creators say gap them. I live in Maryland, its hot & humid here in the summer and cold in the winter. My deck is about 20 inches off the ground. I havent fastened the boards down yet. I'm cutting them, placing them down to let them dry out. Then I'm going to paint them on both sides. Thanks for posting.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Месяц назад

      I've built in MD. I'm not that far away from you in PHL. - I've also built "decks" that I've put in the ocean as swim floats and docks on Cape Cod. - But 'em. - They'll shrink and look great. - For my re-skins, I tape the joists to cover the old holes.

  • @mr.fahrenheit310
    @mr.fahrenheit310 Год назад +150

    That's not always true. I pulled deck boards tight to begin with and the rainwater tends to pool on the surface even on seasoned decks...i switched to using a 10d nail as a spacer and it hasn't failed me since. Rather have a quarter inch gap than no gap at all.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +11

      I'm 100% not everybody nor everywhere. If what you're doing works for you and you clients, damn the torpedoes. The end result--which is what resulted on this deck--is what you say. Keep going.

    • @brianwoods6403
      @brianwoods6403 Год назад +5

      ​@@myfixituplife blah blah blah.
      I'll stick to having a gap / large gap then a possible hairline crack thank you much.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +4

      @@brianwoods6403 you do you bro. Have a nice day.

    • @CarlosSanchez-bg4wf
      @CarlosSanchez-bg4wf Год назад +5

      What I noticed that if the wood is dry I gap it. If wet I make it tight. 🤪 n again it all depends what day it is m.t.w.t.f.s.s. 😆

    • @thanos2149
      @thanos2149 Год назад +8

      If ur boards cupped. It’s because you placed them up side down. I built decks for 10 years. I always pulled them tight and never had that problem. Only on the instant where I placed one upside down because It was hard to determine what side to place up in the end grain.

  • @davesuniverse5385
    @davesuniverse5385 Год назад +3

    Actually your gap size should take a couple of things into account. First is debris buildup from things like surrounding tree leaf & seed litter. So many forget to account for this simple, yet, most important aspect to keep from creating debris buildup which creates moisture issues & eventually contributes to rot. I also totally agree with the comments on using a cats claw or other tools that might tear up or score the wood surface in manner contributing to rot. Smooth wood vs. rough surfaces shed water more readily. With that said, if your gaps are not large enough debris can actually get easily stuck becoming wedged & at times extremely difficult to remove, contributing to moisture buildup & rot. Things like leaf & seed stems are notoriously problematic, even with blowers, brooms, & pressure washers…
    Second is to account for zoning & whether there are impervious surface considerations. Gap sizing is sometimes taken into account in allowances to drop square footage impervious calculations on a site, with gaps large enough sometimes allowing for lowered square footage for impervious surface totals & thus allowing you to develop more area for construction if needed. This is, however, totally dependent on local codes & their interpretation.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      I appreciate all your observations. I also appreciate that you're civil and for all the "you're dumb" dummies listening, listen to this guy. - That said, I politely disagree. - Debris build-up is a maintenance issue. There are a million variables, But if you have a 100-year old Doug Fir over your deck shedding needles 24/7, you need to blow the deck off when you mow your lawn. I'm remodeling a deck right now with similar conditions and it's like it's raining on me all day. A sewer grate would get clogged. - Ground contact PT does rot, but it takes decades. - As for zoning, I hear you. I'm not sure gap sizing is a contributing factor. I think it's an either/or: A deck is impervious. A deck isn't impervious. At least that's my experience. - Either way, thank you. Please chime in any time.

  • @howtodoitdude1662
    @howtodoitdude1662 6 месяцев назад

    My neighbor did his like this earlier winter. Can’t wait to see it in the summer.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  6 месяцев назад

      I’m interested in all the details from species of lumber to location and climate to supply chain_

  • @adrianskelton9
    @adrianskelton9 Год назад

    My favorite part of the video was the aaaarg at the beginning. Sums up my experience in the construction industry

  • @erichilyard3565
    @erichilyard3565 Год назад +29

    I've been in the trades for 25+ yrs. Always gap your boards! Installing them tight will result in improper/irregular gapping and cause more moisture problems, cupping/warping.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +4

      Where are you in the trades? What're you working with? And how is it possible you don't know wet wood contracts?

    • @erichilyard3565
      @erichilyard3565 Год назад +5

      I'm primarily in remodeling and building. There are many tools available that even for wood installation have a preset spacing tool, it's a toenail application. Camo tool, kreg are two examples. Putting the boards tight isn't guaranteed you get equal spacing. No two boards will shrink the same. It's better to have a 5/16 gap instead of inconsistencies. Plus certain codes require you to gap your boards 👍

    • @married-a_crazychickenlady
      @married-a_crazychickenlady Год назад

      @@erichilyard3565 either this guy lives in the desert, or he is trolling for clicks and its working. There are lots of internet fools now saying the wrong thing just for views and comments.

    • @drockx85
      @drockx85 Год назад

      ​@@erichilyard3565I mean, if you're using a camo screws you need a gap just to get the screws in.

    • @predatorysage1
      @predatorysage1 Год назад +2

      How would gapping the boards make the gaps more consistent? With your logic then not gapping the boards should have the same effect. Think about it, if you gap the boards 1/32", you're saying gapping the boards 1/2" instead will somehow mysteriously make the gaps more consistent as they dryout?

  • @nourdraw1548
    @nourdraw1548 Год назад +8

    An advice worth exactly what I paid for!

  • @jayonez137
    @jayonez137 Год назад +1

    I’m up the northeast.
    If it’s in the heat of summer, I run the 5/4 all tight when installing.
    It it’s in the cold winter I space them with a 8D common.
    Been working this way for me for decades

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Interesting. An 8 isn’t a giant nail. And I have broken many a frozen board off the stack. Good call.

  • @davidball4049
    @davidball4049 5 месяцев назад

    Spot on. Our deck in FL is PT Southern Pine, butted up tight. Perfect gap once it dried.

