How To Frame A Roof Over A Deck | Outdoor Kitchen Part 2
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- Thank you to MrCool for sponsoring this video. Find out more about their DIY-able units, as well as their other units here: bit.ly/2DbB2bq
In my last video, you saw me build a giant deck. In this video, we're framing and building a large Hip Roof to cover the deck and turn it into my outdoor kitchen!
Find Part 1 (building the deck) here: • How to Build A Floatin...
Find Part 3 (adding roofing) here: • How To Roof A Deck | O...
Find Part 4 (building an outdoor fireplace) here: • How To Build An Outdoo...
Things I Used in This Project:
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Reciprocating Saw: amzn.to/2mr6MDW
Diablo Demo Demon: amzn.to/3epISkD
Diablo Spade Bits: amzn.to/3xTCJ7X
Lifting Straps: amzn.to/32pfxAZ
Website: www.wilkerdos.com
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The two collar ties are essentially acting like trusses. It probably wouldn't meet code loading but without the collar ties, the raters push the beams outward and make the columns go out of plum. With enough load, it could collapse. The connection between the collar tie and rafter is critical. We often use gusset plates to secure the connection.
I suspect the minimum live/snow load in Texas would be 20psf. Most codes use 20psf as the lower minimum even if you don't get snow in the area.
It is just wonderful to see how far and successful you have become.
Thank you for your kind words and support. :)
you can use the "stranded" loops as plant hangers! 👍🏾😄
Or attachment points for a porch swing ☺️🤓
🤯
Yes!
I was thinking hammock
@@jeremyspecce the suggestions keep getting better! 😄
Great roof april. But should the stretcher timber before the hips be bolted not screwed. Then the roof goes on there will be a lot of pressure on them screws to stop the roof from sagging in the middle. Here in the uk we have to put a timber both sides and bolt them together.
In Norway as well
Isn't she using Timber Lock screws or whatever they're called ? I think they are as strong as bolts, but nothing really beats a bolt !
@@augustreil A lot of things are in play here. At least for us in Norway with a bunch rougher weather. I see a lot of thing that are mandatory here in Norway, that is not common in US. So there are differences in ways to build.
@@CrinosAD, Ain't America great ?! Oh, and I get that other countries do things different. Many ways to skin a cat, so to speak. Gross analogy, sorry.
Girl...I really enjoy watching your videos......I'm 68 and semi retired and have been in metal fabrication all my working life but have also been a self doer...I consider myself to have a lot of common sense which I consider way more important than book sense....I don't know how much book sense you have but you have plenty of common sense.....Job Well Done
Thank you for your kind words. :)
That chain hoist idea is friggin' genius and solves a problem I've been staring at for several weekends.
Great to hear!
If you like that M18 Hackzall you'll love the M18 7 1/4" circ. You'll love no cords on the jobsite even more, especially notching from a ladder.
Suggestion: incorporate the unmovable straps to a swing couch?
Very very yes
I have enjoyed your channel for 4 or 5 years April. Thank Jimmy DiResta and Matt Cremona for recommending your channel. You have a wonderful "Look, See, Do" method of explaining things. Very fun to watch. Thank you again!
Awesome! Thank you! I'm glad you're still along for the ride. :)
The beauty of tthe cottage-style roof is that it gets a lot of its strength from the wall corners. Cheers
All collar ties I have installed have been fastened through the side of the rafters not the bottom. The way you did it is more pleasing to the eye but you may have to apply plywood gussets or a metal plate.
Smart thinking Tim, April, that is a sure fail over time. Consider adding a 3/4" steel rod ( threaded on both end and /or use a turnbuckle in the center for looks) under both your collar ties, drill through that 800 pound beam and same on back side. Used this fix on an old barn, still standing. Good luck, I'm a fan D Oktim
And no diagonals at the corner posts? I'm not an engineer but was there one on this?
I don’t understand what there is about this video to warrant the dislikes!!!!!!!
Keep up the good work April.
Keep making and creating.
Thank you so much! Eh, you can't please everyone. I just appreciate the ones that are supportive. Thank you again.
By the way. Love the tv show. “Some assembly required”. I have always been a massive fan of Tim’s. So jealous lol. 👍👍👍
Job Well Done, speaking as a retired ol' hasbeen, you all got it right. A hip roof is popular here in Florida, able to deflect the high-velocity winds of storms that come with someone's name. If I may, I would collar tie the other common rafters, and through bolt each collar tie at the point where the center of the collar tie intersects the center of the rafter.
That chain hoist trick us brilliant.
Hey April
I agree that's some pretty framing; plus plywood sheeting will beef up strength for large paddle bit hole you bored down through rafter right @ birdsmouth and tail intersect, I would prefer to use a galvanized screw shank 3 1/2 16d nail especially hot dipped if you were to pilot drill the nail hole for position and placement this would prevent drifting if carefully nailed and set from both sides all the better best not to weaken critical break fail areas where weight fulcrums. But good golly that is some pretty framing. Well done you!
