Fellow math enthusiast (engineer) - I created a Roof Valley calculator in google sheets but I'm not sure how to share it since links are blocked. If P1 is the pitch of the roof you're diving into and P2 is the pitch of the roof that is doing the diving, then your formula for the offset distance of that runner from your mark would be your framing lumber thickness (assume 1.5) divided by the tangent of the angle between the two roof's normal vector. This angle is equal to acos(144/(sqrt(P1^2+144)*sqrt(P2^2+144))). This angle is also your bevel angle if you decided to bevel the runner and/or sheathing. If both roofs are a 4/12 pitch then P1 = P2 = 4, your roof normal vector angle would be 25.84°, and your offset would be 3.1". Given most framing lumber comes with a corner radius that is between 1/8 and 3/16, this would shorten your offset distance by about 3/16 so that the sheathing makes contact with the radius. This was actually the most difficult part of the calculations and isn't really needed unless you want to be perfect. Thanks for the challenge and keep up the awesome work!!
You are the hardest working dude I know. I just got done with a 12hr day of sheeting the ceiling of my 16’ high ceiling in my shop by myself and I see you working by yourself (old best house video), setting up cameras, filming, moving cameras, and editing it all while having a family is an incredible amount of work. Just wanted to say great job
Serious props to the camera work and editing! The music with the beat pause (I don't recall ever hearing music in one of these videos)... The dozen + nail gun shots across the roof... Having both guys mic'ed up... Many other interesting edits and shots over the last few videos... Super well done!
Greg, I know Kyle can be anale, but I worked for a guy in a custom cabinet shop and I was Kyle. 30 years later we're together and he tells this guy that he worked for me! How is that for acknowledgement!! I took the ability that God gave me and give it a 110%.
Except for having to try out each of the cheesy effects that are included with the editing software. Had a film professor who swore he could tell how much time an editor had using each different editing software suite by how many of the kitschy canned special transitions they felt compelled to add to their videos, since the more time you spend editing the less you feel a need to use gimmicks to try and impress your viewing audience.
So nice to watch craftsman at work, looking amazing! We got the Genstone installed and it looks fantastic, now I'm trying to compact the rock to get ready for the foam board. Still need to get the gutters installed yet and I thought I would cut in the lights under the soffit.
Its good to see it rain after a pour because then you know good the concrete guys did their forming and finishing of the concrete. If you see puddles that don't dry up you know there is a low spot.
As usual and absolutely typical for RRBuildings videos, the content was topnotch, the editing was spot on and although some soundtrack to portions of the video use to be the norm, the added music really elevated the video and brought back memories of the early days for me (2018) of RRBuildings videos. I'll be watching this video several times to make sure I catch every nugget of information.
Now I'm even more excited to build the new rabbit hutch. but it will probably take until next week until my Festool TS60 arrives. great job guys. greetings from Germany
I've not had this situation happen to myself bit I have heard from others: With that green Huber board on their Zip system stuff, you can of course squeegee it to get good contact, but also make sure you roll it with their roller! That roller has little "Z" shaped bit juuuust protruding from either side on the roller so that it basically gets stamped onto the tape, and Huber will only honor their warranty if they see that Z on the tape from you rolling it. Otherwise they'll claim it was an improper installation.
Thanks Kyle for all your videos, very informative and enjoyable to watch. I am looking forward to watching more of your content into the next year! Happy New Year to you and your family!
Hey there! Love your videos and craftsmanship! I have what may be a dumb question but, am curious why you run the sheathing vertical as opposed to horizontal? I know you are busy but, maybe one of your viewers can enlighten me. Thanks!
for LP Weatherlogic ON A ROOF, the long dimension (the major strength axis) must be across the roof supports and continuous over at least 2 spans (so in this case the 4 footers work, too). for LP Weatherlogic on a wall, it can go vertically or horizontally
Keeping the slab wet for 28 days will almost eliminate all cracking and allow concrete to cure w/o internal stresses. Maybe do as DOT does on interstates and cover all structual pours with visqueen for a month
Should have been covered with concrete blankets,to stop the surface freezing. If the surface freezes it is possible that a thin layer will not set properly, in a bad case you can brush it off in a month or two. I do not think that this will happen in this case, as it only usually happens if you get a heavy frost before the initial set. You can spray the surface that is at risk of freezing with a concrete antifreeze. But I’ve never thought it does the surface much good.