  • @Macismad
    @Macismad Год назад +3

    Good to know! So, would the same be true for pressure treated privacy fence pickets? I so hope you see this and are able to answer.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      100%. - When I built this fence, I installed all the 2x6 tight. 2-weeks later it was gapped about 3/8 - ruclips.net/video/d36Mtn4pH7k/видео.html

    • @Macismad
      @Macismad Год назад

      Thanks for that. I watched that video too. Nice work! I am re doing a 20 foot run with 2 5 foot gates from the ground up. The only surprise left will be when I go to put the pickets on and how it all measures out. They are 5 1/2 “ pickets. I will plan on running them tight to each other, but to avoid having to cut one thinner I will gap them maybe a little. Just have to see how it winds up. Thanks so much for your answer!

  • @Trin1019
    @Trin1019 Год назад +3

    And when it dry's out they tend to warp and push against each other and initiate movement throughout the deck.
    A gap will allow the deck floor to move individually.
    So i repair is needed it will allow the new board fit with fighting the old boards.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      When it's dry, they contract and remain right where they are.

    • @adammacer
      @adammacer Год назад

      That doesn;t make nay sense at all - as they dry they shrink, moving away from each other so how would they push against each other?

  • @steveschainost7590
    @steveschainost7590 Год назад

    Interesting comments. I have built two decks on our house. The first one, on the front, I gapped the boards at ~1/8". After several years, the gaps now range from 3/16" to 3/4". The next deck,, on the rear entrance, I did not gap but pulled the boards tight together before screwing down. Gaps are now 1/8" to 3/16" and look much nicer. I buy my PT wood from Home Depot and it is WET in the store. Lifting successive boards, you will find moisture on the surface. Note: for posts and rails I get cedar or redwood because PT wood warps and twists way too much. (Note 2: eastern Wyoming so no trees, no leaves, and no codes.)

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Outstanding preface to the conversation. In Eastern Wyoming--where we will be running through on I-80 next week--you are not getting (I'm pretty sure) "wet" Southern Pine. You're getting a Douglas fir product and the criteria is different. I really appreciate you adding this to the conversation.

  • @rickyperkins232
    @rickyperkins232 Год назад +1

    Love that FLEX impact driver

  • @matthewmindler46
    @matthewmindler46 Год назад +6

    The end grain of this board is upside down, you should always put the arch up

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Sorry dude, that's a myth. Choose the best face side and run with it.

    • @matthewmindler46
      @matthewmindler46 Год назад +5

      @@myfixituplife it’s no myth brother, one it cups and traps water two the edges become uneven because the curl up

    • @timbarry5080
      @timbarry5080 Месяц назад

      In my experience thats not a rule that can be adhered to. Often times there is damage on the boards. You have to put the best side up, otherwise there would be far too much waste . Also, to my understanding, "bark side up" is preferred for decks that don't get a lot of sun and therfore stay moist. If they are getting sun and dry out they will cup upward. .

    • @matthewbeaver5026
      @matthewbeaver5026 14 дней назад

      ​@@timbarry5080if you lay them with the crown oriented properly. They wont cup to hold water.
      They may still cup but the center will be high so the rot causing water will run off.

    • @matthewbeaver5026
      @matthewbeaver5026 14 дней назад

      ​@@myfixituplifeapparently you have 30 years experience of doing it wrong. If you believe this is a myth.

  • @johnzimmerman6516
    @johnzimmerman6516 Год назад +12

    💯 correct!! My deck has this type of wood and once the wood dries out, the gaps are perfect at 1/8” to 3/16”. Also, sink your screw 1/8” below the surface or they will protrude once the wood is dry.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      With you all the way. And yes, just a slight countersink and you're good to go. Keep up the good work.

    • @rencleavus5213
      @rencleavus5213 Год назад +2

      Never sink screws that deep, rainwater will collect in the countersink and hasten decay. Leave them just flush with the surface.

    • @koozizzel
      @koozizzel Год назад +1

      Install hidden fasteners. No issues. Rows of screws look terrible

  • @MrRoberoni117
    @MrRoberoni117 Год назад

    Nice pipes brother!! Hope you’re getting after it every SINGLE day!!

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yeah man. Thank you. Between work and working out, I try to get after it all the time. The gym - work balance isn’t what it could be, but it’s not nothing. - You too, bro. Hammer it.

  • @RobertWGreaves
    @RobertWGreaves Год назад +12

    When you buy pressure treated wood, you have no way of knowing how much it may have already dried out. Perhaps you can weigh the boards. Last time I bought pressure treated lumber to redo my old deck, the boards varied considerably in weight. I decided to simply lay them down without attaching them. Only after they dried did I screw them in.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      You're not the only one to bring this up. If that works for you, terrific. But no contractor alive can stay in business doing this. And those boards were twisted AF.

    • @edgarloike
      @edgarloike Год назад

      Variability of grain density in each board changes the weight a bit too. Cant you get a moisture meter that doesnt stab the wood?

  • @kirkwise1107
    @kirkwise1107 Год назад +4

    So what about cold temperature and snow. What happened when it expands 😮

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      It expands. It doesn’t expand to maximum moisture content. Remember, snow isn’t liquid water until it melts, then it usually melts slowly. And drains through the gaps. The wood never goes back to from-the-mill moisture content.

    • @kirkwise1107
      @kirkwise1107 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife 🤞

    • @johnunsicker7440
      @johnunsicker7440 Год назад +1

      @@kirkwise1107 Don't listen to this guy. Talk to the treatment place and get the truth.

  • @qualityonebuildingsolution802
    @qualityonebuildingsolution802 Год назад +1

    We build a lot of decks in Winnipeg, MB. We always leave a 1/8” space. All the decks still look great.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      You're way west and north of me. What kind of decking do you use?

