Restoring an Ancient Barn | Part 5
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- Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
- 288-Year-Old Doorstop & The Slim: carlrogers.co
Patreon: / carlrogers
Insta: / carlroge
Part 1: • Restoring an Ancient B...
Part 2: • Restoring an Ancient B...
Part 3: • Restoring an Ancient B...
Part 4: • Restoring an Ancient B...
Part 5: • Restoring an Ancient B...
Part 6: • Restoring an Ancient B...
This barn roof was built alongside the original farmhouse in 1732, which makes it 288 years old. Over the years its clay tiles have been replaced with cement boards, and a leaking corner has rotted away some of the oak frame. It was time for it to be returned to its former glory. This is Part 5 of a 6 Part series documenting the restoration. If you want to follow along, please subscribe!
With Ryan's ruclips.net/user/postUgkxy_pn55PK60wAV3X_C_RoLS_67mNonoCE plan I was like one taken by the hand and led step by step from start to finish. Thank you very much Ryan!
You guys are so talented, I love wood it’s so tactile and can be crafted so many ways. I am super glad you are only replacing what needs to be replaced, and leaving the difference between old and new visible.🙏🏻 mad respect. Yes I know it’s a year since you posted this, doesn’t change the respect 🙋♀️🇦🇺
You are by far one of the greatest channels on RUclips! Your craftsmanship is unparalleled! Festool and Makita tools are definitely built to withstand the toughest tasks. Nobody does joinery the way you do! It’s absolutely incredible!!!!!!!! Another great part of this series!!!!!!
thanks Patrick - really glad you enjoyed it
The craftsmanship is fantastic to watch and appreciate. Your filming of the whole process is superb, it puts you right in the middle of the work you and your dad are doing. Finally the drone footage just takes it to the next level. The property is amazing and you and your dad are fantastic custodians.
Ps. The work you are doing reminds me of Kris Harbour. The filming quality and editing reminds me of Andrew Camareta.
Thanks Elaine! I spend more hours than I should watching Camarata - would love some of his gear
It's looking magnificent! I did a small roof a while back, I can't imagine how expensive all that beautiful wood/material will have cost when you finish. (worth it, for sure!!)
Yes, I couldn't help my own thoughts acting like a cash machine - as in 'yikes' - but what a privilege to watch, a marriage of fantastic skills, materials - and someone prepared to pay for them
So great to see this project progressing in such an excellent manner! Craftmanship at its finest. Nice work gentlemen!
Thank you sir
ty, so much, for a vid, without annoying music. without music at all. there are still normal people on YT, even if very-very few
Молодцы, приятно смотреть на работу! Как будто с вами рядом нахожусь) Будет ещё 300 лет стоять.
@Bob Carruthers hieroglyphics = "sacred carvings"
Seems appropriate :)
Действительно
Tremendous amount of work, even hard to imagine with modern tools. Love the huge oak timber and that bandsaw, YIKES, don't even want to mess with the blade off the machine. Outstanding Carl!!!!!
I could watch you guys work for hours. I would love to be on a project like this every day. Beautiful work and craftsmanship, can't wait for more.
You guys did a scarf joint!!!!! I'm a 60 y.o. carpenter and I have never seen someone do a scarf joint. Amazing. Well done to you! P.S. I've enjoyed all your videos, on the roof and on the staircase. Thanks. Skill like yours should be celebrated.
Great work, I love that you are saving a 300+ year old barn.🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺👍
Seeing the videos and the farmhouse progress is lovely. Plus I get to see the view of the Pyrenees like from my parents’ place in the next door departement in the Ariege. Lovely work guys. Pride in your work shows.
amazing craftsmanship
17:47 I use that brand of carte dor screws as well. The rusty nail is my favourite flavour though.
Woodworking and Brickwork, absolutely master class 👏👏
Carl, it is great to see the care and attention to detail even on those bits that will be covered for 100's of years, when a future tradesman will carry out some repairs or upgrades and think 'the guys that worked on this before us did a quality job'. I struggle to get tradesmen to think like this; "I know the plasterboard will cover it but that's not the point, everything has to be done correctly". Love your videos and work, the quality is wonderful.
great scarf joints guys and it boggles my mind that there have been 1.5m views and only 18k likes? how hard is it to click that like button folks?
Fabulous! Sometimes I watch stuff from USA, slim timber, sheet board and nail guns.... then I see the quality work you are doing.. chalk and cheese. Looking fw to seeing the finish!
cheers paul! those fellas sure can put up houses quickly though!
