Better would be to not have bare feet 2 inches from a grinder lol I'd have been tempted to pour a few ml of resin into the base, the tip on each side and repeat. Decorative top plate added after. I'm redesigning my sunken tub at the moment and drawing up a new design for the rocket burner heater.
Don't utilize siding when it needs to be water tight, measure twice cut once, learn how to join materials, learn how to cut rabbits and dados plane and joint your boards for proper thickness and width, SAFETY GEAR!!!! Unless you want to be called stumpy for the rest of your life. Learn the functions and directions of your pump then apply them accordingly, its not that hard has 1 in 1 out if one side sucks the other side blows. Don't try to assemble pump lines while trying to crawl between the fence and a tub. Squares have been around for mellinia, a good square is worth its weight in gold. Dry fit before running fasteners, make certain those fasteners are proper length and won't potentially cause further injuries. Sand more not just a couple of swipes actually sand, stepping your grits up taking it to somewhere close to 200, and sand everything all sides then stain and seal finally assemble keeping in mind if you have glued joints dont stain and seal until the glue has cured, and more clamps you needed much more and culls to keep it from bowing or cupping. Use a straight edge on all circular saw cuts Unless it's rough but even then having a true square edge to reference off of is good.
Woodworking TH-cam, while making a cutting board: dozens of Bessey and Rockler clamps everywhere. This dude, making something that has to be water tight: these two clamps aught to do it. No reason I can't clamp all the panels at once. Hero.
I was very skeptical at first when I first came across this video. I was almost one of the haters like in some of the comments. I think the tub came out awesome. Looked like you guys had a good time building it, that is what really counts. Anyone can simply go buy one. I wish I did stuff like this when I was your ages. Good luck to all of you, you'll go far.
I don’t think anyone is “hating” just because the comment may not be favorable. This kid had great intentions and ambitions that should be praised but the quality is plainly lacking! We see the tub lose 12 inches of water upon his test.
I would grab more copper tube and make a large coil inside the fire pit area. Maintaining heat also might be easier if you insulate the tub and cover the top while heating. Cool project
Just a few dudes chillin in a homeade hottub eating cookies. haha!!! That's truly awesome though - this is the stuff you will remember and talk about for years to come. Enjoy it
Sickkk build by normal people! 🙌 tub came out badass! Even tho there was hiccups y’all showed it and didn’t edit it like other channels. Way to keep it REAL! Good job fellas! 👏😎
I love that you didn't quite know what you were doing and yet started building anyway... I build that way... It's perfect... Gives be hope to build my wood fire Hot tub. Thanks!
I aint no hater at all. I love what you have done with the place. Watching your video has given me some ideas of how I may can Jerry Rig my own little hot Tub up.
Should have sealed the insidde corners prior to putting in the trim pieces and then seal the trim as well. Now when the trim flexes the seal may break. Plus sealing the inner corners is less likely to fail because its part of the structure and cant move as much as
Because you're heating with fire, you're going to have to build a bypass and/or shutoff so you can disable the heat when it gets hot enough. I suggest doing both because you can't turn the heat off without significant effort. Doing both will allow you to disable the heat going into the hot tub, and then opening the bypass will let the water in the tube boil out so you don't have a build-up of steam pressure which could really hurt someone.
I built one using a metal skidded ICB tank and the leftovers from a blow up hot tub. The hot tub system is inside a set of wood stairs on one side. The air pump is removed and wire extended then attached to the ICB tank bottom outlet in the bottom stair. Inside there is a square PVC connected with holes to release the air. The water hoses run through and up from the second stair and the hot tub unit is in the bigger top stair. The control unit I mounted at the top of the stairs. Has a wood bench seat and the hoses run and connect to the blow up hot tub connections mounted on a 2x6 down one corner. Only fits two people . Already been running it for a year.
If you wanted it to heat up faster I would say you need to get a thicker copper tube (so that more water can flow though it) and have a couple more loops on the coil over the fire.