    • @qualityonebuildingsolution802
      @qualityonebuildingsolution802 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife our weather here fluctuates so much. We go from -35 degrees celsius to plus 30 degrees Celsius. The lumber is also hit or miss. Some pieces are really wet like you said and others are really dry.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      @@qualityonebuildingsolution802 Interesting. Our weather fluctuates, of course but the lumber-at least from my supplier-isn’t in their yard long enough to even have the top boards on the bunk drier than the ones from inside. It’s all high moisture content PT Southern Pine. What species do you get up there?

    • @johnunsicker7440
      @johnunsicker7440 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife I'm calling bs on the moisture content the center will always be wetter then the outside. Moisture meter will prove this. Just a known fact. Only way it will not be is if it comes right out of the treatment place to the jobsite the same day. Once it hit the outside dryer air and its in bunks the outside starts to dry and inside is wet still.

  • @amclaughlin681
    @amclaughlin681 Год назад +6

    Wouldn't they swell again when wet and make it so there is no gap

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +2

      They will for sure. All decking, even composite, does. But they'll never swell to full moisture content. That's the entire point of this method.

    • @jonathonfrederick2062
      @jonathonfrederick2062 Год назад +1

      @@myfixituplife composite decking doesn't absorb moisture or swell when wet. it expands and contracts to temperature changes but always requires a gap. I think the issue is that people want a gap even during the rainy season.

    • @johnunsicker7440
      @johnunsicker7440 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife You are wrong. IF the board is dryer when you put it in and it get wet then it will expand to father then when you put it in. Proven fact in the building trades groups. Good composite will not swell in moisture the cheap junk that is just glue and press wood will. And no not all decking will swell. Mine doesn't swell at all and it barely expand and contract either. I have aluminum decking. IT is one of the only one that doesn't get hot when the sun it beating on it.

  • @uofudavid
    @uofudavid Год назад +16

    That chisel is creating a great spot for the rot to start.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      Not. No it isn't.

    • @somenteasescrituras4064
      @somenteasescrituras4064 Год назад +1

      Uofudavid
      You are the kind of people no one wants at the job site.
      I know a few like you, they claim to know everything about everything, and when I check their work. It looks mediocre.

    • @johnunsicker7440
      @johnunsicker7440 Год назад +4

      @@myfixituplife Actually it is causing a place for water to sit and get into the lumber. IF you ever have tore off old decking you see that the only place that is bad is where the screw went in to the lumber. Your lazy and don't want to us the deck board straighten they have out now. Do it right or don't do it at all and don't saw things that are not right. Your a hack at best.

    • @adammacer
      @adammacer Год назад +3

      @@myfixituplife Sorry, but he's right on that point - you've just penetrated the upper surface of the joist RIGHT where moisture is going to get deposited

    • @trollop4866
      @trollop4866 Год назад +1

      ​@@somenteasescrituras4064 He didn't claim to know everything he's just making a solid point. Life is much better when you're not bitter and open to being wrong sometimes 😜

  • @leedanielson7452
    @leedanielson7452 Год назад

    He is 100% absolutely correct!!!

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yessir! Wet wood shrinks. People keep saying they get "dry" PT lumber. I'm not sure how that's possible, but they say it nonetheless.

  • @2121contreras
    @2121contreras Год назад +6

    You are 100% correct. Those deck boards shrink a lot over time . If you gap them they will get even bigger. And yes i use a chisel to move them over. Looks like you came from the same school of building that I did.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +2

      Yessir. All day. Keep up the good work.

    • @MrFlarespeed
      @MrFlarespeed Год назад +3

      I see you gapped your words

    • @freddymax5256
      @freddymax5256 Год назад +1

      And driving a chisel into the edge of board doesn’t leave a hole where moisture can penetrate and deteriorate it over time?

    • @richardcranium3579
      @richardcranium3579 Год назад

      @@freddymax5256it does. Leaves a hole to trap water and dirt

  • @TheTinker6871
    @TheTinker6871 Год назад +14

    My first was installed like this. Being outside, they never dried out and cupped and held water and slush. Second deck, they wanted to do it that way. It never dried out like I told them. Collected water like I told them it would. Told them to get their asses back there and do it the way I wanted in the first place. Alls good now. Problem is, builders think it srinks but never go back to look. Meybe in Arizona, but Im in the northeast.

    • @trustme7731
      @trustme7731 Год назад +1

      It shrinks significantly in Minnesota.
      Cupping is because the installed the boards upside down.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      We're in PA and this deck--and every other one I've installed--gaps to 3/8-inch in about 2-weeks. Never swells closed again.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Cupping is a myth. It seems like it makes sense, but it doesn't. I checked this deck this week and the boards are all flat.

    • @TheTinker6871
      @TheTinker6871 Год назад +1

      How old is that deck?

  • @hughgard4707
    @hughgard4707 Год назад

    this dude IS right ! I've been decking since 1975 and the very BEST advice is lay your boards spread out on the deck for 2 to 3 weeks if at all possible to dry or in a garage layed out on blocks for air flow..(new boards also shrink in length).. then STILL do not gap them ..1/4 inch is what u want and they will still gap themselves as they cure ..if u install kiln wet boards w gaps , the ends will shrink too and u end up w over 1/2 inch which is bad.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Couple things, I'm glad you agree with butting them tight. It works. That you've been in the game since '75...you should be given a Smokey and the Bandit Trans Am. What an achievement. If you're spreading out your deck package (which I cannot do) how do you keep the boards from twisting as they dry?

  • @carpenterconners7441
    @carpenterconners7441 11 месяцев назад

    Absolutely right

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  11 месяцев назад

      All day. Keep up the good work.

  • @yeltsin6817
    @yeltsin6817 Год назад +5

    I think it best to still gap. My neighbour didn’t do that a few years ago and had a low ground level deck. He is having some issues. My deck is 2 to 3 feet off grade but was completely sealed off due to animals burrowing under. I ended up having to replace all the boards and also installed joist tape and then added some west ward facing vents with metal rodents screening on the east and west sides to let the deck breathe

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yes, a deck needs to have some air flow. Still, I'm surprised. I've built docks and swim floats like this and thrown them in the ocean and gaps still opened up.

