Good job being meticulous on the lay out. Don't forget to mark the stakes for the string locations so that when they get yanked by the post hole diggers, you can put them back (or replace with new string) where they belong without having to re-level all the others.
Hello Seth. In the last video where you've made this setup , you said that you will test the whole job with using the laser lavel when the night falls. You didn't do it. Neither in this video. I was just wondering if this old method of layout and leveling terrain is as accurate as modern laser levels.
A 2x6 has a max allowable span of 6 feet. So I went with 5 feet between footers to be on the safe side. That also allowed a 10 foot 2x6 to end on a footer.
@@sethcraftworkshopbut since 2x6 can be bought off the shelf in lengths of 12 or 16 feet, how did you come up with “a max allowable span” of just 6 feet? Seems like you would need to determine a rough estimate of the load on the boards under the exterior walls and roof vs under interior walls or extra heavy tools/appliances/tubs?
Good job being meticulous on the lay out. Don't forget to mark the stakes for the string locations so that when they get yanked by the post hole diggers, you can put them back (or replace with new string) where they belong without having to re-level all the others.
Good job Seth ❤❤❤❤
Hello Seth. In the last video where you've made this setup , you said that you will test the whole job with using the laser lavel when the night falls. You didn't do it. Neither in this video. I was just wondering if this old method of layout and leveling terrain is as accurate as modern laser levels.
I brought out the laser and it did not translate well on camera in The dark. The laser did show that I had around 1/4" off in spots.
Great job. Easy to listen.
Thank you.
Good skill
Do you have any video about house extension? I need to extend my shed and want some fair idea.
crystal clear explanation
Happy to help.
How did you come up with the distance between your footers
A 2x6 has a max allowable span of 6 feet. So I went with 5 feet between footers to be on the safe side. That also allowed a 10 foot 2x6 to end on a footer.
@@sethcraftworkshop building a pole barn and trying to rape my head around how far to span my openings.
@@sethcraftworkshopbut since 2x6 can be bought off the shelf in lengths of 12 or 16 feet, how did you come up with “a max allowable span” of just 6 feet? Seems like you would need to determine a rough estimate of the load on the boards under the exterior walls and roof vs under interior walls or extra heavy tools/appliances/tubs?
Good job
Thank you.
Doing great 😎
Thank you. This place is coming along nicely.
@@sethcraftworkshop it’s looking awesome! Love the videos. Year after year the channel keeps getting better😃
Love it
These guid lines make a big difference. Especially with how poorly I judge a straight line.
Im not a fan of tire wall
It has held up perfectly. Free too. However the look is not for everyone.