Siiiiiiiick! I'm totally shocked you where able to get those panels apart and they weren't glued together 😂 and I've never had any issues with titebond2, let alone 3, but, Instead of wood glue, you could have used epoxy for 100% waterproofness, or gorilla glue, which is a foaming polyurethane glue. Edit: also! Bar clamps! They're $15 and they're the way to go for pannel glue ups. They fit any length steel bar, and they're less likely to bow then the DeWalt squeeze clamps
I think locktight construction adhesive would work better than gorilla glue, it’s also a PU adhesive but foams less and has rated gap filling properties
Is there any chemical transfer from the waterproof sealant being heated? Since it’s not made for constant contact with water and skin I’m wondering if it will degrade and contaminate the water
I think once it is fully cured flex seal and other silicone sealants I used are pretty non toxic. Definitely uncharted waters though so I do test the water frequently
this looks dope, i would've coiled the copper pipe around the flames more to maximize the heat transfer (i know copper is expensive so wasn't sure if that was intentional not to do it)
I really think that you should properly enclose your fire pit for the heat source to the hot tub that way you don’t accidentally burn down your house have a great weekend k
you can definatly tell at the end the water lvl dropped about 6 inches it looks like. the top pump pipes go from being fully covered with water to not even having water touching them. great build tho and an amazing diy idea
Very cool guys! Awesome to see young men just going for it. I do however have some major major concerns about the chemicals being used to stain the wood and how that interacts with hot water. Stains of this nature should not be absorbed into the body. I believe the hot water will cause those stains to absorb into the body at higher rates and much faster. Just be careful. I would have personally gone with the some kind of plastic liner sandwiched between unstained Cedar.
Hay Scott, what about using a much bigger copper coil and engulf that coil with fire, I mean bond fire size. That should get you the results you want!!! Or, you can get one of those tankless water heaters and use that. Either way it will be epic!!!
Yeah a lot of money was spent on flex seal... if I could do it again - 2x cedar all the way with tight joints that could swell to create the waterproofing
You have a great start and I love your creativity. I got a lot of ideas from your video for the deck and hot tub I plan to build. You asked for suggestions on how to improve yours, so here are a couple of suggestions. Please take this reply as a constructive reply. In no way am I throwing shade at your efforts. Quite the opposite. You and your assistants did a great job and gave me ideas on creating, designing, and building my own. The money you spent on the Flexseal, glue, stain, and clamps would cover the cost of the cedar. When joining the Ceder, you could use a pocket hole jig on the back and install decking screws every 4" to 6" along the joint to make the wood a water-tight seal. You would no longer need the long clamps included in the savings. With cedar, you might have some small weeping along the seams, but the seams would seal closed as the wood expands. Also, the floor joint would have been less likely to have failed if you had installed deck screws with pocket hole joinery. ** Using the deck screws along the tongue and grove joints and the plywood/T-111 sheeting would have saved you time because you would not have to wait for the glue to dry. Pocket hole joinery allows you to put a screw into the board from the back side, at an angle, pulling the two boards together, tightly. The screws are hidden from the finished side while doing a great job keeping the joint together even when the spa is empty and dry. You can look up Pocket Hole Jigs on the internet. my favorite brand is the Kreg System. I am not a sponsor of Kreg Tools, I just love their system and I have used many and even built some myself, but none worked for me as well as Kreg Tools. I will use these tools to build my 10' by 8' in-deck hot tub. Kreg Tools Website: www.kregtool.com/shop/pocket-hole-joinery/pocket-hole-jigs/ You might want more copper tubing and two or more wraps in the coil to make a more efficient heating element. As the heat rises in the flue of the firebox it heats the cooler water with the coolest gases first and the hottest part of the fire as the water leaves the firebox. The water flow should go toward the cold water entering the coil at the top and leaving the coil at the bottom. The furnace to heat the water should be an enclosed firebox with the heating element, the copper coil on top of the wood, made out of cinderblocks. The firebox should have an opening on the bottom for the wood and air to enter. The firebox should enclose the heating coil except for a 4" to 6" hole at the top to allow the smoke and gasses to escape. The fire would burn more slowly but put out a more even and efficient heat. When you build the furnace with controlled airflow, you will use less fuel but get more heat because of the venture effect. A double brick or cinder block wall around the furnace will also make it safer for you and your guests. You might consider upgrading to a stronger pump and adding more distributed water returns to the pool with a directed flow to circulate the water more evenly throughout the spa. Adding Styrofoam or waterproof insulation around the outside walls and then a cover of T-111 siding will use less energy to keep heated and will also look much more attractive. Another upgrade I can see is adding a solar heating option, having two heating sources. Using Solar during the day to maintain temperature, and wood burning for when the sun is not shining or during extreme cold. Both of the heating options need a way of temperature control for safety reasons too.