  • @allred53
    @allred53 Год назад +4

    I would never put them on tight. Use a nail for a spacer. About 1/8. They will dry out and shrink but never will be too tight

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      They'll never be too tight doing it like this and I don't have to mess around with nails and spacers.

    • @Twistedredlab
      @Twistedredlab Год назад

      Hell no, always tight. If I didn't make them tight I'd have 1/4" spacing, I put my decking tight tight and end up with a nice 3/32 gap.

    • @johnunsicker7440
      @johnunsicker7440 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife BS your just lazy if you get a dryer board and space tight and it gets wet it will be to tight. Think yoiu really need to go back and talk to some good builders and lumber some lumber companies and get yourself set straight.

  • @Ballsy_
    @Ballsy_ Год назад

    Seems like a tip I needed to hear for future seld

  • @jeffreykreft5442
    @jeffreykreft5442 11 месяцев назад

    he is absolutely correct! been a builder for over 40 years now, and this is the way we have always done it, and never had a problem, ever!

  • @michaelbelle4702
    @michaelbelle4702 Год назад

    Thanks for information

  • @pfsmith007
    @pfsmith007 Год назад

    I didn't know this. Thanks man.

  • @davidbrabham3623
    @davidbrabham3623 Год назад +31

    Do not follow this guy’s instructions in the northwest we get enough rain to where the heck expansion during the winter will rip the deck apart

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +10

      I've ben hoping somebody from the PNW would chime in and offer some input. We use high moisture content Southern Pine. It dries and shrinks leaving a 3/8-inch gap that never fully closes back up, even with snow. - I know your framing lumber is incised fir, but what about the decking? PT fir too? Cedar? - All those would need gaps.

    • @rotemtomhagbi1937
      @rotemtomhagbi1937 Год назад +7

      Another keyboard warrior you could have said , depending on the area you're from. I'm from south California where they will shrink 1/2 inch at least baking in the sun .

    • @trick58
      @trick58 Год назад

      @@myfixituplifeI’m putting on cedar in the PNW (Idaho) next week. So gap? I think so, would love experienced opinions.)

    • @WilsonRA.2
      @WilsonRA.2 Год назад +1

      ​@trick58 always gap with decking. In washington State, not doing so will have tremendous consequences. I can only imagine it's the same in idaho

    • @Nick-be5hh
      @Nick-be5hh Год назад +1

      I built a ton of decks in Vancouver and we always gapped 1/16 or 1/8 and never had any problems. I moved to Ontario and all decking is installed right like this and exactly as described, the decking shrinks but doesn’t expand back over the content that it came with so therefore doesn’t over swell causing cupping or cracking.
      If it’s not a species related detail then it must be the environmental moisture in the PNW means the wood doesn’t shrink as much as opposed to here where it will dry out much more.
      Just my thoughts on this.

  • @seepictures7669
    @seepictures7669 Год назад +7

    He puts they tight so his high heels don’t get caught between the boards.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      Can't have our stilettos (or chair legs) caught.

  • @IdealistINFP
    @IdealistINFP Год назад +1

    I’ve got 5 year old treated deck boards that are precisely the same width and the new ones I bought this year. Just saiyan.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +5

      There a a zillion different inputs here. Maybe the new ones you bought were on top of the stack for a while and dried out accordingly. My main question is: Why do you need new deck boards for a 5-year old deck?

  • @valeriewilliams5013
    @valeriewilliams5013 Год назад

    Thanks for the info , you stay Bless 🙏🏽 and Safe 😇💯👵🏽

  • @sunsunbubbles5272
    @sunsunbubbles5272 Год назад +5

    I've been installing decks for about 159 yrs now , I pressure treat all my own lumber that I grow in my back yard.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yes you do! You should look in the Facebook comments for the "Losers and Virgins" guy. You'd be fast friends.

    • @chrisperrien7055
      @chrisperrien7055 Год назад

      Using copper-naphalate I hope.😎

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      @@chrisperrien7055 Not with SP. It’s treated through and through.

  • @TheDJOblivion
    @TheDJOblivion Год назад +3

    I set em butt tight and spray about 75 rnds of .223 for drainage, never works but its fun and the customer never complains...to my face. 😊

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      Drainage matters How you get there is up to you! Aesthetics are personal.

    • @dejavu666wampas9
      @dejavu666wampas9 Год назад

      Awesome comment 👏👏

  • @polgirinokaaz7470
    @polgirinokaaz7470 11 месяцев назад

    He is right because it happened to me I screwed them tight and after 8 month I saw nice gaps between thank you boss

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  11 месяцев назад

      It only takes 2-weeks with most PT lumber.

  • @Brian-tu7yn
    @Brian-tu7yn 5 месяцев назад

    When I built my last deck, I intentionally left no space / almost no space to allow for board shrinking and it worked wonderfully. However, I did not force pry the boards together like this guy. I don’t think my boards would have shrank enough to overcome what he did there.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  5 месяцев назад

      I get where you're coming from. The source code for this is getting parallel from the outside band joist. - I pry the boards tight to even up the measurement. Not doing so as you go--and I am glad your deck worked--creates other problems.

  • @DanMcClelland
    @DanMcClelland Год назад +3

    Always gap your boards a minimum of three eights inch. You will end up with approximately half inch cap which is perfect. Let dirt debris and especially small leaves and twigs go through.

    • @joeadorjan1206
      @joeadorjan1206 Год назад +2

      Absolutely not. Tight as possible will get you 1/4-3/8+ once dried.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Wet PT SY pine gaps 3/8s by doing nothing. Where I build, a 1/2-inch gap may not be noticed, but it's not the product I want to deliver.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yup.