Funny, I've never seen any concrete covered with visqueen for a month in the 40 years I have done highway construction. Of course I have only worked in 12 or 13 states, so maybe DOT has different requirements where you are from.
Or get 2 jumper cable sets and connect 2 cars in series (Magni negative -> Car #1 negative; Car #1 positive -> Car #2 negative; Car #2 positive -> Magni positive). The only thing to watch out for in this is that you must never allow the body of the 2 cars to come into contact (directly or through something else like a tool or a slab of metal roof panel or whatever), because the car chassis is connected to that car's negative, and connecting the 2 chassis together will short one of the car batteries.
On our tractors if the batteries are really dead just jump it off with one vehicle , hook positive to positive post on battery, or the positive post on the starter, then hook the ground clamp to a good ground anywhere on the machine , a bolt, a strap, anywhere that isn’t covered in paint preferably. Let it charge for a while 15-30 minutes, it should start. Make sure the key is off in the machine while it’s charging lol.
I was curious about the Hubert zip roller so I searched it up....There's always a chance i'm wrong but it looks to me like they sold you that marketing line on the hard to roll two uneven surfaces. It appears the roller accounts for that with two separated roller surfaces. Just like Greg said, if it looks straight it is straight. lol.....regardless, ur not wrong. Great build. As always looking forward to the next video.
Good to see the roof being closed in, that Magni is soo usefull. you lost me on that valley build got lost in all the caculations, 🙃😂then it all comes together😮Real clever how youre brain works Kyle. This may be the last vid before New Years day ,Soo,!! Happy New Year to you and youres for 2024, Hope you have a Healthy & Prosperous year, and the same to Greg.
Would a screw binder allow you to make more precise adjustments to the chain tension rather than the lever binders you use? I have wondered about that on several videos where I watched you search for the right chain link to hook the binder onto.
Roller vs squeezing the tapes. A rubber roller barrel is elastic, too. Some systems have special stamp indentations just to verify that you did roll all the tape and not overlooking some parts. Ensure the nail pattern before applying the tape. Structural sheathing depends on nail patterns to every board. Inspectors will not be amused when nails are hidden behind tapes. At least get some pictures for them and ask them whether the will accept this as a documentation.
I want my next home to be a high quality post frame build, but there aren't any post framers on this level here in NE OH that I'm aware of. I was considering taking it on myself, but this will be my forever home, so I want a professional job. Plus it's damn near impossible to get financing on a self build.
@karlwithak. "Small scale"? What are you smoking?! This absolutely is not a small scale job. It sounds to me like you just don't have access to decent contractors, which is a common problem. They do exist in some areas, but they're always booked. That leaves mainly low quality jokers who are out to take advantage. In any case, not everyone has the skill or the desire to take on a self build on this scale, so don't assume that's always an option.
Have you ever considered using a ratcheting chain tensioner so you can get those 1/8 or smaller adjustments easier than having to go an extra link or use those boards that slip sometimes? I’ve never adjusted walls with chains like you do it I was just wondering if you thought it might work.
My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined. I thought you weren’t one of them, Kyle. I thought I could trust you. It goes without saying that hearing the phrase “That’s good enough. That’ll do.” come out of your mouth cut deep into my soul. You know better. 😂
Loving this build so far. But I will be curious to see… where your rooflines are meeting up next to your gables, looks like some prime bird nest real estate. Interested to see what your solution will be for this. EDIT: That Truewerk hoodie is fire!
Interesting roof design, will the side roof die into the small main roof gable as it is now? I have thougt the peak will be connected and have a valley top to bottom.
Love your videos. Just asking a question to understand because I am looking to build a shouse and i am trying to learn. At the 22 minute mark, why wouldn't you run the all rafter tails to the other roof and therefore extend the valley all the way down? It seems like it would be a cleaner look and less area for water to get into.
The math is interesting - do you use BIM as a design tool? You are building accurate enough that a digital twin would allow you to pre-cut on the ground or in your shop on a rainy day. Math on site can be time consuming because you check it so many times.