Avec vous on dirait que c'est trop facile !!!! Good job
yet another stunning example of skill and knowledge - beautiful finish
Yeehah! Tool belt arrived! It’s the Business, well done Carl. You cracked it mate. It’s perfect.
Great to see this love for craftsmanship, along with the beautiful scenery, father and son prevail 👍
As always, just wonderful. Your home will last another few hundred years, easy.
Absolute artistry. If the Heritage people aren’t happy with your work they are in the wrong job! It’s a pity that the woodwork has to be covered.
I’m in Oz and don’t get the ads 😄 Shh 🤫 I’m looking forward to the last segment of this stage. 🙏🏽🙏🏽😷😷🦘🦘
No wonder older homes last much longer than new builds. So much more high quality wood. And so much more strength
I don't know how I found your channel but I'm glad I did. Really cool project, workmanship and video editing etc. Thank you !
something really easy and cheap that you could do to prolong the life of the howl structure is to coat the beams in boiled linseed oil that you heat up to about 130 celsius. when you heat up linseed oil the oil becomes more och like water in consistency and at around 130 Celsius the oil is the same consistency as water. when you brush the hot oil on the wood the oli change place with the water on a cell level which means that the wood will last a very long time. I`m assuming that you are using White oak which itself has a very good rot resistance but in combination with the hot oil is a very good and will last a long time. other Weise great work and good luck in the future
with greetings from Sweden
Even better than oil is wax, but way more expensive and difficult to apply. It is way more likely that he is using European oak (Quercus robur) than white oak (a north american species). Cheers
As well as the great job that you are doing restoring that old barn... I love the way you dealt with repetive choirs in the video! a concerto of hammering knocks knocks, brilliant!!!
What an achievement, it’s one of the most beautiful roofs I’ve ever seen! Thank you for the episode, unbelievable work!
What a place and what a nice job your doing very good and a great video
Justin brickright 👍
HOLY CRAP! A Carl Roger's upload,...looking good Carl
I've missed it!
Thanks for posting and sharing! Amazing to see what you have accomplished!
You deserve an award from the French government! Seriously, impressive work.
Amazing work. You share some of the same methods as the barn wood builders from West Virginia, here in the USA.
1st time visitor.
Built a Post & Beam Mortise & Tenon. The Sawyer a childhood friend selected my trees, waited until Winter to drag them out and delivered up true within a quarter inch at at 30'. Putting it togeather was high anxiety. (A couple of 4 wheel trucks with winches and friends with construction yes, mortise & tenon no.) Still nothing like what you had going on there. 👏👏👏 What an incredible project.
Have to ask at some point in there did it ever occur to you, you had lost your mind? Question sanity?
Give not one thought about length, I'm here for the duration. In fact wandered off on something else for a bit came back and started at the very beginning realizing I haven't been paying close enough attention.
Appreciate your sharing. 👍
Both interesting and impressive. Watching the film with great fascination. Thanks
I am quite enchanted by the Work of the youngster. Well done
Very good job
Great workmanship. True craftsmanship
Very interesting construction. Tx for sharing. Rich
OMG! Haha. Finally! Dreaming of pulling this office day in Italy.. Love these vids. Thanks for the update!
항상 감사하며 보고 있어요 올해도 좋은일만 가득하세요~
Thank you for posting, I enjoy your good work.
Such a beautiful barn, cant wait to see it completed.. ❤
First time I've seen arris type rails used for roof rafters, there must be a good reason for this over regular rafters.
I was thinking the same , hopefully someone could shed some light on it🤔
Beautiful. A pleasure to behold. Well done!
Great product work wonders
Работа красивая, раньше такого не видел .Но крыша тяжёлая ,столько дуба ,а ещё черепица!Каждому своё.Всем здоровья и мира
Beautifully functional symmetry. Plenty of firewood in those offcuts too? Congrats, guys.
I love seeing your videos, they are fantastic. Regards from Spain
C'est superbe, merci pour cette vidéo qui me rappelle tellement de souvenir. J'en ai les larmes aux yeux. Merci.
This man does not skimp on his power tools!
great video + craftsmanship! thanks for sharing!
First of all well done !! i'm waiting impatiently for my SLIM. i'll be in Dordogne soon, if we're not in re re re Lockdown. you Guys have some mad working skills. the Gigs for the wood cutting are legend. The Festools help a lot too i've noticed. I guess I have to wait for the video. I spent my money on the Slim cheers
Hey William, I appreciate your patience, they're 90% finished and will be shipped first thing next week!