  • @AxelFoley317
    @AxelFoley317 Год назад

    I live in the Midwest and I can say that after two years of a deck being down with covid era PT lumber...we just had to have ours redone to remove massive gaps. When first laid it was lovely 1/8 in gaps, but after the seasons...it opened up in some places to .5 to .75 in which is unsafe and ugly. The covid era wood of all varieties was VERY wet and of lower quality in general. It still sucks but its slowly getting better.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Just that you link Covid to your deck, no. Yes, there were interruptions in logging and other meta economic issues with a years log runway, yes. But the retention levels--to my knowledge--saw no changes.

  • @leerisher6205
    @leerisher6205 Месяц назад

    I live in South Carolina I built my deck just like this guy I put the boards as tight as I could 1 year later I have 1/2" happy between all them in the south they gap bad carry on all your professionals lol

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Месяц назад

      All wet lumber shrinks. In South Carolina--not far from where it is pressure cooked water-borne chemical--I get it. Nice work. - Now, about those misters ...

  • @samhunt9380
    @samhunt9380 Год назад +1

    Depending on the grain of the treated timber the gaps will end up varying in width. I only use kiln dried decking or a composite material.....and use hot dipped galvanised screws......

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Hot dipped are for real. These are Spax screws, # 10 x 2 1/2-inch. The coating is rated just below stainless steel and they're 10,000 times easier to work with because they're not soft. I can't really get KDAT decking because of the volumes I'd have to buy it in, but that's a good call on your end too.

  • @Handymanphilly
    @Handymanphilly Год назад +1

    This guy has absolutely no idea what he’s talking about. But the confidence on him. 😂

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      For the cheap seats. The "pressure" in pressure treated lumber comes from gigantic pressure cookers. That's how the chemical gets into the wood fiber. Now follow me here because a lot of you seem to not understand this: The chemical is waterborne. That water gets into the wood fiber, swelling the material, which is Southern Pine--a species uniquely suited to this process. WHEN THAT WATER DRIES OUT AFTER INSTALLATION, the wood stabilize and contracts. That contraction leaves a 3/8-inch gap and the wood never swells to pressure cooker moisture content again.

    • @Handymanphilly
      @Handymanphilly Год назад

      @@myfixituplife that’s not entirely accurate. You can’t predict the changes in the wood, even if pressure-treated, to 100% certainty. I’ve replaced countless decks where pressure-treated wood had been installed as you described in this video what it does is trap, moisture and debris between the slats and make the wood rot at a faster rate.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      @@Handymanphilly How many is “countless”? And where? What species of lumber? What time period?

  • @BrianLawrence-vk3pu
    @BrianLawrence-vk3pu 25 дней назад

    #1. Gapping does not increase decking life for any lumber. All wood, treated or not, will shrink enough in 12 weeks to allow for water shed.
    #2. You are correct about punturing joists. There is a joist pry tool made to utilize physics that straightens decking without damaging joists. It costs about $100 and requires only seconds to use.
    #3. The most important step almost every installer ingnores is the most important. It is crowning the cup. Nearly all boards have a natural cup when examined by cut-end. This is due to wood growth in relation to rings and becomes more exaggerated as the wood dries. Almost every contractor orients decking with the wrong test. The aesthetic quality of deck boards should be secondary to cup orientation.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  24 дня назад

      @@BrianLawrence-vk3pu 1 - I love that you speak in list format. Gold. - 2 - I’ve been using a chisel for 35-years. I haven’t found a situation yet where I needed a different tool. I’m not saying you’re wrong, I’m just saying what I see on all my decks. 4 - As for cupping, I do disagree, Yes, it makes sense, but in real life put the best side up and keep rolling.

  • @tophauler8626
    @tophauler8626 2 месяца назад

    Ive heard both ways which is confusing as a greenhorn homeowner but im redoing an old deck with original joist so I wanna keep from the gap minimal to prolong the joist long as possible

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  2 месяца назад

      Hopefully, I can help. Pressure treated Southern Pine arrives at your doorstep at something like 25% moisture content. This is by design. Slam them tight and it is INEVITABLE they'll dry out to a 3/8-inch gap. Also--and we have another video on this--DO NOT miter your top caps. For the same reason--moisture leaving the wood changes its shape--the miter will open at the bottom and close at the top.

  • @mikegrier2829
    @mikegrier2829 Год назад

    I’m just a DIY guy, but I’ve built two decks. I did not gap the first one. Sure enough the boards did shrink and there was a big enough gap for water to get through, but I had a maple tree nearby that puts out those little whirligigs every year. Those would get stuck in the gaps and were a real pain to clean out. So, second time around I gapped using a #2 pencil. Problem solved and the gaps were not too big.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Your gaps have to be nearly an inch. No homeowner in their right mind would pay for that.

  • @danielwimberly7806
    @danielwimberly7806 Год назад +1

    It all depends on location and if the deck is covered or not in my opinion. It’s definitely easier to not set the gap but if the deck is uncovered the gap should be larger to allow for debris to fall through.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      This lands in a personal preference zone. This deck is in a wood area--not directly under trees, but lots of leaf debris close--and it's not clogged. Hitting the deck with a blower from time to time might be a solution, too.

    • @danielwimberly7806
      @danielwimberly7806 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife I have to disagree with that. There’s not a one size fits all for putting down deck boards some situation’s warrant more of a gap. But as I said, this is my opinion

  • @seejanedrill
    @seejanedrill Год назад

    A lot will depend on time of year the deck is being built

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      I guess. Not for me. I get deck packages in winter that are so wet they're frozen together.

  • @mr-vet
    @mr-vet Месяц назад

    Wish the installers for my 62’ long raised pine deck (varies in depth from 9’ to 14’; with three sets of stairs) had put them in tight together. I have gaps ranging from 1/8th” to almost 1/2”. I live on a forested property, so all kinds of debris gets stuck between the deck boards. Leaf blower doesn’t do a very good job in removing them, but pressure washer does. Eventually, I’ll replace them with composite.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Месяц назад

      Most of us don't build forested properties. All the same, composite gaps to about 1/4-inch, uniformly. Changing the decking might not solve your problem.