Oh yes, Ya gotta square the corner and account for slippage or skew and the age of the bevel board, never mind the average temperature since that chalk line was snapped and set. Everybody knows that the fascia can be wrong and needs to be checked and checked again. So many variables can affect the square and never mind being level. Leveling is similar but again there you're gonna be checking the bubble and not the square. Ya still pull and snap the line accounting for skew or slippage but there, it's all about the bubble. Everybody knows that. Right? The square and the level, then and only then can you start installing the plank. Course then there is the surface of the plank. Important to consider. And the very biggest worry with the plank is the warpage. Along with the warpage comes the other two variables. The square and the level. Whew! ~ I'll tell ya. 😵💫
If I may ask, why would you want to do Box gutters, from a maintenance point of view, this would be the first place to get a leak? I always avoid a Box gutter as much as possible. and all 3 those roofs could be joined (eliminating the need for box gutters). But I'm curious to hear your thoughts (these are just my opinions).
Oh my Oh my Oh my. Yes in the good valley. The valley of sun. The degrees. Oh yes. Not a temperature in the sunny warm valley but an angle. The shape of the angle maybe a bevel too. The angle of the offset. A key component for the moment. Factoring in The Level. The Level knows. See the moment of the angle in the sun. It makes sense and all fits together. There in the valley. Maybe some compound angles but the right length to consider too. Hold that and Nail it Greg. There in the valley of the sun. ~😉~
Hey Kyle got a question about your foot wear! What brand and style boots are you wearing? I have worn my Columbia's out and I need new boots. What your wearing looks very comfortable, and I would like to see if I can find me some and try them out. Great video as well. I like the well balanced videos of your shop. Love It!! Happy New Year!!! 2024
Seems like these expensive sheet suppliers would add some sort of bumper for spacing so you don't have to mess with nails to space every sheet. When they do this I want a 5% royalty
Question - Where your fascia board dives into the valley - how do you keep the the water off so the fascia board so it does not rot? I have two locations on my roof where this is a constant problem.
Can't believe it that you guys don't wear safety harness that high up. You would go to jail if someone came off the roof. Don't care how experienced / careful you are.. one hose under the foot and over you go.
Is the roof going to be metal? What is all this sheathing for? Why not just put on the coated insulated steel? I assume you will have a metal ceiling and blown-in insulation? Overkill? Belt and suspenders? Lots of extra money to spend?
He will extend the purlins after the sheathing is done so they can die off on top of the sheathing for uniformity. The sheathing on the outer roofs probably runs all the way down to get the necessary strength since they're separate roofs.
@@colearmbruster yea that’s what they all say then laid up in hospital unable to work and provide for their family because they chose to be lazy and think they are invincible.
Favorite quote of this video: “I’m just looking for perfect… I’m looking for perfect but hoping it is close” I think that is the next RR Building Tee Shirt.
Having Greg mic’d up makes these videos so much more entertaining
I only listen to Greg...
Yes!
They balance each other out. Great observation.
He has had some great responses lately.
Agree
I'm not sure what I'm more impressed with, how hard Greg works or how much patience he has working for Kyle 😂😂
Fellow math enthusiast (engineer) - I created a Roof Valley calculator in google sheets but I'm not sure how to share it since links are blocked. If P1 is the pitch of the roof you're diving into and P2 is the pitch of the roof that is doing the diving, then your formula for the offset distance of that runner from your mark would be your framing lumber thickness (assume 1.5) divided by the tangent of the angle between the two roof's normal vector. This angle is equal to acos(144/(sqrt(P1^2+144)*sqrt(P2^2+144))). This angle is also your bevel angle if you decided to bevel the runner and/or sheathing. If both roofs are a 4/12 pitch then P1 = P2 = 4, your roof normal vector angle would be 25.84°, and your offset would be 3.1". Given most framing lumber comes with a corner radius that is between 1/8 and 3/16, this would shorten your offset distance by about 3/16 so that the sheathing makes contact with the radius. This was actually the most difficult part of the calculations and isn't really needed unless you want to be perfect. Thanks for the challenge and keep up the awesome work!!
"The math is always right if you do it right". Love it. Great series.