Hi. Thank you! Glad the video was of help. This is some great information. I completely agree that the cedar would've been the way to go. Also maximizing efficiency with more copper coils, insulating the tub, and enclosing the furnace is a must. Solar idea is also a great idea. I hope to build another tub one day and take everything I learned with this one and make a much better one. Thanks for the advice again!
This must have cost a fortune especially with lumber prices the way they are now. Spend the money on the cedar next time it swells and makes it water tight without all the flex seal and stain.
The heat from the fire causes the water to rise in the coil (just like air) and it will flow out of the other end. There's a science term but I forgot it
Thank you glad you enjoy the videos! Yes, it is a lot of work hahaha but very rewarding. Only tip is build stuff that you like then videoing it on the side just makes it more fun
Never use your phone while driving, especially when you're going to upload it lol, but nice video, it has it flaws and lessons learned, but if you didn't upload it we would not know. Not sure if you did upgrades, but it definitely is almost perfect.
I would just avoid the pump altogether, if you're using the copper coil in a fire method, the water will circulate on its own just due to the heated water rising in the coil
@@DIYSCOTT the t&g or if you're making a wood panel or counter top. Really helps to clamp opposite sides so it doesn't warp. Source: I work at a wood shop. cool build btw 🙌
When you build it put insulation so it holds the heat the pink foam boards get them and then put a rubber swimming pool liners over frame and then the boards then the water should hold and you need to make it bigger so that you have full benches and also another exit area where there are steps up and safety rails to lead to a deck as bylaws require a fence around all pools outdoors same with the hottubs so the local kids cant get in and drown so you have to have it installed lower in ground when you get your own places and then have a set of stairs up to a deck area then put safety rails and fence that has to be 3 inches so that kids cant fall or climb in between and so that no animal or child can get their arms or head through the rails as they try to crawl through the bylaws in your local area check make sure fence requirements if you do not follow it and someone complains then bylaw can make you tear it down if there is no fence around your whole area there seems to have fence but make sure a locking door so no unsupervised child gets near cause there are too many small little ones that are drawn to pools in summer so be safe if you have little siblings around ok.
@@kristakaufman-y6j yes fully area. Only thing in question is if I should have the wood in contact with the water (with the pool liner behind the wood) or if I should just make the pool liner the surface
Hard to say at this point... the wood was probably around $800, pluming was $200, pump was $120, plus a lot of random Home Depot trips so probably 1.2 to 1.4k?
Also, you should’ve used pipe clamps not trigger clamps. Reason is because you don’t get a good surface for clamping on trigger clamps with clamping large boards.
How are you planning on regulating temperature? I've thought about making one of these a few times! I think a hexagonal shape would hold the internal water pressure better than 4 flat sides, but it has more jointing so more complicated build!
I appreciate the total disaster of a build. No I don’t recommend anyone follow this plan but I love the fact that he tried and learned and that’s something everyone should do.
hard to say because I improved it a couple times but just to build the first video's worth maybe like $600 but wood was way more expensive then than it is now
Get you a nice pair of headphones, and the last step of your editing should be throwing those things on and mixing the audio evenly to finish it off. Made me bout jump 450 feet into the air with those sudden cuts to the full volume music in comparison to the volume of your commentary. Great vid. Would love to cut a huge square hole in my deck and build one of these into it.
Before the water started going in, I was thinking "Oh gosh, that thing is gonna leak so much." Hehe 😅 I've heard other pool people say that Flex seal doesn't work so well. So there might be better things to use. Old video, but still. Hope it turned out good. :)
Have ideas on how I could make it better or a question? Put them down below :)
Better would be to not have bare feet 2 inches from a grinder lol
I'd have been tempted to pour a few ml of resin into the base, the tip on each side and repeat. Decorative top plate added after.