  • @darengibney7357
    @darengibney7357 Год назад +1

    You are correct regarding pt lumber. Different with cedar.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      Yessir. Cedar's moisture content is way lower that PT. Gap it.

    • @trick58
      @trick58 Год назад

      Thank you. I’m guessing you have experience with cedar? I’m putting it in next week.

  • @Bryan-wq1ng
    @Bryan-wq1ng 11 месяцев назад

    Experts have given their holy advice. Look build it the way you want. Being in the south pull them tight. If you're up north leave a gap. I agree with this man. They will dry and shrink. It doesn't really matter what advice you give because their is someone who always knows how to do it better.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  10 месяцев назад +1

      I love it. The ExpertGods do speak from on high, "ex cathedra" if you like Catholic and Latin stuff. - Love your perspective. Chime in any time.

  • @coacoa289
    @coacoa289 Месяц назад

    We've installed them tight for years and we build in southeast Georgia..and correct they create a gap when they dry ..

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Месяц назад

      Nice. Those deck boards you're using were probably grown and milled not far from where you build. Good stuff.

  • @user-gl4ox8hu7i
    @user-gl4ox8hu7i 6 месяцев назад +1

    All you carpenters out there. Just follow this guy around. You're going to make a fortune fixing his mistakes.😂

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  6 месяцев назад

      Oh, you mistake fixer guys are my favorites. It's almost like you don't know how successful businesses work.

  • @anthonygoolsby4268
    @anthonygoolsby4268 Год назад

    I’ve built thousands of decks and he is 100 percent correct!If you leave a gap then in one year you will have huge gaps between each deck board.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      1,000s of decks--dude, you are a beast. Love it and thank you.

  • @buck9739
    @buck9739 Год назад

    I didn’t realize good they know. Thx

  • @roberttill3787
    @roberttill3787 Год назад +2

    As it dries out you will get a gap, but on the same reasoning the board will soak up moisture and swell. This then makes the boards twist and buckle over time.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      No. They never achieve the saturation they arrive on site with.

    • @roberttill3787
      @roberttill3787 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife Any absorbant material such as wood will adjust its water percentage to that of its surroundings, so in spring will shrink through summer, and in autumn (Fall) to winter it will soak up moisture. This means that the wood will vary in dimension at any given point in the year. Its sizr will never be constant.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      @@roberttill3787 correct. However, it’ll never reach the saturation point it shows up with unless sea level rises.

  • @patrickcowan8701
    @patrickcowan8701 26 дней назад

    Built tons of decks. Cedar, PT always leave an 8" gap . No problems.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  26 дней назад

      AN 8-INCH GAP! - Kidding. I believe you. - I leave a 16-d nail for cedar (that's how old I am by the way; it also works). PT where I work...spacing is a waste of time. - I have little doubt you do good work and care for your customers. The last thing I'm gonna do is harp on 1/8th. - Keep 'em comin'

  • @mikecuntala9675
    @mikecuntala9675 Год назад

    100% works every time with fresh from the yard deck boards. Only time I’ve seen it not work is when people have the material sitting on site for weeks and the boards are already shrunk or shrinking.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yessir! 100% my experience. I've even had one package sit for months (don't ask) and the bunks were still high moisture content when I installed them. Maybe the top 2 layers had dried, but the center lumber was way wet. Thanks. Keep up the good work.

  • @davekirkpatrick5724
    @davekirkpatrick5724 11 месяцев назад

    Yes, I learned that the hard way. Tore it all up a few years later and put down composite decking.

  • @Book-Gnome
    @Book-Gnome Год назад

    I use a medium size Phillips head screw driver to gap in Central NY. Only built 4-5 decks (all for myself) but they all turn out fine and yes even with a wider than most gap they still collect leaves and such.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      You've easily got a 1/2-inch gap. No good for me. Gathering media from the trees is a maintenance issue.

    • @Book-Gnome
      @Book-Gnome Год назад

      @@myfixituplife I just measured my gaps on a deck I built last Sept or Oct and I'm at a consistent 3/8". Even if they grow to a full 1/2" over the next year I'm fine with that. Makes for good drainage and plant material easily flushed out with a garden hose. There will be no mold or moss growing in my gaps.

  • @dsm9785
    @dsm9785 Год назад

    I use joist tape before installing the decking, helps save the joist from water penetration and freezing making them split. Also they make a tool that hooks on the joist so you can move/pry the decking where you want it. As for spacing, if wet I’ll put them close together, and if dry leave a gap. P/T moves all over the place and will shrink and expand a lot. It’s not consistent. It will get slippery as hell also if mold and mildew build up on it.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      All good tips. I appreciate the input. I've never gotten PT dry enough to gap. Interesting.

    • @dsm9785
      @dsm9785 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife Haha, me neither really. I did have some in the shop for awhile and used it to build a new step for a customer. that was pretty dry, he never had any issues with it.

  • @TTownTim
    @TTownTim Год назад

    Thx!..In ALL wood decking, time of year, moisture content and type of wood play a role in shrinkage and expansion. Good tip, man! synthetics tend to shrink and expand lengthwise not width wise but natural wood will do both. Enjoy the 4th of July weekend!!

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      AWESOME information. 100% on composites! When you install them in the winter, you need to leave gaps so they can expand in the summer (it's a little nerve wracking, to me). - Chime in any time.

  • @glennjames7107
    @glennjames7107 Год назад

    I myself prefer to gap mine so that after alls said and done, I wind up with about a 1/4" gap between boards. This ensures the deck will drain well, and as a bonus it won't hold dirt, and sand anywhere near as much as pulling them tight. Where I live, the ease of keeping sand off the deck is a major selling point. If you can keep the sand off the deck, that's that much more kept out of the house !

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Yes, if you gap it 1/4-inch, it'll be gapped 1/4-inch, when you're done. two weeks later, it'll be 1/2-inch. There's just no need to gap boards that'll shrink to a 3/8-inch gap without any extra steps required.