Carpenters code: Square, plumb and true. Makes life a dream once that critical work has been completed.
I honestly appreciate how you bounce things off Greg. I’m in the field and some guys just think they know best and don’t care for others inputs.
You are the hardest working dude I know. I just got done with a 12hr day of sheeting the ceiling of my 16’ high ceiling in my shop by myself and I see you working by yourself (old best house video), setting up cameras, filming, moving cameras, and editing it all while having a family is an incredible amount of work. Just wanted to say great job
Serious props to the camera work and editing! The music with the beat pause (I don't recall ever hearing music in one of these videos)... The dozen + nail gun shots across the roof... Having both guys mic'ed up... Many other interesting edits and shots over the last few videos... Super well done!
Incredible that just two of you can do all this!!! Sooo impressed!
You are a master of your craft. You attention to detail is hard to find these days. I tip my hat to you guys
Greg, I know Kyle can be anale, but I worked for a guy in a custom cabinet shop and I was Kyle. 30 years later we're together and he tells this guy that he worked for me!
How is that for acknowledgement!! I took the ability that God gave me and give it a 110%.
You're so lucky to have a good assistant. I hope he got a good Christmas present.
3:17 this is why I watch these videos. You’re a beautiful man Kyle.
Your camera guy is really, really good. He's made night and day diff in your videos.
Except for having to try out each of the cheesy effects that are included with the editing software. Had a film professor who swore he could tell how much time an editor had using each different editing software suite by how many of the kitschy canned special transitions they felt compelled to add to their videos, since the more time you spend editing the less you feel a need to use gimmicks to try and impress your viewing audience.
So nice to watch craftsman at work, looking amazing! We got the Genstone installed and it looks fantastic, now I'm trying to compact the rock to get ready for the foam board. Still need to get the gutters installed yet and I thought I would cut in the lights under the soffit.
Greg mic’d up is the best thing you’ve added to your production.
I think we have the same taste Kyle. You be building what I wanted.
Can't wait to see the final results. Amazing job and looks to this point. The pattern on the sheathing looks cool by it self. 👍👍👍
"It's not perfect..." my grandfather always told us it was "good enough for who it's for!"
I dont blame you with the safety harness. I do worry about sawdust on the roof, but maybe the plywood you use doesn't matter. I love your work!
The Milwaukee track saw looks like works pretty good !
It’s amazing what two people can get done looks good
Right off the bat Kyle to Greg “Ok whatever” ! Wow I felt that in Nor Cal!
Its good to see it rain after a pour because then you know good the concrete guys did their forming and finishing of the concrete. If you see puddles that don't dry up you know there is a low spot.
This roof sheathing installation, is some fancy-schmancy!
You two guys are quit a team. 🔨👍 Marc from Belgium. I totally like your videos (excuse my French)
As usual and absolutely typical for RRBuildings videos, the content was topnotch, the editing was spot on and although some soundtrack to portions of the video use to be the norm, the added music really elevated the video and brought back memories of the early days for me (2018) of RRBuildings videos. I'll be watching this video several times to make sure I catch every nugget of information.
Now I'm even more excited to build the new rabbit hutch.
but it will probably take until next week until my Festool TS60 arrives.
great job guys. greetings from Germany
Ouch, please tell me you have other plans for the 800 dollar track saw you bought than just building a single rabbit hutch.
@@stevecorcoran9869 lots of other things. I'm currently renovating a house from 1920. But the rabbit hutch for my daughter took priority
Looking really great, guys. RR, you're the best at this. Love watching you guys just getting it done.
You should have a new slogan: 'I'm not going to chase a 16th, but I will chase an 8th'. Great video.
I've not had this situation happen to myself bit I have heard from others: With that green Huber board on their Zip system stuff, you can of course squeegee it to get good contact, but also make sure you roll it with their roller! That roller has little "Z" shaped bit juuuust protruding from either side on the roller so that it basically gets stamped onto the tape, and Huber will only honor their warranty if they see that Z on the tape from you rolling it. Otherwise they'll claim it was an improper installation.
Their adhesive is pressure activated as well, so there is an actual reason they require it.
Wow, guys, I have been following you both right from the start of this "Dream Shop Build" You guys are talented nice work perfection for sure....!