I'm redesigning my sunken tub at the moment and drawing up a new design for the rocket burner heater.
@@shaneord7527 err red ddd
Don't utilize siding when it needs to be water tight, measure twice cut once, learn how to join materials, learn how to cut rabbits and dados plane and joint your boards for proper thickness and width, SAFETY GEAR!!!! Unless you want to be called stumpy for the rest of your life. Learn the functions and directions of your pump then apply them accordingly, its not that hard has 1 in 1 out if one side sucks the other side blows. Don't try to assemble pump lines while trying to crawl between the fence and a tub. Squares have been around for mellinia, a good square is worth its weight in gold. Dry fit before running fasteners, make certain those fasteners are proper length and won't potentially cause further injuries. Sand more not just a couple of swipes actually sand, stepping your grits up taking it to somewhere close to 200, and sand everything all sides then stain and seal finally assemble keeping in mind if you have glued joints dont stain and seal until the glue has cured, and more clamps you needed much more and culls to keep it from bowing or cupping. Use a straight edge on all circular saw cuts Unless it's rough but even then having a true square edge to reference off of is good.
How hot have you got it ?
@@slydog748 I didn't use a thermometer but I'd say around 92-95 degrees fahrenheit
Woodworking TH-cam, while making a cutting board: dozens of Bessey and Rockler clamps everywhere.
This dude, making something that has to be water tight: these two clamps aught to do it. No reason I can't clamp all the panels at once.
Hero.
hahaha
Lol
I was very skeptical at first when I first came across this video. I was almost one of the haters like in some of the comments. I think the tub came out awesome. Looked like you guys had a good time building it, that is what really counts. Anyone can simply go buy one. I wish I did stuff like this when I was your ages. Good luck to all of you, you'll go far.
Thank you! It sure was fun. Glad you didn't join the dark side :) hahaha
I don’t think anyone is “hating” just because the comment may not be favorable. This kid had great intentions and ambitions that should be praised but the quality is plainly lacking! We see the tub lose 12 inches of water upon his test.
I would grab more copper tube and make a large coil inside the fire pit area. Maintaining heat also might be easier if you insulate the tub and cover the top while heating. Cool project
Just a few dudes chillin in a homeade hottub eating cookies. haha!!! That's truly awesome though - this is the stuff you will remember and talk about for years to come. Enjoy it
Hahaha definitely!
@@DIYSCOTT ...WOW. You are an expert. I am so inspired and intelligent
Sickkk build by normal people! 🙌 tub came out badass! Even tho there was hiccups y’all showed it and didn’t edit it like other channels. Way to keep it REAL! Good job fellas! 👏😎
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the video :)
I love that you didn't quite know what you were doing and yet started building anyway... I build that way... It's perfect... Gives be hope to build my wood fire Hot tub. Thanks!
Thanks!
To save money, buy fence pickets, run through table saw to make your own T&G. Pine pickets are 2.30 , cedar are 5.00
incredibly chill for no reason. banger vid
I like your solution. I'd probably fiberglass the inside instead of using water proof glue and stain. You can do that on TUB 2.0
Yes if there is a tub 2.0 I'm all in for that
I aint no hater at all. I love what you have done with the place. Watching your video has given me some ideas of how I may can Jerry Rig my own little hot Tub up.
Thanks! Yeah it definitely had its flaws but with some trial and error you may just end up with something awesome
Should have sealed the insidde corners prior to putting in the trim pieces and then seal the trim as well. Now when the trim flexes the seal may break. Plus sealing the inner corners is less likely to fail because its part of the structure and cant move as much as
This video should have way more comments and likes! Good job!
Hahaha hopefully one day the algorithm gods will catch on!
I’m doing this when I got a spot 100%. Dope idea my guy and super nice execution
Dude this was fun as hell to watch for some reason. I'll subscribe to your shenanigans.
Haha thanks!
Dream it, you can do it... thoroughly enjoyed the video.. there is still hope for young men such as you. Great job!
Thanks Bob!
Really great job. You can put a tarp in it! Thanks for sharing. Keep up the great work!
