Modern House Part 5- More main floor joists and start decking
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- Опубликовано: 24 янв 2024
- Continuing on with the build a rainy Monday sees some main floor decking followed by the next section of joists out on the bedroom wing of the house. Seems like every day had a big portion of it dedicated to something other than what looked like progress but it set me up well for the following two weeks which were just out of control. Thank you for tuning back in or stopping to check it out on your way past. Next week we will be off site working on steel so stay tuned!
Absolutely a 1 man frank lloyd Wright... impressive
I have never seen a person do so much work on his own,SIR I am impressed with the level of skill you have and your work ethic 👏👏
Dang son, you deserve a pay day! Great work!
I can't believe what I'm watching one guy do. Incredible - well done!
I thoroughly enjoyed watching these videos during my leisure time.
Loving this build series...
Thanks Paul!
Thanks for the render. So great to be able to see it take shape
I am so impressed with you capability. I ran my home construction project, but I didn’t have to do any physical work. I can’t believe the size of the metal beams.
I am enjoying your hard work and workmanship. Great job. Keep the videos coming.
Thanks for that! will do.
uncredible the Jake!!!...the best movie at the year, good luck fore you fore ever...
Sweet, thanks!
We love what you do! Hard working and talented!
Another Great post, from the work to documenting all the work! Can't wait for the next one!!
thanks Robert:-)
Never seen the diagonal sheeting before but makes perfect sense structurally. 👍🏻
Well, it's still perpendicular to the joists. That opening sequence was a camera fault from the rain that looked cool. I was trying out an overhead shot from a stack of tool rods. You see me bringing the camera down to check the footage at 1:22 I still can't figure out how the camera seemingly twisted it's own perception of things. Thanks for tuning back in!
Hard work man you are doing great work
You live in Seattle all it ever does is rain rain rain.got to be depressing, keep your feet dry to when you're welding right,..love what ya do,your a gentleman and a scholar!
Thanks! No, down in PDX area. 16" December and 12" for January already.
Thanks for the Video. The rain seems relentless!
My pleasure, It feels that way sometimes and it's funny how good of a mood it can put you in when you see that there is only a 60% chance for most of the day:-)
Love it so much keep it up as always 💘
Will do!
Boy... THAT floor ain't going anywhere - SERIOUSLY it ain't goin' NOWHERE! ... of course the company that makes the nails is moving though... to a new bigger better warehouse and everyone is getting a raise. (hahahaha)
I love your videos love from Pakistan ❤❤❤
Awesome Job!!
Hey there, Jake
Another great video.
I’m sure you are used to it by now, but I feel cold and wet just watching you work out there.
I’ve been wondering, will you be building the entire house, all of the exterior and interior?
From what I’m able to see on the videos you’re doing an outstanding job. Any idea how long this project will take you?
Again, thank you for the videos, I look forward to seeing them every week.
You take care out there.
Joe
Hey Joe, I am the framer and steel guy on this project. Sometimes I do exterior finishes but not on this project and I almost never do interior stuff other than steel handrail or stairs. See you next week, believe it or not it gets worse :-)
Fantastic workethic!!
It’s a shame that you’re building such an awesome house with no land at least 5 acres great work be safe God bless
I suppose it's just a different way of living and pretty common in urban areas like this one. The beauty of this house is there will be essentially no yard to take care of and the zeroscaping that will be done just blends into the forest. Thanks for tuning in :-)
Wow! What a job you are doing! I think about all the water that the building bathes in. You screw boards and joists when it rains. Are you not building moisture into the construction then? Any risks of mold and rot?
Typical process for this time of year and location.
The house will be dried in soon and the long open time on a project like this will allow it to dry correctly before drywall. Troubles will happen on the houses they complete start to finish in 90 days. That is not this project. Thanks for tuning in!
Really enjoying this Jake! Thanks for the effort to video document the build. Is there any help in Portland? I know you can but I am curious why? I retired as a GC and now find myself working alone on projects which I enjoy, this is an inspiration
I appreciate that recognition Peter, It's frustrating when I forget to turn the camera on or turn it the right way. It's actually just been way easier to work this way for the last decade or so. I do have a handful of guys that all work in ones or twos like I do that are all available for larger stuff and we will team up on things from time to time. It will make more sense in the next few videos, Thanks for sticking around:-)
I wonder how you feel at the end of the day! Love the quality of your work!
Before or after my afternoon coffee? :-)
Give a try to the Milwaukee M12 caulking gun. I got one years ago and it makes caulking much faster and easier. A charge lasts a good long time.
I might try that. Do they make them for the quart tubes?
Yep. Also for the frosting bags as I recall. Mine was for the large tubes. I was trying to use PL at less than freezing, ignoring the directions, burst the tube but gasoline soak got it cured. Powerful. Had to get used to allowing for the afterdrip but it is 😮a godsend. Get the kit that allows you to use big and small tubes on the same gun. I think I heard that they came out with an extension so you can use it for flooring while standing. It was much cheaper than the other brands. Six or seven years ago I paid full price of around $120 as I recall.