  • @bobbo9549
    @bobbo9549 Год назад

    Here in england I install with a 10mm 3/8” gap as with amount of rain we get that gap will become 6mm - 1/4” in no time. If pulled in tight where does the expansion have room to go.
    Using a flooring joist clamp you can easily lay, space and clamp 4 - 5 boards at a time without damaging the board edges breaching the dipped anti rot coat.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      Hey England! You certainly do have a higher dew point year round than us, give or take, and even though we're on a parallel with Lisbon, you're way milder. What species of lumber are you using. What are the chemical retention levels? What's the chemical? Is it rated for ground contact? Can we discuss this in a pub over a pint?

    • @bobbo9549
      @bobbo9549 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife mainly softwood as customer wants to keep cost down. Sometimes hemlock and on occasion composite recycled plastic/timber mix but with its hardiness and straightness its expense.
      Using joist clamps and clamping rows at a time with a few temporary bearers secured though the gaps to keep them down to stop then lifting during clamping the process doesn’t take that much longer really
      I always advise do not paint with decking paint as it look great when done but looks tatty 2 years later and the you have paints it each year. Far better to let it weather a year than when good and dried out coat with a clear or tinted wood preserver as if soaks in as opposed to painting with minimal absorption and the remainder sitting on top waiting be worn off.
      I’d never fix direct to ground and the boards can never dry out.
      I’ve installed over existing concrete slabs but always on composite or plastic 2 x 2 bearers to keep them out the puddled water. Can get away with 2 x 1 if run off is good but often not if DIY install. Best way is to veiw after rain and see how big/deep the puddles are.

  • @terryjones8360
    @terryjones8360 7 дней назад

    That's the way i do it too. Works perfectly when they shrink a bit. However, I put joist tape on every joist.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  6 дней назад

      Joist tape is fine. - I've taken apart so many decades old decks--and our Code isn't asking or it--that I know this deck is there for a generation.

    • @terryjones8360
      @terryjones8360 6 дней назад

      @@myfixituplife I replaced a 15 year old deck that was built by a contractor. The joists were very rotten, as well as the decking. Just trying to see that doesn't happen again by using the tape.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  День назад

      @@terryjones8360 Yessir. Belt and suspenders. - The towns I build in aren’t requiring it. It doesn’t mean tape isn’t a good call. - I do tape all my composite. decks. It hides the green lumber under the colored plastic.

  • @joeransom1567
    @joeransom1567 Год назад

    Built many piers decked, many piers, which used pressure treated 2x6, on the sun they will shrink so we never used a gap unless had to square up a side, bang a 20 penny nail between each board to bring it around some. Comes back a month later or couple months maybe there’s always a little gap

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      You, sir, sound old school. I hand-banged many a deck (they were docks and swim floats we put in the ocean, but same idea). The hand-drive toe nail is a thing of utter beauty.

  • @gavett
    @gavett Год назад +1

    What is that tool you are using to pull the new board up tight to the previous board?

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      It's an old 3/4-inch chisel. When you drive it into the boar, make sure the bevel is facing the edge of the board and the flat side is away from you.

  • @joem7062
    @joem7062 5 месяцев назад

    The same guys who say the catspaw marks and not gapping soaking wet deck boards are going to rot the deck are the same guys who put butyl tape on their joists then drill holes thrugh it while each season that tape loosens, then you have water penetration through the fastner holes and sitting under the tape rotting the joists faster. This mans technique is absolutely correct. This is what you do when you have built many decks and know what works and what doesnt. Sometimes the simple solution really is the best one. The butyl taping, gapping wet boards guys should stick to building decks on home depot deck blocks in their moms backyard.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  5 месяцев назад

      Yessir. - Butyl tape isn't in our code yet and I think--while I love it for lots of things, like hiding PT under composite, and sealing a ledger against a masonry flashing (I like Spax Tape for this) the PT industry has got this down. -- Thank you. Chime in any time.

  • @hawkeyebricks9905
    @hawkeyebricks9905 Год назад

    I learned this the hard way. I put a small gap between each one and they all shrunk quite a bit. Menards wood is the worst. I also had a perfect miter on my hand rail and two days later it looks horrible. Gonna have to redo it. And let the board dry before installing. Good thing it's a small deck. I'm not going to go super tight like you did. But I'll just set them flush.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      A lot of people do. Part of the reason I set them super tight is so that I'm running parallel to the outside band joist. If you start working various gaps, I think you're going to have trouble. - All miters in wet lumber open up. They drive in at the toe and retreat at the heel. I use what I call a "stepped" transition. It's in this video - ruclips.net/video/kAChBcgxZqw/видео.html - Home Center lumber is...try a pro lumber yard. Get the material delivered.

  • @dimsumnimsum5425
    @dimsumnimsum5425 21 день назад

    So few things . If you buy lumber and its rained in the last few days , then you can do smaller gap or no gap ( still wouldn't recommend no gap) . But the biggest issue is where you are . Im in central canadian praries , we have a humitity level that will dry you out faster then a women at a comic book convention . So when it rains , the wood soaks up alot of water and has a huge expantion . If your at one of the coasts , the would will keep a decent humitiy and wont expand as much when it rains

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  20 дней назад

      >>>women at a comic book convention

  • @DannyB-cs9vx
    @DannyB-cs9vx Год назад

    I made a flatbed for a pickup truck. I used a nail as a spacer. After a year there was like 1/2" between them.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      100%. Same as my trailer...ack...30-years old...the guy who works on it for me wasn't even born when I bought it...Perfect for tires and trash an sittin' in the yard.

  • @longjingshen5473
    @longjingshen5473 Год назад

    When installing a deck board....
    Make sure its long enough!😂

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      That's right. But not too long or the one that goes next to it won't be nailed to anything :)

  • @MusicAsWeMakeIt
    @MusicAsWeMakeIt Год назад +1

    I use a small allen key to space them. You're the first ive heard say this

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      It seems you're not the only one who hasn't heard this before. I've been building decks (and before that docks--that we put in the ocean) for 35-years with PT lumber in the Northeast. That Allen key, while a good idea, is just extra work that serves no master.