Yeah I'm gonna make another soon with a liner
Great video! Quick tip, you could use one of your water jugs as a stop block when batch cutting all the studs to the same length.
Thanks!
I subbed because I can’t do this stuff anymore, but I like your positive outlook, so I’ll support your adventures. Great job.
Thanks!
Make a lid for it and it will heat up faster. Awesome job man! Good work!
You and your boy "Noland" did a great job....
Hahaha thanks
That part was definitely funny 👍
Because you're heating with fire, you're going to have to build a bypass and/or shutoff so you can disable the heat when it gets hot enough. I suggest doing both because you can't turn the heat off without significant effort. Doing both will allow you to disable the heat going into the hot tub, and then opening the bypass will let the water in the tube boil out so you don't have a build-up of steam pressure which could really hurt someone.
Yeah the steam is a real concern
Clamp Cauls are your friend! Cool build. I’m doing this one next.
Thanks! Good luck!
I built one using a metal skidded ICB tank and the leftovers from a blow up hot tub. The hot tub system is inside a set of wood stairs on one side. The air pump is removed and wire extended then attached to the ICB tank bottom outlet in the bottom stair. Inside there is a square PVC connected with holes to release the air. The water hoses run through and up from the second stair and the hot tub unit is in the bigger top stair. The control unit I mounted at the top of the stairs. Has a wood bench seat and the hoses run and connect to the blow up hot tub connections mounted on a 2x6 down one corner. Only fits two people . Already been running it for a year.
@@TinyGoHomes nice!
If you wanted it to heat up faster I would say you need to get a thicker copper tube (so that more water can flow though it) and have a couple more loops on the coil over the fire.
More beer and chilli cheese with bean burritos
Siiiiiiiick! I'm totally shocked you where able to get those panels apart and they weren't glued together 😂 and I've never had any issues with titebond2, let alone 3, but, Instead of wood glue, you could have used epoxy for 100% waterproofness, or gorilla glue, which is a foaming polyurethane glue.
Edit: also! Bar clamps! They're $15 and they're the way to go for pannel glue ups. They fit any length steel bar, and they're less likely to bow then the DeWalt squeeze clamps
Thanks Sean! Yeah two of them were pretty stuck together but luckily they came apart. Good to know on the bar clamps :)
I think locktight construction adhesive would work better than gorilla glue, it’s also a PU adhesive but foams less and has rated gap filling properties
Wood glue definitely isn’t water proof gonna have issues later on
woooow that looks amazinngggggg
Thanks!
That will NEVER last. Good job!
only time will tell... A lot of times with experiments like this I reuse most of the materials for another project so it's all in good fun
Haha the tub is now a tree house. Time did tell.
Great work! Nothing like learning by doing. Maybe insulate the wood with spray foam and sealing it with another layer of plank wood.
I have since seen the later video. Never mind… lol😂
@@OmarAhmad-gm1uc Hahaha. Yeah insulation is a must if I ever build another one
Top job. Hello from snowdonia.
Thank you! Hello👋
Is there any chemical transfer from the waterproof sealant being heated? Since it’s not made for constant contact with water and skin I’m wondering if it will degrade and contaminate the water
I think once it is fully cured flex seal and other silicone sealants I used are pretty non toxic. Definitely uncharted waters though so I do test the water frequently
this looks dope, i would've coiled the copper pipe around the flames more to maximize the heat transfer (i know copper is expensive so wasn't sure if that was intentional not to do it)
Yeah it was just hard to work with. Very easy to kink it then you’re kinda screwed
I really think that you should properly enclose your fire pit for the heat source to the hot tub that way you don’t accidentally burn down your house have a great weekend k
I think using a bigger copper coil would heat it up much faster. A 1” copper pipe perhaps.
Great work! I won’t hate you if you want to come to Maryland and make me one too😂
That’s was so funny sitting here with me bong thinking he’s gonna have trouble with that glue hahahahah only to hear him say it did a awesome job tho
A really nice project! so cool to watch it
Dont hope and live the rest of ur life hoping you can do wat ever you want at any age go 4 it a build one ❤😊
you can definatly tell at the end the water lvl dropped about 6 inches it looks like. the top pump pipes go from being fully covered with water to not even having water touching them. great build tho and an amazing diy idea
Yeah it leaked then got better as the wood swelled then I emptied it over summer which caused the wood to dry out and shrink and it leaked worse
Hi Scott, is the wood hot tub still working? I'm curious about its lifespan...