Making great progress guys! 😁👍🏼
having Greg mic'd up is awsome
Thanks Kyle for all your videos, very informative and enjoyable to watch. I am looking forward to watching more of your content into the next year! Happy New Year to you and your family!
The camera work on this project is awesome! I'd love to hear more about your camera & editing setup.
“We didn’t turn it off” I’m not sure Greg has even touched the Magni 😂
Great job as always guys. Feed Greg he’s hungry 😂😂. 👍👍🏴🏴
Another episode of "Trig class with Kyle" ... another good video
The different trusses sure seem to add a ton of work to get things right.
Thank You Greg for mic’ing up.
Hey there! Love your videos and craftsmanship! I have what may be a dumb question but, am curious why you run the sheathing vertical as opposed to horizontal? I know you are busy but, maybe one of your viewers can enlighten me. Thanks!
Sheathing should always run perpendicular to the frame it's fastened to. This results in greater strength for the roof and less points for failure.
for LP Weatherlogic ON A ROOF, the long dimension (the major strength axis) must be across the roof supports and continuous over at least 2 spans (so in this case the 4 footers work, too). for LP Weatherlogic on a wall, it can go vertically or horizontally
"All by myself" 😜 Greg making Eric Carmen proud 👍
Finally! Been waiting for this video! Loving this series! Keep them coming! 😛
Keeping the slab wet for 28 days will almost eliminate all cracking and allow concrete to cure w/o internal stresses. Maybe do as DOT does on interstates and cover all structual pours with visqueen for a month
Should have been covered with concrete blankets,to stop the surface freezing. If the surface freezes it is possible that a thin layer will not set properly, in a bad case you can brush it off in a month or two. I do not think that this will happen in this case, as it only usually happens if you get a heavy frost before the initial set. You can spray the surface that is at risk of freezing with a concrete antifreeze. But I’ve never thought it does the surface much good.
I am in Miami and have zero knowledge regarding freezing.@@CrimeVid
Funny, I've never seen any concrete covered with visqueen for a month in the 40 years I have done highway construction. Of course I have only worked in 12 or 13 states, so maybe DOT has different requirements where you are from.
@@stevecorcoran9869 USDOT calls for all concrete supporting columns pored to be sealed and or covered with visqueen for 28 days.
Kyle. Pull the battery cable off that joins the 2 batterys. Charge them as regular 12v batteries
Or get 2 jumper cable sets and connect 2 cars in series (Magni negative -> Car #1 negative; Car #1 positive -> Car #2 negative; Car #2 positive -> Magni positive). The only thing to watch out for in this is that you must never allow the body of the 2 cars to come into contact (directly or through something else like a tool or a slab of metal roof panel or whatever), because the car chassis is connected to that car's negative, and connecting the 2 chassis together will short one of the car batteries.
Holy man. Way to confuse the hell out of a simple solution
On our tractors if the batteries are really dead just jump it off with one vehicle , hook positive to positive post on battery, or the positive post on the starter, then hook the ground clamp to a good ground anywhere on the machine , a bolt, a strap, anywhere that isn’t covered in paint preferably. Let it charge for a while 15-30 minutes, it should start.
Make sure the key is off in the machine while it’s charging lol.
For the tape on seams. What you want is a split head roller. That way each side is independent. Then you dont need to use the scraper.
I was curious about the Hubert zip roller so I searched it up....There's always a chance i'm wrong but it looks to me like they sold you that marketing line on the hard to roll two uneven surfaces. It appears the roller accounts for that with two separated roller surfaces. Just like Greg said, if it looks straight it is straight. lol.....regardless, ur not wrong. Great build. As always looking forward to the next video.
Looking sweet
Team work !
Good to see the roof being closed in, that Magni is soo usefull. you lost me on that valley build got lost in all the caculations, 🙃😂then it all comes together😮Real clever how youre brain works Kyle. This may be the last vid before New Years day ,Soo,!! Happy New Year to you and youres for 2024, Hope you have a Healthy & Prosperous year, and the same to Greg.
Nail gun cam was awesome! 😂📷
Would a screw binder allow you to make more precise adjustments to the chain tension rather than the lever binders you use? I have wondered about that on several videos where I watched you search for the right chain link to hook the binder onto.