Rule of thumb if gap is 1/8" inch or less that is good for framing .
Wow working with Tim Allen wish I could meet him and hang out for a while, good on you April, now I'm impressed.
. Very cool
God bless you
Best Dave
My brain works another way. Instead of moving back & forth, I built roof frame on ground in parts & panel, then place corner pillars & mounted it on top with powerlift & pulleys. This way, it saves time & energy in lifting things back & forth. Also, working on flat surface ensures measurement are accurate.
Hi April, my hubby & boys are building me a 12x12 greenhouse...We sure would love to see what kind of greenhouse you would build☺️
That is a really cool roof design and I've always wondered how to tackle building it. Time to update my shed roof 😁😅👍👍
It looks stellar April, you and your team did a great job with that hip roof. Cutting those compound mitres correctly isn't easy! I can't wait to see how this project progresses 🙂
Thank you! This is an exciting build for sure!
@@AprilWilkerson It would have been nice to show how those compound miters are calculated.
Good job
haha excellent choice leaving the straps.. it's not a mistake, it's a feature!
:)
Came across you 3years ago and was hooked to watch you grow and inspire people is amazing you inspire me and I’ve been in the trade all my working life love your videos and content so here from the uk have a successful and blessed week let’s hope we get some of your weather soon
Good job.
It looks amazing.
Thanks!
Great job ma’am!!
Thanks for watching! :)
This was really good, I can’t wait until part 3….
I'm glad you're enjoying it! Stay tuned! :)
Always a good day when a new video from April is out!! Can't wait to see how the outdoor kitchen turns out!
Thanks! Glad you are enjoying my Channel! Thank you for your continued support. :)
It's wonderful to watch the progress April....☺👌
Thank you! 😊
was surprised you didnt go ole school and use wood dowel like the amish do with their barns that would look awesome
I say put in some fake ones to achieve the look.
We do roofs like this in the Bahamas, hopefully you go with Tongue and Groove Yellow pine for the decking. For extra credit you'd finish those pieces before installing them, if you're gonna leave it exposed. Way easier.
I'm building a shed with a hip roof this summer. So this was fun to watch. Thanks
This looks like Australia by the look of the trees. Nice design great video
Texas. The Hill Country of Texas. Thanks for watching.
Good jobs
Always learn something from your videos. Today, it was Timberlok screws. I'll be using them soon on a project.
Great! You'll really like them.
Done plenty of metal roofing on hip roofs but never had to build one. Going to be an awesome deck when complete.. I’m stuck out of town in a place with no cable, I found “ Assembly Required “ with Tim Allen and .... April Wilkerson, I did not know but congrats on the show. You are a busy gal. Been a sub for several yrs now but, I don’t always catch every vid is probably why I didn’t know about the show. 2👍👍
You know what I love about your video's April (other then the skill, craftsmanship and solid work)....its that you never ask me to like and subscribe! I like that. Anyway, onto the next video. Thanks April!
Thanks! I'm glad you enjoy my channel. Thanks for watching.
Thank you for sharing this video. I can appreciate your frustration with the green chain slings. Perhaps you could hang an over engineered swing or two. Wishing you and your family a blessed spring season. Cheers.
Good gap 👍
Beautiful. Work....
4:35 That is smart thinking!
So nice to watch precision framing instead of the usual fast and rough. Also, that's some quality lumber.
Very neat project
The roof skeleton is beautiful and a true work of art when viewed from the top.
Wow! great and informative video. I especially like the mr. Cool ad. since I now have no air conditions. Thanks Amy. :-)
April, not Amy. :)
I just wanna say you're doing roofs 100% different than we in Europe. :D
As an wood engineer I would say nails and screews should never carry a roof.
You should always make joins where wood in supporting wood (nails are just for that everything stays in place after the wood is dry).
only simple example: ruclips.net/video/BjexBYE-8Xg/видео.html
Dont forget hurricane clips.
Super roof!
Wow Ápril you're a good carpinter watching from Barcelona Spain
Awesome seeing it coming together like this
You and me both! This is such a fun build. Thanks for watching. :)
Look at all that gold under that tarp!
HOOP STRAPS what the wbat!?! Technical industry name is endless slings....but great work none the less. I think I would leave those slings on there as well, I wouldn't want to cut those straps, very expensive. I noticed other comments to use for swingnor plant holders etc...whatever you do if applying any weight to them where they will swing back and forth it would be a good idea to place a softner underneath the sling where it touches the beam so they dont wear out. Altogether, great build.
You Never Disappoint…. Great Job 💯💯💯
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it.
I love, love, love your videos April!! You are one cool chick! Everything is explained well and you don't hide your mistakes. This is all stuff I want or need to learn lol. Thank you!
Thank you so much!! Glad you are enjoying my channel. :)
That Chain Hoist IS slick!!
It was a great idea and life saver for sure!
My thought was "work smarter, not harder". Nice trick.
Retired carpenter here. This girl got skills!
Thanks! :)
Du très joli travail bravo à bientôt salut Jeannot 🛠😉
The puppies around any motorized equipment made my heart skip a beat.