@@carlroge many thanks. patience is a virtue in the age of Covid...
lovely work team. its wonderful to see the considered detail and craftsmanship of this project.
Bravissimi!!! i I will restore and replace all the roof tiles this summer 2022 good tutorial Thanks Grazie
Excellent Work!!! Great!!!
Bombproof ! Superb work. You could put a helipad on that!
Excellent loved every minute. John Scotland🏴
You guys have a lot of skill. Enjoyed the video.
Great work and super editing.
Strong work and a pleasure to watch
I’m intrigued to see how you will terminate the roof on that genoise eave. As it currently sits, it almost looks like the roof will fall short of the end of the eave. The work so far has been awesome! Keep it up!
Great work Carl. I've just re-tiled my kitchen and the thing that kept me going through all the testicular discomfort, was remembering how detailed and methodical you and your Dad are when working on this project. I am so grateful also, for the complete lack of inane and unnecessary banter, that so many other RUclipsrs feel they have to provide. More power to you and the wind chimes. Thank you.
Very good video Enjoying all episodes so far Great skills should last hundreds more years 👍👍👍👍👍
Excellent travail
wish you could ship to us on those door stops. nice work really coming together
Didn’t know they sold Amstel in France. Very much enjoying the content!
Great video, thanks
Perfect work
Beautiful, well done.
Well done.. hello from Texas
amazing work guys!
Fantastic work. Hope your hearing survives (I have to watch with the volume right down).
Really wonderful job you ve done here guyz
Great to see another fantastic upload. The editing, content and humour are all top notch. Was wondering why you don't invest in a nail gun?
haha I'm sure a lot of people think the same. we've never really looked into them - I wonder if they would be able to punch a 4" nail into oak
@@carlroge my father always used to say "theres always a nailgun big enough"
@@carlroge probably not with the same panache that you and your old fella manage it! I'll be sending you some francs for a cafe au lait. I'll be damned if I'm waiting a fortnight for the next episode. ☕👍
The construction of the Genoise Eves is fascinating. I have never seen anything like it before. Apparently mostly regional in Tuscany. And there is very little information available online about this method. (however much more information pops up about Genoise Cake!)
Man, you're faster than the woodpeckers around here!
Great work, Carl!
I like your dad's shirt. (19:45) I live in Texas and pass by the DICKY'S Clothes factory every day in Down Town Forth Worth....for the pass 18 years. Been to Italy and Germany and Switzerland(Heathrow Airport..UK) but I've never made it to France.......YET.
PLEASE can we have some more Land Rover content! would love to see some more restoration work.
👏👍you are working so hard
amazing work well done
Cool project!!! Good job.
realmente sublime!!! amo el trabajo que hacen es increible
εξαιρετική δουλειά πολύ προσοχή στην λεπτομέρεια άψογη συνεργασία
I think I would invest in a nail gun.... That's a massive amount of work
LOL loved the Superman flashback😂
Espectacular trabajo!, realmente espero con ansias mas videos de esta remodelación. Podrías enviar la localidad donde están realizando este gran trabajo. Gracias y suerte.
Love your videos Carl. I need one of those hammers. Faster than a nail gun :)
très bon travail bravo
Fantastic content, thanks! Would love to buy some of your product but times are hard 🤣 maybe in future. Just wondering did you consider picking up a nail gun for the rafters? Can imagine you had a bit in tendinitis after a day of that!
"Spacer" traditionally called a "Story Stick".
les batiments sont superbes ! c'est un trés beau batis ancien . En plus votre rénovation est faite avec amour. Je n'ai pas pu voir si vous utilisiez du ciment ou de la chaux, c'est extremement important pour les construction anciennes (briques et pierres). En tout cas vous y mettez du coeur :)
Yay, been waiting on this
I'm a really slow editor!
But a really quick builder, it took you just 32min to fixe the roof :)
Thank you for sharing your skills.
@@besttech3216 lj
@@besttech3216 c
Wait! What was that grub!! 😳🤣🤣 Still loving the impromptu film clips. Great progress Carl n Dad. The Genoise eaves !! Proud of you! ( Re grub...Some kind of Longhorn beetle?).
By the time you guys are through that roof is gonna need replacing jk greatness takes time
Can I suggest a 21oz framing hammer instead of that carpenters hammer. Won't need to hit the nail 162 times to drive it in. Just a suggestion. Great work by the way.
Always exciting!