It’s a treehouse now. I let it dry out (empty) over a summer and that caused more leaks than I wanted to keep patching
This is sick super underrated Fr Fr
Thanks!
Very cool guys! Awesome to see young men just going for it.
I do however have some major major concerns about the chemicals being used to stain the wood and how that interacts with hot water. Stains of this nature should not be absorbed into the body. I believe the hot water will cause those stains to absorb into the body at higher rates and much faster. Just be careful. I would have personally gone with the some kind of plastic liner sandwiched between unstained Cedar.
Agreed. It's a treehouse now so now more concerns. When I make another one I'm going to use a liner
You can add cedar pickets on the outside if you really want some cedar and add a liner or tiles on the inside.
Yes something waterproof like a liner would have been very helpful
Please post your cookie recipe! They look delish!
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lol!
Hay Scott, what about using a much bigger copper coil and engulf that coil with fire, I mean bond fire size. That should get you the results you want!!! Or, you can get one of those tankless water heaters and use that. Either way it will be epic!!!
Tankless hot water heater would be clutch
Thanks for the video
I have been inspired
those 3 cans of flex seal were the definition of throwing good money after bad.
Yeah a lot of money was spent on flex seal... if I could do it again - 2x cedar all the way with tight joints that could swell to create the waterproofing
You have a great start and I love your creativity. I got a lot of ideas from your video for the deck and hot tub I plan to build. You asked for suggestions on how to improve yours, so here are a couple of suggestions. Please take this reply as a constructive reply. In no way am I throwing shade at your efforts. Quite the opposite. You and your assistants did a great job and gave me ideas on creating, designing, and building my own.
The money you spent on the Flexseal, glue, stain, and clamps would cover the cost of the cedar. When joining the Ceder, you could use a pocket hole jig on the back and install decking screws every 4" to 6" along the joint to make the wood a water-tight seal. You would no longer need the long clamps included in the savings. With cedar, you might have some small weeping along the seams, but the seams would seal closed as the wood expands. Also, the floor joint would have been less likely to have failed if you had installed deck screws with pocket hole joinery.
** Using the deck screws along the tongue and grove joints and the plywood/T-111 sheeting would have saved you time because you would not have to wait for the glue to dry. Pocket hole joinery allows you to put a screw into the board from the back side, at an angle, pulling the two boards together, tightly. The screws are hidden from the finished side while doing a great job keeping the joint together even when the spa is empty and dry. You can look up Pocket Hole Jigs on the internet. my favorite brand is the Kreg System. I am not a sponsor of Kreg Tools, I just love their system and I have used many and even built some myself, but none worked for me as well as Kreg Tools. I will use these tools to build my 10' by 8' in-deck hot tub.
Kreg Tools Website: www.kregtool.com/shop/pocket-hole-joinery/pocket-hole-jigs/
You might want more copper tubing and two or more wraps in the coil to make a more efficient heating element. As the heat rises in the flue of the firebox it heats the cooler water with the coolest gases first and the hottest part of the fire as the water leaves the firebox. The water flow should go toward the cold water entering the coil at the top and leaving the coil at the bottom.
The furnace to heat the water should be an enclosed firebox with the heating element, the copper coil on top of the wood, made out of cinderblocks. The firebox should have an opening on the bottom for the wood and air to enter. The firebox should enclose the heating coil except for a 4" to 6" hole at the top to allow the smoke and gasses to escape. The fire would burn more slowly but put out a more even and efficient heat. When you build the furnace with controlled airflow, you will use less fuel but get more heat because of the venture effect. A double brick or cinder block wall around the furnace will also make it safer for you and your guests.
You might consider upgrading to a stronger pump and adding more distributed water returns to the pool with a directed flow to circulate the water more evenly throughout the spa.
Adding Styrofoam or waterproof insulation around the outside walls and then a cover of T-111 siding will use less energy to keep heated and will also look much more attractive.