I would like to see you do a video of all the products in a time line and how to schedule them.
I literally checked for a new vid 2 seconds before the notification😂
Roller vs squeezing the tapes. A rubber roller barrel is elastic, too. Some systems have special stamp indentations just to verify that you did roll all the tape and not overlooking some parts. Ensure the nail pattern before applying the tape. Structural sheathing depends on nail patterns to every board. Inspectors will not be amused when nails are hidden behind tapes. At least get some pictures for them and ask them whether the will accept this as a documentation.
Awesome stuff fellas! 😃👍🏼👍🏼👊🏼👊🏼
I want my next home to be a high quality post frame build, but there aren't any post framers on this level here in NE OH that I'm aware of. I was considering taking it on myself, but this will be my forever home, so I want a professional job. Plus it's damn near impossible to get financing on a self build.
Same here in southern Indiana I want to know how far they will travel I want there attention to detail and math on our next house
@karlwithak. "Small scale"? What are you smoking?! This absolutely is not a small scale job. It sounds to me like you just don't have access to decent contractors, which is a common problem. They do exist in some areas, but they're always booked. That leaves mainly low quality jokers who are out to take advantage.
In any case, not everyone has the skill or the desire to take on a self build on this scale, so don't assume that's always an option.
Kyle as good as Greg is as an employee he needs profit sharing along with his wage. What a great employee.
Bring Greg to IBS.
Everyone always know how to run someone’s else business plus it’s his building (no profit)
🤦🏼♂️
@rogerlarkin5674 I know it's Kyles own building. I was just ribing Kyle as a joke. Plus, 100% of 0 is still 0
Finally!! Haha glad your back after the holidays buddy
Glad my phone isn’t the only one that has the insanely loud keyboard clicks sometimes
Just curious always wondered why you use those style of chain binders instead of ratchet style with a lot better adjustability.?
Have you ever considered using a ratcheting chain tensioner so you can get those 1/8 or smaller adjustments easier than having to go an extra link or use those boards that slip sometimes? I’ve never adjusted walls with chains like you do it I was just wondering if you thought it might work.
I know you got the chains on it, but maybe get some sheathing on those corners to stabilize it...lookin good
My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined. I thought you weren’t one of them, Kyle. I thought I could trust you. It goes without saying that hearing the phrase “That’s good enough. That’ll do.” come out of your mouth cut deep into my soul.
You know better.
😂
Thats sort of what my helper kept telling me, It's just a garage.
Reviewbrah?
As my co-worker often says, it's not the Garage Mahal. That said, if anyone were to build such a thing, it'd be these guys.
“Cut to shape, pound to fit, paint to match”
The pirate bro's "our R" 😂.
Happy new year!
Loving this build so far. But I will be curious to see… where your rooflines are meeting up next to your gables, looks like some prime bird nest real estate. Interested to see what your solution will be for this. EDIT: That Truewerk hoodie is fire!
Interesting roof design, will the side roof die into the small main roof gable as it is now? I have thougt the peak will be connected and have a valley top to bottom.
Good job 👍happy new year 🎉🎉✌️🙏🙏👍
That was a good one.
Love Greg's FSU sweatshirt. Too bad they were left out of the playoffs. The Orange Bowl was also very disappointing. Go Noles in '24 !!!
Was that a Jimmy Diresta reference? That’s where I came in.
Love your videos. Just asking a question to understand because I am looking to build a shouse and i am trying to learn. At the 22 minute mark, why wouldn't you run the all rafter tails to the other roof and therefore extend the valley all the way down? It seems like it would be a cleaner look and less area for water to get into.
What nailer are you using with the "B" on it? Also to jump a 24 volt system just use (2) 12 volt batteries in series.
I've intentionally designed buildings without those kinds of valleys and overhangs because they're a pain in the ass to get right lol. Nice work homes
The math is interesting - do you use BIM as a design tool? You are building accurate enough that a digital twin would allow you to pre-cut on the ground or in your shop on a rainy day. Math on site can be time consuming because you check it so many times.