    • @MusicAsWeMakeIt
      @MusicAsWeMakeIt Год назад

      @@myfixituplife ah. The northeast. Climate makes a difference. Summers with 80% humidity in southern Ontario, oy. However, having built only 3 decks, the first 22 years old as built, a gap is smarter for a more humid climate.
      Based on a lot of comments and videos I've seen, I stand by words, you're the first I've seen do this. The greatest issue is drainage, esp with snow loads. Anyhow. Cheers

  • @layan76
    @layan76 2 месяца назад

    I'm so glad I watched your video before building the deck. I was also thinking of using PT Southern Pine. May I have your advice? I'm thinking of painting the floor. Do I need to paint my deck after it has dried sufficiently? Or can I paint right after the deck is finished? Should I leave a gap between the deck boards in this case? One more question, do you recommend 10x?

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  2 месяца назад

      Awesome. Thank you. We make these videos for DIYers like yourself. - PT pine is a great choice, it’s not perfect but you know what: Nothing is. - I think by “paint” you mean “stain”. I do not recommend paint. Yes, choose a deck stain you like the color of-the darker the stain, the longer it’ll last. 100% wait for the wood. To dry out. Typically, that is 6-months after installation. DO NOT apply a coating before the wood has dried. - DO NOT leave a gap for coatings. - I don’t know what 10X is. Thank you. Good luck. Please let us know if you have any questions.

  • @dwaynebrownsr9646
    @dwaynebrownsr9646 Год назад

    STOP THE MADNESS!!!!

  • @franks.6134
    @franks.6134 2 месяца назад

    I'll come by in a couple of years and redeck it with camo. Ty.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  2 месяца назад

      Yeah, when the moisture content has stabilized Camo would work. Until then, however, good luck.

  • @RandomsFandom
    @RandomsFandom Год назад +6

    Always pre gap the wood, otherwise the boards will rip out if they do happen to swell. Boards move. I've installed many decks, and many hardwood floors. The difference is climate and moisture controll.

    • @joeadorjan1206
      @joeadorjan1206 Год назад +1

      No, not at all correct.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +2

      These boards will not “happen to swell”. They WILL swell, they just won’t swell to out-of-the mill moisture content. Installing them tight means they contract, leaving ample room for them to swell without making a gap so large it eats chair legs and the wheels of the grill fall in between them.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад +1

      @@joeadorjan1206 I agree. Also, flooring expands and contracts as a membrane. You leave the gaps around the perimeter, so the whole thing has room to move as a unit.

    • @MusicAsWeMakeIt
      @MusicAsWeMakeIt Год назад

      @@myfixituplife flooring (inside).decking outside. Flooring one piece. Decking 1000s of pieces. WTEF are you talking about. SMH

    • @johnunsicker7440
      @johnunsicker7440 Год назад

      @@myfixituplife Not if it has been drying for more then 5 minutes lumber start to dry right out of the treatment process and the inside lumber of a bunk is wetter then the outside and will not have the same moisture content. Any good treatment place will tell you this and person ever buying PT lumber will know the closer to the center the wetter the lumber is in a bunk. The outside could be about dry and then inside is like you just pulled if from a pond.

  • @user-dk1cy5wf1q
    @user-dk1cy5wf1q Год назад

    Satisfying

  • @gagecrozier7672
    @gagecrozier7672 Год назад

    Built plenty of decks in the Piedmont of NC. Don’t gap the pressure treated wood, unless it’s already kiln dried, which is why half the comments about actually gapping were probably people using kiln dried wood, or the deck was built in a wet vegetative area. You just need to use experience and your best judgement. Sometime you should gap, sometimes you shouldn’t. When it’s wet pressure treated wood, you don’t gap, when it’s kiln dried already shrank pt wood, you should probably gap it.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  11 месяцев назад

      Chime in any time. Nice work.

  • @slingbart705
    @slingbart705 Год назад

    I'm near Chicago and the weather swings wildly that you cannot install like this. When it rains alot the 5/4 wood swells shut and puddles appear, you have to gap the boards. when its dry for a week or so, i maybe have 3/16" gaps.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      With Southern Pine? I'm near Philadelphia and your weather on the whole is probably more extreme than ours but we get the same swings.

  • @danthecarpenterman9463
    @danthecarpenterman9463 Год назад +1

    This depends on your geographic area and how wet the wood is , this works sometimes not all the time

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      In theory, I guess. But the entire supply chain, as I understand it, is set up for wet wood to arrive on site and gap itself naturally. I don't know of a single lumber yard that keeps PT around long enough for it to get dry and still be in business.

    • @richardcranium3579
      @richardcranium3579 Год назад

      Theyre set up to deliver wet wood to match the market. They won’t wait around for it to dry out as wood not moved doesn’t bring in $$.
      CCA (chromium copper arsenate) treatment makes the wood harder and more brittle when dry as compared to untreated. It does the same to utility poles.
      Want a great looking deck? Buy the lumber ahead of time, store it covered lightly for awhile to let it dry and then put it together.

  • @andrewacton5885
    @andrewacton5885 Год назад

    wow, reading these comments... maybe u guys live in a different part of the country? with different pressure treated material? every PT deck I build, I put the boards tight. lots of those decks belong to repeat customers. every time I'm back at their house doing mlre projects, i check their deck and the gaps ended up perfect. this man isn't lying

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  Год назад

      What you said. All day. And good on you for checking your previous work. Happy to hear what you think any time. Lots of people could learn from your approach to customer service.

  • @ranger2316
    @ranger2316 4 месяца назад

    I agree.

    • @myfixituplife
      @myfixituplife  4 месяца назад

      Yup. How wood and moisture works.