Another upgrade I can see is adding a solar heating option, having two heating sources. Using Solar during the day to maintain temperature, and wood burning for when the sun is not shining or during extreme cold. Both of the heating options need a way of temperature control for safety reasons too.
Another thought, you also would have had little to no chemical transfer when going with cedar.
Hi. Thank you! Glad the video was of help. This is some great information. I completely agree that the cedar would've been the way to go. Also maximizing efficiency with more copper coils, insulating the tub, and enclosing the furnace is a must. Solar idea is also a great idea. I hope to build another tub one day and take everything I learned with this one and make a much better one. Thanks for the advice again!
How did this hold up? I live in Atascadero and was excited when I saw you were local
Yes sir. It held up decent but after sitting dry for a summer it started to leak. So logically I turned it into a treehouse
Cool stuff, how is it holding up today? Any problems?
I turned it into a treehouse…
Billy Mays smiles upon you from the heavens.
Phil Swift is the man I think you’re thinking of. He’s alive and well
No bubbles???
Next time!
Awsome idea. Id have used silicone in the grove of each board, or a rubber cord.
This must have cost a fortune especially with lumber prices the way they are now.
Spend the money on the cedar next time it swells and makes it water tight without all the flex seal and stain.
100% Agree!
You should consider a vinyl liner.
For a long term solution I would agree in considering it or using a wood that can hold up better to water like cedar
Price/Plans/Supplies/Tools/Suppliers & Time it took to build it. Pls?
Might be losing some water there bud. Awesome job though. Way better than any home made ones I've seen through the years
Loved the Jake Aaknes feature.
A true gift
How do you get the water to rotate from tub round the tubes without some kind off pump
The heat from the fire causes the water to rise in the coil (just like air) and it will flow out of the other end. There's a science term but I forgot it
Thermal cycling is the science term (:
Hey man hows the hot tub holding up now?
@@ExploringwithAlec it leaked too much so I turn it into a treehouse
@@ExploringwithAlec I’m gonna build another soon though with a liner in between the wood, so it should not
Just found your channel and your builds are hard asf hope your channel grows more soon im finna start a diy one myself any tips
Thank you glad you enjoy the videos! Yes, it is a lot of work hahaha but very rewarding. Only tip is build stuff that you like then videoing it on the side just makes it more fun
Never use your phone while driving, especially when you're going to upload it lol, but nice video, it has it flaws and lessons learned, but if you didn't upload it we would not know. Not sure if you did upgrades, but it definitely is almost perfect.
Youre right 👍
would it be better to put tarp inside ? tac it to the sides?
Some sort of liner yeah
Needs more copper tubing and stop those leaks We saw the water level overall not a bad idea. 👍🏽
How much did this cost all in all?
First video only: probably around $800 including some tools like those clamps
What did you use for the floor t&g plywood???
Yeah just whatever they had at the Home Depot
A year later - is it still holding water without additional work or repairs???? Or has it leaked?
It's a treehouse now... It leaked once I left the wood dry out when it was empty over a summer
@@DIYSCOTT How about for your next project - hot tub in a tree?? :)
I would love to know the cost of this project, just curious.
I think it was like $800 to make this first video
Now only some nice bubbles are missing. Pls let us know if this cool tub is still not leaking 😉
It’s a treehouse now…
Thanks so much
I feel like it’s better to have the sucking pipes on top considering most of the debris that gets in would probably float!
I'm not sure if that sealant is safe to submerg your body into after being heated over 100. I used straight silicone.
I would just avoid the pump altogether, if you're using the copper coil in a fire method, the water will circulate on its own just due to the heated water rising in the coil
Yeah I added the pump for the filter though mostly
How come you used T&G instead of some very thick plywood?
I thought it would look cool... If I were to do it again I would use plywood (kinda like the floor) because there would be way less seams to seal
FYI clamp opposite sides so your material doesn't bow
Are you talking about for all the T&G?