Cool, thanks. I'm on it.@@douglasthompson2740
50:00 Try the FastCap PSSR-16 tape measure. It will definitely be your favorite! (not an advertisement)
Impressive all around! How are you getting views so quickly!!? Awesome!
Thanks a bunch man! Regarding views, I have absolutely no idea. My production value is not particularly high but I do draw each video from a ton of footage so I try to cover as much ground as I can with each episode as well as sticking to a regular posting schedule. I've never ever been on any social media but I've always enjoyed RUclips content so one day last spring I decided to turn on the camera and began posting content of my own in late fall and here we are.
It rained for forty days and forty nights.
(and it snowed:)
46:00 Milwaukee batteries are real annoying when they go bad. Seems to charge normally, shows full then dies after 5 seconds at load.
It feels like whack-a-mole sometimes. Lately I've been buying stuff in kits instead of tool only to rebuild my stash of batteries and it seems like they are the ones blowing out first. Super agravating.
Lions don't like to work in the cold, especially if they are not genuine Milwaukee Lions.
Jambo Jake. Fantastic build videos and even greater results. I would love to replica this build in all year-Round-Sunny Kenya where the expansive widows would really be awesome - my small cattle farm has i it a long rocky escarpment that is no good for anything else but as a rustlers' Look-Out spot and perhaps for a small Tourist Resort. Would you be willing to share your Materials-Costs-breakdown and architectural schematics, please? Asante.
I'm glad you are enjoying the series! I am the just the carpenter on this job and not the general contractor so cost sheets do not go thru my office. The plans belong to the Architecture firm and I would never distribute or make available something that I do not own. There will be some renderings and basic floor plan information that appear from time though to guide you in the right direction.
Thanks for tuning in:-)
I tip my hat to the man that works in that %^it weather. You must go through a bunch of air tool oil. Lol.
Nope, the key is to run an old compressor with copious amounts of blow-by. It's like an auto oiler:-)
That is some seriously thick plywood. Roughly, what is the cost of one of those bad boys?
So far all the lumber looks seriously robust. I'm in the southern US. All tape measures stop at 1/2 inch here. 😎
I can't tell you that off the top of my head right now but I will say that it always feels like a better deal when you look at the cost per level vs per sheet. Feels less personal that way:-)
What is the Blackboard? It looks like you notched the framing to sit below the sheathing level. I am assuming this is the entry. How are you getting the water to drain out at this point? I Don't see a slope.
Oh good eye, It's Pressure treated plywood, there is actually a minor slope there on the joists. I swapped the TJI's for LVL's so I could drop and taper that area. It will get TPO and then floating pavers that will feed into the larger PT framed area which in turn will be foam sloped to Internal drains and again covered by TPO and followed by floating pavers. The entire area is covered by an upstairs cantilever so no direct rain - wind drifted rain of course but you get the idea. The entry piece Is more than 10' in from the edge so it's doubtful it will ever be truly tested.
Do you have a regular job and only work on this one when you are rained out
All right, that got a laugh out of me, still laughing:-)
Why do you switch nail guns?
Love the videos, hard work in the rain.
It's easier to tack with the 36v but the pneumatic does a better job at nailing and It's not worth burning a battery gun up on a floor. A roof maybe but even that still depends.
Any reason you didn’t apply primer to the welded joist hangers?
Totally spaced it!. I'll bet I can squeak a bunch in there since there's a little gap there underneath
Are you parking 747's in this house? Everything is super beefy. They dont build um like that anymore . 150 year house
It's a good one, I upgrade the floor because of the open time on the project. Even if it wasn't so shitty the large expanse of window hole draws it in even after the roof is dried in. This keeps it nice and stable.
The house has been designed by an architect who wants his creation to last. He was lucky his client agrees to a highly laborious extent. 😁
There's large cantilevers, lots of clear spans and huge windows. In an earthquake zone. On a steep hill. ....
NVM that it looks like, from the rendering, that's it's 3 stories. Just think of the weight of two stories of 6x8 windows on a cantilever....
How thick is that plywood?!
1 1/8 "
I used it for my kitchen counters. Covered it with 12x24 tile. It will not crack, and it was only about 72 bucks a sheet. It is bcx t&g as opposed to 3/4 bcx t&g. It is very heavy.
Black plywood or rubber coated? Why? Not familiar with that product.
It's PT plywood for an area of the porch with TPO and then pavers over it. It does look black when it's wet with rain but it's more green normally.
ich finde es immer wieder bemerkenswert, wie du bei Wind und Regen alleine am Haus arbeitest. Aber ich frage mich, wird durch den ganzen Regen das Holz nicht morsch?
Der Regen ist hier ein unglücklicher Teil des Bauprozesses, aber eine lange Bauzeit für diesen Haustyp und andere Methoden helfen, dieses Haus vor dem Trockenbau auszutrocknen. Der schwerere Boden wurde gewählt, um ihm das Überleben zu erleichtern. Danke fürs Wiedereinschalten :-)
Add a man ...and get more than double the work...
Hmmm
Greed is nothing but inconvenience.
My God, are there ever videos without rain? It's a terrible area.
Laugh laugh laugh