Wall Framing

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

This is the second day on this series of daily framing videos.
I am filming every single day that we are on this huge frame, to make a series showing the entire framing process and everything involved.
To get most of the walls framed, I turned on the go pro and filmed a lot of raw content on what goes on when we're framing walls, how we frame our walls and showing you a few stupid mistakes we made and had to fix along the way

Пікірлер: 43

  • @zephyr1408
    @zephyr14083 ай бұрын

    Dave you’re a good leader ! I am a finish contractor now and see guys yelling, belittling, cussing and acting silly. ( I am in the states). Being from a leadership background you may not realize just how much those guys respect you? You know what you’re doing , confident & teach w/ o holding class! Keep it up young man and remember your creator!

  • @arunmarimuthu1572
    @arunmarimuthu15723 ай бұрын

    Great work. Enjoyed the video....

  • @morganazzopardi2187
    @morganazzopardi21873 ай бұрын

    U are very intelligent at what u do. Wish there were more builders like u

  • @UmarRehman-
    @UmarRehman-3 ай бұрын

    in love with your work bro , i am doing BUILDING CONSTRUCTION TECH in Canada 🇨🇦

  • @revs75
    @revs753 ай бұрын

    love the longer vids

  • @morganazzopardi2187
    @morganazzopardi21873 ай бұрын

    Nice long vid. Cheers mate

  • @michaelcataldo1651
    @michaelcataldo16513 ай бұрын

    Wow that’s a tight squeeze for the brickies

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    They’re not going to have a good time 😅

  • @michaelcataldo1651

    @michaelcataldo1651

    3 ай бұрын

    Hahaha. Man I love ur work! I’m a chippy from Sydney but mainly do renovations, decks, pergolas etc. those boys are lucky to have you as a boss!

  • @rorycoe3311
    @rorycoe33113 ай бұрын

    Nice vid man, alot goes into the planing of walls its not just bang bang bang. Hot tip when your prepping a wall for studs leave the plates together, load the studs into place(your effectively also measuring whether or not you can build the wall with no obstructions at the same time), then move the back plate to the otherside... saves getting your tape out!

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    That’s a good tip! Cheers mate

  • @stewatparkpark2933
    @stewatparkpark29333 ай бұрын

    The boundary clearance is crazy .

  • @cruzmakaveli9891
    @cruzmakaveli98913 ай бұрын

    Mate, great content. i work in the building industry as well but don't get to spend much time on Site to see how you guys work and set out. Like this type of content, very informative and interesting. Learning a lot mate.

  • @Sjwolosz321
    @Sjwolosz3213 ай бұрын

    Watching from The USA . some similarities in the framing process . Biggest difference being metric . I am always the lead / layout man . One thing here I have seldom every seen . Is a slab flat and level enough to use pre-cut studs !! Though many will just roll with it and wonder why the floor above has a heave in it or the trusses won't bend straight atop the plates because one is higher than the rest . Then again there are instances where an engineer does not want contact with internal webbing " It changes the moments " I've pulled up on sites where the slab looked like a rolling hills and the contractor refused to let me customize to plane . Outta Here Jackson !! . Most of my homes in the last 2 decades have been in the multi-million dollar range and huge . We generally have to shoot in .Establish a benchmark height and customize every stud. Some homes so complex that we have to use a total station to determine elevations and locations within a mm .. Seldom use trusses , Floor trusses yes , Roof trusses almost never . Those are for simpler homes where is something is wrong , It won't bite you in the butt . This reminds me of the furious frame days when you got to move it . Stand still long enough , You'll get nailed to the wall and drywalled over.. Other differences is the lingo . Nogs we call purlins , fire blocks or lateral stabilizers , Here we lace our double top plates . The only time we use single top plates is on non bearing walls. Though a bearing single top plate is allowed by code here as long as it's attached with a gusset plate and proper N-10 nails and whatever bears above must be bearing directly in line with the stud below . It's allowable by code here , But many inspectors aren't aware of it and many don't feel safe about it. Where walls tie in .. We call T's or channels , Then corners are a variety pack depending on the exterior application . Seldom see metal straps .Before they came out , It was let in bracing , Then came T bracing . The wall was squared lying flat and a line snapped , A saw kerf and install . Then the metal strap , Had the damnedest time getting them taut , But I see that has improved with the tensioner you all use now . Used to sheathe the wall with a variety of products , gypsum , foam , celotex . Code was 25% of the first and second story must be structural sheathed and 40% of the first story of three .. Then came along plywood and OSB "Horizontal mulch " and sheath the whole exterior and tattered house wrap !! Then Zip system now . Hate to see what space age stuff they will try next. I started in the the days before nail guns , lasers and battery powered tools . Hand driving an entire. Don't miss those days at all . Peace