Episode #1 with the tractor.
Episode #2 with the quad pulling the headers.
Great build, looks fantastic.
I agree, there is something special about framing.
All the geometry, angles, triangles and such, the bones I guess.
It always seems like a shame to cover it all up with drywall or sheeting, even though it is inevitable.
I was hoping your extra special guest star would pop up in the videos, your mom.
Take Care and God Bless
Suggestion for square holes. Add a nut or washer over the drillbit and make sure it doesn't drift when drilling. If horisontal - it should stay in same place on the bit...
Robert, Hesperia Ca. I did a hip roof for 16x20 gazebo . I mounted a ceiling fan in the center and vented out through the roof. The updraft kept all smoke vented up and out no matter where the Bar B Q was placed! Looks like you have a great build.
@0:04, is that a Hollywood pay flex?? 😂 But honestly, I did gasp and said to myself.."wow, I bet *that* was expensive. " But the end product looks AWESOME
That is a MASSIVE deck roof.
OK, that was slick @4:50....
So cool April. Well now you can use them perminent straps to hang plants, lights, or maybe a swing chair, if they can hold that much weight.
Also enjoy part 1 but this is super 👍
Wondering if you ever thought of using GRK screws instead of carriage bolts? Then you can eliminate the extra steps of drilling a hole and then driving a bolt in and then snugging up the nut.
Dam your good at what you do
Thanks! I do my research ahead and plunge in. Glad you are enjoying my Channel.
With the price of wood I hope you had armed security when you uncovered that load :)
@Frederick Maximiliano definitely, I've been watching on Flixzone} for months myself :)
starting to really take shape, can't wait to see the finished thing
Yes! It's amazing how quickly it comes together. Very exciting. Thank you for watching. :)
THE DOG RIDING ON THE TRACTOR 🥹🥹
The best!
Great Job April !
Awesome job April!! Love framing work!!👍🏾🪚📐🪜🪛🛠🔨😍😍
Always a pleasure to watch your vlogs.
Glad you like them! :)
i was green 15 yrs ago on jobsites, me and my co worker noticed a sparky took all day completing the main feed to the house on an ext ladder. 4 pm and we started clean up, and heard sparky hootin and hollerin, we looked up and he ran his main line through the ext ladder rungs and couldn't get it down without cutting either. i still laugh to this day.
That's a huge job! I love the mini splits they are so efficient.⚒
Definitely! I just love mine. :)
I know nothing about what your building except your framing is epic🤣😎
I've always loved roof framing, one of the best jobs ever,
Its very satisfying for sure
ARGH! Knee pads girlfriend! Knee pads! My first day as a plumbing apprentice, I was part of a repipe (Poly-B for pex), in the crawlspace, rough concrete, jagged rocks slicing through knees and tendons! Have never forgotten my knee pads in over 25 years!
As far as framing the roof try following the instructions in the Little Blue Book that came with your Speed Square. If you can find it!
Also considering where you are in TX you should use hurricane clips. Not that attractive but they will help keep the roof in place in a strong wind.
I'd use them here on the coast, but they aren't going to see much hurricane wind out there in the hill country.
the project is going well. 👍🇨🇦
The kitchen area looks amazing and the roof is something else !
Can you please provide us in the UK with some of that Texan weather you have?
Wind can take out a gable easier than a hip.
Tomberlocks will also add 10x mor estructural integrity and toe-nailing
Alguém do Brasil parabéns pelo vídeo
Now you have to build one of those egg shaped swing chairs for the chain hoist strap. ;)
Nice work April and crew.
Dog is my co-pilot. Nice job
You need to see if you could visit the Navy Seabees Builder “A” and other classes. We were taught how to do all that framing along with other construction. It would be cool if they would let you.
I can't wait to see the finishing result of this outdoor kitchen. I also want to see you guys do some bbq out there to. Great work.
April it looks great can't wait for the next video. Take care and GOD BLESS
Texas seems to have a very similar landscape to the African bush here in South Africa.
beautiful!
Great work, great running commentary, and great tutorial explaining everything as you go. Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching. :)
Was a Contractor in Texas for many years, and at least while I was there, Timber Locks were good but Rafters HAD to be toenailed as well. 2 per side, per State Building code. But that was 12 years ago when I left. Unsure of the Code now. Also I assume Rafter hangers are in part 3?
Yow those 3/4 sink hole bits are amazing 🤩.
Lovely as always.
Thank you so much 😊
That was slick!!!
Really impressive on the beams and the roof.
I am surprised there was not some sort of bracket at the roof joints in the center as I would personally be concerned about just the strength of the nails on the ends. however, clearly with the load spread across so many joints it seems to work been fine.
This was a great build. As always, excellent video - informative, fun and very good production quality.
thanks for sharing.
Very good work.
The chain hoist @ 4:30 is brilliant! Better than to ask a Sumo wrestler (who might break the wood) to do the job!
that is a great job April looking good. keep up the good work