Nice work! We’re elbows deep in our old house renovation also (although you guys are probably done and moved in already) and watching you take that rotten wood was like deja vu. I wish we had stud walls like yours instead of the solid criscross barn wood we got. Thanks for sharing!
Ill be doing this soon on a 1900 stucco-frame house in the desert,,likely I will run some block in teh corner since the wood is just on the ground,,thanks for the video!
Thank you both so much for posting this. I just did my first ever floor joist repair (a lot of wood rot, much like this) and this was both informative and affirming. Great work!
Great video. I hope I won't be going to that extent but my new project, assuming my offer gets accepted, starts in the new year. I know there is rot in one wall, top to bottom, but I'm hoping under the house just needs jacking and I can save all the old floors (approx 1870 build).
probably all the ground contact and also no ventilation is the cause of the rot they did fix it but later down the road the same thing will happen they should have moved the house (yes its possible ive done it on multiple jobs) added a new foundation and stem wall so that the house is higher off the ground and added vents so the crawl space can get proper ventilation
@ching574 is correct about the crawl space needing more ventilation. There are a few ways to go about that, just depending on time and budget. We're currently evaluating which way we'd like to proceed. Leaning towards removing cinder block from each side of the room to place crawl space vents. We would have to dig around the vents outside to place vestal window wells. By no means a perfect solution but it would drastically help. Thanks for the question!
You're correct about the crawl space needing more ventilation. Thinking of just removing cinder block from each side of the room to place crawl space vents and vestal window wells. By no means a perfect solution but it would definitely help along with the pressure treated lumber.
@@cripplecreekfarmsky Ahh thank you! I’m very curious on all of this stuff. I’m dealing with something similar with my kitchen. However, there is a small crawl space under the kitchen and it connects up to the rest of the basement. But I cannot install vents due to how the structure was built and because it connects to the rest of the basement. I planned on putting a vapor barrier down and a way for any water that could potentially build up, down into a drain. But the only thing I could think of to help with the moisture (if there is some left) was a dehumidifier. Thanks for the video!
Wow that was a really high quality rebuild. The old stuff was almost completely gone it was so rotten. Awesome work
Pretty neat t see this done ,looks like a job well done ! Is that regular rot from old age ?
Nice work! We’re elbows deep in our old house renovation also (although you guys are probably done and moved in already) and watching you take that rotten wood was like deja vu. I wish we had stud walls like yours instead of the solid criscross barn wood we got. Thanks for sharing!
Ill be doing this soon on a 1900 stucco-frame house in the desert,,likely I will run some block in teh corner since the wood is just on the ground,,thanks for the video!
Thanks for watching! Best of luck on your project!
Thank you both so much for posting this. I just did my first ever floor joist repair (a lot of wood rot, much like this) and this was both informative and affirming. Great work!
Glad that this video was able to help you out! Thanks for tuning in and best of luck on your project!
Great video. I hope I won't be going to that extent but my new project, assuming my offer gets accepted, starts in the new year. I know there is rot in one wall, top to bottom, but I'm hoping under the house just needs jacking and I can save all the old floors (approx 1870 build).
Good luck on your project! Hopefully this video will come in handy for you!
For your safety, to keep the 4x on the jack from kicking out, screw a 2x to it and the stud. 😮6:13
That would probably help. We live on the wild side though lol
definitely....could you imagine the movement that would cause?
Question here, what originally caused that rot? And, won’t the moisture from the dirt cause rot? Or dry rot?
probably all the ground contact and also no ventilation is the cause of the rot they did fix it but later down the road the same thing will happen they should have moved the house (yes its possible ive done it on multiple jobs) added a new foundation and stem wall so that the house is higher off the ground and added vents so the crawl space can get proper ventilation
@ching574 is correct about the crawl space needing more ventilation. There are a few ways to go about that, just depending on time and budget. We're currently evaluating which way we'd like to proceed. Leaning towards removing cinder block from each side of the room to place crawl space vents. We would have to dig around the vents outside to place vestal window wells. By no means a perfect solution but it would drastically help. Thanks for the question!
You're correct about the crawl space needing more ventilation. Thinking of just removing cinder block from each side of the room to place crawl space vents and vestal window wells. By no means a perfect solution but it would definitely help along with the pressure treated lumber.
@@cripplecreekfarmsky Ahh thank you! I’m very curious on all of this stuff. I’m dealing with something similar with my kitchen. However, there is a small crawl space under the kitchen and it connects up to the rest of the basement. But I cannot install vents due to how the structure was built and because it connects to the rest of the basement. I planned on putting a vapor barrier down and a way for any water that could potentially build up, down into a drain. But the only thing I could think of to help with the moisture (if there is some left) was a dehumidifier. Thanks for the video!
@@ching574 Like, actually picking up the whole house and moving it to install a new foundation?
Awesome job but have you considered a battery powered nail gun? Would save you a ton of time
Thank you! We're just old school I guess lol