@@DIYSCOTT the t&g or if you're making a wood panel or counter top. Really helps to clamp opposite sides so it doesn't warp. Source: I work at a wood shop. cool build btw 🙌
When you build it put insulation so it holds the heat the pink foam boards get them and then put a rubber swimming pool liners over frame and then the boards then the water should hold and you need to make it bigger so that you have full benches and also another exit area where there are steps up and safety rails to lead to a deck as bylaws require a fence around all pools outdoors same with the hottubs so the local kids cant get in and drown so you have to have it installed lower in ground when you get your own places and then have a set of stairs up to a deck area then put safety rails and fence that has to be 3 inches so that kids cant fall or climb in between and so that no animal or child can get their arms or head through the rails as they try to crawl through the bylaws in your local area check make sure fence requirements if you do not follow it and someone complains then bylaw can make you tear it down if there is no fence around your whole area there seems to have fence but make sure a locking door so no unsupervised child gets near cause there are too many small little ones that are drawn to pools in summer so be safe if you have little siblings around ok.
@@kristakaufman-y6j yes fully area. Only thing in question is if I should have the wood in contact with the water (with the pool liner behind the wood) or if I should just make the pool liner the surface
What about a drain at the lowest point
Yeah needs to be in the bottom
Cookies & Milk? 😅
Wheres the Whiskey & Women? ❤ Bring'em on out...
Fuck yeah Scott!! My girl and I really enjoyed the vid. We’re also looking to make a hot tub. 👍🏼thx
Do it!
What was the total cost for everything including the plumbing and heater?
Have you tried time travel subliminals or the energy thief subliminal
Hard to say at this point... the wood was probably around $800, pluming was $200, pump was $120, plus a lot of random Home Depot trips so probably 1.2 to 1.4k?
Also, you should’ve used pipe clamps not trigger clamps. Reason is because you don’t get a good surface for clamping on trigger clamps with clamping large boards.
Interesting... I've never used pipe clamps
So how is this holding up after a year?
It’s a treehouse now…
So... a year later, how did it hold up?
It’s a treehouse now…
How are you planning on regulating temperature? I've thought about making one of these a few times! I think a hexagonal shape would hold the internal water pressure better than 4 flat sides, but it has more jointing so more complicated build!
Yeah a more complex shape would be more fun. I've only gotten it up to like 93-95 degrees so just around perfect at max fire for a couple hours
AWESOME
Thank you!
I guess my only concern would be what might be leeching out of the water you're soaking in. I mean, it might be fine...
Yeah definitely not great lol but I only used it a couple times
I appreciate the total disaster of a build. No I don’t recommend anyone follow this plan but I love the fact that he tried and learned and that’s something everyone should do.
Well said
How much did it all cost you, in the end?
hard to say because I improved it a couple times but just to build the first video's worth maybe like $600 but wood was way more expensive then than it is now
Has your tub lasted and not leaked I want to build my own but I can't afford to spend the money if it leaks etc can you let me know please
I'm going to make a follow up video on this very soon
Just posted... it definitely leaks over time but I think it could be built better to not leak
How is the tub after a year?
It's in a tree now... It started to leak once I left it empty for the summer and the wood dried out
Luke warm and obviously still leaking…..
flex seal over caulking, why, silicone already flexes
Get you a nice pair of headphones, and the last step of your editing should be throwing those things on and mixing the audio evenly to finish it off. Made me bout jump 450 feet into the air with those sudden cuts to the full volume music in comparison to the volume of your commentary. Great vid. Would love to cut a huge square hole in my deck and build one of these into it.
Hahaha. Sorry!!! My audio does suck. Working on making it better
@@DIYSCOTT Its all good man. It was still a great video. Editing is HARD.
Nolan’s Ark 😂
How long it takes to heat it up?
This original version took too long... 4-5 hours with like 5 bundles of wood
Skeptical we mafe everything negative by design to fail just gor me to rise bc everyone is fake hunny but us three i see everything 😂😂😂
Before the water started going in, I was thinking "Oh gosh, that thing is gonna leak so much." Hehe 😅 I've heard other pool people say that Flex seal doesn't work so well. So there might be better things to use. Old video, but still. Hope it turned out good. :)
It’s a treehouse now lol
U need to let the wood to get wet and expand and it will stop the leaking
Noticed all the water missing from the fill up
Your not supposed to notice that!