Oh yes, Ya gotta square the corner and account for slippage or skew and the age of the bevel board, never mind the average temperature since that chalk line was snapped and set. Everybody knows that the fascia can be wrong and needs to be checked and checked again. So many variables can affect the square and never mind being level. Leveling is similar but again there you're gonna be checking the bubble and not the square. Ya still pull and snap the line accounting for skew or slippage but there, it's all about the bubble. Everybody knows that. Right? The square and the level, then and only then can you start installing the plank. Course then there is the surface of the plank. Important to consider. And the very biggest worry with the plank is the warpage. Along with the warpage comes the other two variables. The square and the level. Whew! ~ I'll tell ya. 😵💫
If I may ask, why would you want to do Box gutters, from a maintenance point of view, this would be the first place to get a leak?
I always avoid a Box gutter as much as possible. and all 3 those roofs could be joined (eliminating the need for box gutters). But I'm curious to hear your thoughts (these are just my opinions).
Oh my Oh my Oh my. Yes in the good valley. The valley of sun. The degrees. Oh yes. Not a temperature in the sunny warm valley but an angle. The shape of the angle maybe a bevel too. The angle of the offset. A key component for the moment. Factoring in The Level. The Level knows. See the moment of the angle in the sun. It makes sense and all fits together. There in the valley. Maybe some compound angles but the right length to consider too. Hold that and Nail it Greg. There in the valley of the sun. ~😉~
Hey Kyle got a question about your foot wear! What brand and style boots are you wearing? I have worn my Columbia's out and I need new boots. What your wearing looks very comfortable, and I would like to see if I can find me some and try them out. Great video as well. I like the well balanced videos of your shop. Love It!! Happy New Year!!! 2024
I laughed pretty good at that little sheathing "slip".
With the new TH-cam update I feel like this is the only channel I’m not running on 2x speed
What keeps the roof moving back the why it was be fore you squared it up
こんにちは!
日本からあなたのTH-camをいつも観ています!私の仕事は、家を売る仕事ですが、あなたの家を建ててみたいです😊
ところで、いつも作業ばかりなので、アメリカ人の大工さんはどんなランチか、どんなコーヒータイムか。凄く気になります!
いつか撮影する機会があれば、休憩中のところや、仲間達との一息ついている時を、撮影して教えてください😊
いつも日本から楽しみに観ています😊
You use lever chain binders. Why not ratchet binders? Is it the tolerance you require or the large area of a post frame or just the speed of install?
Great tutorial!
Seems like these expensive sheet suppliers would add some sort of bumper for spacing so you don't have to mess with nails to space every sheet. When they do this I want a 5% royalty
Question - Where your fascia board dives into the valley - how do you keep the the water off so the fascia board so it does not rot? I have two locations on my roof where this is a constant problem.
Can't believe it that you guys don't wear safety harness that high up. You would go to jail if someone came off the roof. Don't care how experienced / careful you are.. one hose under the foot and over you go.
go where, to the lift? did you watched the video?
Math, my old nemesis.
Is using H clips not necessary anymore?
Only required if using 7/16" sheathing.
Is the roof going to be metal? What is all this sheathing for? Why not just put on the coated insulated steel? I assume you will have a metal ceiling and blown-in insulation? Overkill? Belt and suspenders? Lots of extra money to spend?
Standing seam bud I need the sheathing
When in doubt, apply two layers of tape.
🤘😎
So is there just gonna be a Big dead spot between the center roof gable ends and the roof on the 2 outside roofs?
He will extend the purlins after the sheathing is done so they can die off on top of the sheathing for uniformity. The sheathing on the outer roofs probably runs all the way down to get the necessary strength since they're separate roofs.
On the roof the whole time not tied off but a little drizzle comes and work stops because it’s not safe versus tying off 😂
We work over our machine. Very safe
Lots of time harnesses just get in the way.
@@colearmbruster yea that’s what they all say then laid up in hospital unable to work and provide for their family because they chose to be lazy and think they are invincible.
@@mjboy8790 lol got safety Steve over here
Could you use the LA180 to straighten fascia?
Are you going to build crickets on either end of the center roof?
How many machines does the Magni replace?
Way do you run the plywood long ways
Favorite quote of this video: “I’m just looking for perfect… I’m looking for perfect but hoping it is close”
I think that is the next RR Building Tee Shirt.