Upstairs Utility Room
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- Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024
- Paul prepares the upstairs utility room so that we can install the furnace, ac, and the water heater. There is a little bit of everything in this video.
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#postframe #selfbuild #utilityroom
Your house is so fabulous that your kids will never leave home.. :)
haha we have a few years before we need to kick people out
The utility room looks great, I'm looking forward to seeing everything installed! I really like how you spray foam all the openings and certain cracks to make the spaces airtight, 😊👍💕💕💕
Thanks! 👍
Great show Paul and very interesting
Thank you!
Good job as always. Looking forward to the next video.
Thanks for watching!
Looks great!
Door n trim n one room done.
Haha yes! Lots and lots left
Dude, that's some serious Nasa insulation. Cheers!)
So well thought out, GREAT JOB‼️👍👍. Vinny 🇺🇸
Thanks for watching!
Thank you Paul for sharing! 😀💪💪💪💪
Thanks for watching!
Awesome!!!!
Thanks for watching!
Super!❤️👍🏻
Thank you!
It's looking good. Good video .
Thanks 👍
Love your videos!
Thank you!
Great what you do and all the details. When you had insulation problems, I did research and found Spray Jones. Hopefully on consulting, all good. Love you’re attention to detail and planning. It’s helped me on small projects.
Just connecting plumbing, or doing a hybrid system with existing hydronic heating? Sorry, just nerdy curiosity. Building something great wish I was ready to do!
Back again, its coming together 💪👌
Thanks!
220, 221 whatever it takes!
Great movie...lol
Enjoyed the show
Thanks for watching!
#337! Love what you guys are doing! Keep the content coming :)
Thank you!
Amazing
Thank you!
You may have already covered this in a previous video, but is there a particular reason you went with traditional HVAC, instead of a beefed up Mini Split system?
Speaking from experience I'd suggest putting a light guard on the lights in the utility room.
Thanks for the rec!
That's looking awesome.. great job.. things are getting in shape! is there any need for heat and noise isolation?
All of the walls are insulated around this room.
Happy father's day
Thanks!
I'm not sure about this, but I believe all walls built of flammable materials need to be fireblocked. R302.11.1 indicates 3/4" particleboard with joints backed by 3/4" particleboard suffice, and your plywood seem almost equivalent to that, so I would think it would be ok. Had you spoken to the inspector to get OK to line the room with plywood? I don't think there are stricter requirements for a residential utiltity room than any other room, in which case the standard fireblocking rules would apply.
You have separate mechanicals for upstairs and downstairs…. I can only imagine what your mechanicals budget is. Doing great though.
I can only imagine it is to deal with the manifold work, two of then, and having that all in one room was either too much or just took up too much space and had to separate them; just my thoughts.
Do utility room walls need Sheetrock for fire?
I’ve always used plywood for the ease of mounting everything to the wall. I’ve never had an inspector give me any troubles. There is drywall on the other side of the walls and the ceiling.
@@MrPostFrame thanks for the response. Really appreciate your videos. Learned a lot from you so far.
Paul- is there more radiant heat flooring upstairs? I thought you already hooked up the subfloor tubing in the first floor slab. I must have missed the later rad heat plumbing. FR
No, we didn't put any in floor heat upstairs.
Are you going to air seal those lights and other ceiling penetration's?
he did in the video
I don't recommend a bulb hanging down like that because it can get knocked off and is harsh. You should consider using LED shop lights. They will sit more flush to the ceiling and give better light overall. the installers will be appreciative of this. I would have installed a layer of fire resistant drywall over the plywood. If there is ever a problem in that util room you will have more time to get out then you would with just ply. The paint will accelerate the burn I would expect. Please consider keeping a fire-extinguisher there in that room. Safety first bro!!!
Trust and believe, Paul has already thought of that. Paul is already 5 steps ahead of what he's doing. I have never seen anyone as organized as Paul and Emily.
Is there a benefit of installing the water heater upstairs?
The kids bathing schedules won't affect Paul and Emily's would be my bet. It would be easier to set up clock timers to have them running full capacity when bathing is expected. FR
I thought he had a tankless system? Maybe all the fixtures exceeded the capacity of one unit
@@thejpkotor Two washer and dryer sets, a big family kitchen; I'm going with to much for one "normal" size HW heater. FR
@@fredericrike5974 thanks for confirming my suspicions, ya that would be too much for just one tankless
@@thejpkotor Not to put to fie a point on it- a simple "butt count"; Paul, Emily and three children,I believe, would suggest lots of hot water in the family's future. Paul, I suspect, is far from done. the sawmill is interesting, but I'm looking for a better than average sized solar project, or other- we've never gotten a "walk through" on their land- a stream might suggest water power. Big house, lots of kids, suggest lots of electric bills. And Paul surely wired it up to a fair the well! People don't build something like that and just stare at it- he meant for it to be used. I just hope Paul (and Em) can do something like turn the channel off and go fishing- this has been a long time project with much hard work by both of them. I'm very glad the Algorithm dropped them in my box! FR
why did you caulk after painting? was it silicone?
Just to contain any minor leak.
Someone tell me what he was spraying under the 2X4 pieces. Was that just spray foam like in insulation or some type of glue.
It was glue.
What is your downstairs sq footage?
2300
Wouldn't it be advisable to put in a floor drain in this room, because of the water pipes in there?
This guy ain't no dummy. There must be a reason. Thats a scary room because of all that water present, especially since it's upstairs.
@@michaelbarron6220
I bought some WiFi water alarms for like 60 bucks for 4. They work great - I’ve tested them a few times by dabbing a wet finger in the sensor.
My biggest worry was always the condensate line clogging and flooding my downstairs neighbor (before I installed a pan float cutoff)
Now I’m in a single fam my biggest worry is the basement - furnace, sump, water heater, miscellaneous pipes, and washing machine
I cover those plus under the kitchen sink in case a pipe gets knocked loose and leaks.
I know too many people who have had $10s of thousands dollars damage from water. $60-70 bucks for alarms is such cheap insurance.
I plan on installing a WiFi ball valve on the main when I re p-pipe this old house.
🏴👍
Thanks for watching!
Why not water seal the room? just too many water lines
Any minor leak will be contained in the room with what I did. If it’s a major leak the water would just run out of the doorway into the rest of the house.
Had to fast forward during ur spraying lol camera person was making me sick lol
I was 261 like...