Wow - the ole retired furniture maker in Michigan - my house 1920 block construction - yeah did my share of roofing and that metal roof needs some help. Nice to watch a seasoned craftsman applying his trade.
Great job on video ! I’m considering buying a 1780 home. The only thing I’m worried about is the front hearth has sunk down and cracked. In the basement the footing for all 3 fireplaces on the first floor looks like it collapsed in the same corner as the main fireplace where the hearth sank and cracked. Is it a deal breaker ? I’m just concerned if that part collapsed a bit , it could crack the rest of the fireplace and chimney behind the walls. Thanks !
Hi Chad . What a great project to undertake. They are lucky to have you because over time watching your videos it's clear to me that you care about these old structures. I've been a mason for 30 years and we definitely have that in common. I think it's criminal that the people who were in there before you used anything other than lime mortars. No better way to accelerate it's deterioration than Portland products on old structures like that. Lastly I have the ultimate ridge hooks and I love/hate them. They are poorly engineered, however when you need them you need them. God bless, good luck
Thank you for the detail. The "wide-ness" of the top 10 feet would "be very cold" and I imagine the various fireplaces, when used, produced a lot of smoke, but there were probably no neighbors back then to care. Hot gasses seem to "turn back to smoke" the moment they get cold. I guess the chimney hasn't been used in decades because the "coldness" of the top, being so large, would produce a ton of creosote on those bricks and there isn't any. I suspect you will keep each chimney separate as long as you can, feeding into a smaller, main chimney that will hold its heat, being a smaller box. Also, sections and voids could be filled with perlite for insulation, and to hold heat. Maybe?
Usually only see fastened metal panels on barns would be afraid to put them on a house. Probably most houses during that period would of had wooden shakes for the roof. They do make metal shake roofing which is a bit more expensive; maybe they will replace it with a least a standing seam once the chimney is finished..
Awesome!! That was all done with hand tools back in the day. No googling, no cement mixer, no safety gear, job done perfectly with a set of plans and skilled hands.
I was quoted $100k for my center chimney Rumford fireplace restoration. Is that high? It felt high to me and the owner didn't think it could be restored, but rather demolished and rebuilt. Any advice for Western Massachusetts home?
Wow - the ole retired furniture maker in Michigan - my house 1920 block construction - yeah did my share of roofing and that metal roof needs some help. Nice to watch a seasoned craftsman applying his trade.
How can we petition to get you on the Build Show with a film crew? I’ve benge watched your videos for days never layed a brick in my life.
Perfect project. High end work when the customer cares about the result is when real craftsmanship is rewarded.
Great job on video ! I’m considering buying a 1780 home. The only thing I’m worried about is the front hearth has sunk down and cracked. In the basement the footing for all 3 fireplaces on the first floor looks like it collapsed in the same corner as the main fireplace where the hearth sank and cracked. Is it a deal breaker ? I’m just concerned if that part collapsed a bit , it could crack the rest of the fireplace and chimney behind the walls.
Thanks !
Hi Chad . What a great project to undertake. They are lucky to have you because over time watching your videos it's clear to me that you care about these old structures. I've been a mason for 30 years and we definitely have that in common. I think it's criminal that the people who were in there before you used anything other than lime mortars. No better way to accelerate it's deterioration than Portland products on old structures like that.
Lastly I have the ultimate ridge hooks and I love/hate them. They are poorly engineered, however when you need them you need them.
God bless, good luck
Jesus Christ this looks like an awesome project. Excited to see how it turns out. Almost makes me wish I could work on stuff like this haha
Thank you for the detail. The "wide-ness" of the top 10 feet would "be very cold" and I imagine the various fireplaces, when used, produced a lot of smoke, but there were probably no neighbors back then to care. Hot gasses seem to "turn back to smoke" the moment they get cold. I guess the chimney hasn't been used in decades because the "coldness" of the top, being so large, would produce a ton of creosote on those bricks and there isn't any. I suspect you will keep each chimney separate as long as you can, feeding into a smaller, main chimney that will hold its heat, being a smaller box. Also, sections and voids could be filled with perlite for insulation, and to hold heat. Maybe?
Looks like an expensive undertaking. I’m interested in seeing how you flash it with the metal roof.
Usually only see fastened metal panels on barns would be afraid to put them on a house. Probably most houses during that period would of had wooden shakes for the roof. They do make metal shake roofing which is a bit more expensive; maybe they will replace it with a least a standing seam once the chimney is finished..
Very nice video. Thank you
Awesome!! That was all done with hand tools back in the day. No googling, no cement mixer, no safety gear, job done perfectly with a set of plans and skilled hands.
Any idea where this guy is from? His accent sounds like he’s from the northeast maybe
Damn that’s a lot of work
Sweet!
I was quoted $100k for my center chimney Rumford fireplace restoration. Is that high? It felt high to me and the owner didn't think it could be restored, but rather demolished and rebuilt.
Any advice for Western Massachusetts home?
I'm not sure but I think this house was showed on this old house
That's a hell of a chimney
Do you travel to MA? Maybe you’re right across the border.
Sometimes. It just depends on how far and the size of the job.
@@chadvaillancourt okay. How do I get in touch for something that might make sense in the future?
Just send me an email with some pictures and what you're looking to have done, and where you're located. Cvmasonry04@gmail.com