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    The slab was pretty good, but we spend a lot of time lasering the plates before starting the beams and subfloor, and we will pack everything to be level. We’re the same with the top plates, we frame everything on the ground with a single plate, and once we’ve plumbed the walls and done the gang plates, someone will run around on a ladder and put on the pitching plate. I’ll love to attempt to build a house without nail guns just to see how damn hard it’ll be. I can imagine how hard that would have been

  • @Sjwolosz321

    @Sjwolosz321

    3 ай бұрын

    @@DaveDoesCarpentry Thanks for the reply . Hand driving , Back then it seemed a carpenters IQ was determined how he fast he could smash a nail. Had to be tap and smash like a machine and nailing off a roof Had to keep the hammer bouncing between hits like a drummer. Extremely tiring , Grateful for nail guns

  • @TBird89

    @TBird89

    3 ай бұрын

    Mate there’s no way in hell that the Gen y would hand drive nails in… they wouldn’t be at work the next day because “it’s too stressful and you’re putting pressure on them and because they missed a smoko break they are exhausted. 😁😁😁😁 Here on Australia kids grow up day dreaming about being a chippy using a Paslode and driving a Ford Ranger otherwise they won’t come to work.

  • @datrakapo4807

    @datrakapo4807

    3 ай бұрын

    @@TBird89 lol too true.. only to join a crew and they get you moving steels and passing tools all day lol

  • @cmagyar7157

    @cmagyar7157

    3 ай бұрын

    @@TBird89why would gen y hand nail when it’s the least efficient way possible?

  • @AlwaysSearching..
    @AlwaysSearching..3 ай бұрын

    Love the content bro, the notes you have on your phone that you wrote down as an apprentice would you be able to upload them any where to see them? Currently doing an on-site apprenticeship in aus not allowed to study because of my visa. There’s a lot of details that are hard to keep track of. Would be very helpful to have 👍🏼

  • @TonyTomas-nr1ld
    @TonyTomas-nr1ld3 ай бұрын

    What’s the reason why you didn’t get Pre Nail Framing for this build?

  • @ramsy3558
    @ramsy35583 ай бұрын

    Can you please do a video on how to mark out for windows to work For bricks

  • @michelereid
    @michelereid3 ай бұрын

    Me, a female in the finance industry….nodding like I understand all the instructions 😂😂😂

  • @DanTuber
    @DanTuber3 ай бұрын

    is that timber treated?

  • @fartnyaface
    @fartnyaface3 ай бұрын

    Hey mate great content, just wondering how do you clad the external walls being so close to the boundaries?

  • @tritruong-pj7dg

    @tritruong-pj7dg

    3 ай бұрын

    they might use the Brick veneer mate, and sit inside the wall to do it. U can see that in the another channel : Brick by Ty

  • @VictoriousGardenosaurus
    @VictoriousGardenosaurus3 ай бұрын

    For the Rithm

  • @Sabreshift
    @Sabreshift3 ай бұрын

    I'm a chippy in NZ and we almost never frame an entire house from scratch. Are there frame and truss manufacturers? You'd think it would save alot of cost in labour to get them made and delivered.

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    There are frame and truss manufacturers here. I love framing our walls on site tho, I haven’t done much wall framing recently as we have been getting a lot of prefab builds, so I was a bit slow today (and had a few mistakes) but definitely love doing it this way. When ever we work with prefab (especially when there’s steel) we end up spending so much time cutting out and changing walls anyway I rarely make trusses on site or do hand pitched roofs. Trusses are usually supplied

  • @Sgten01

    @Sgten01

    3 ай бұрын

    We built our own frames on current project in nz. Such a stress less experience tbh, only fuck up were the trusses, might do rafters ourselves next time. F&T plants don’t give a fuck, you get what u get.

  • @davidandrews2954
    @davidandrews29543 ай бұрын

    Using that AEG gun , you must have an arm like pop eye .

  • @samueltjennings
    @samueltjennings3 ай бұрын

    Chisel? Pry bar? Same same.

  • @VgniK88
    @VgniK883 ай бұрын

    Do an apprenticeship just watching your vids, reckon I’ll pass lol😂

  • @enjay8950
    @enjay89503 ай бұрын

    Why is the house built so close to the boundary? how does the brickie get in... better yet, how do you clear the weeds n shit once you live there in that tiny fuckin shamble

  • @shanereid282

    @shanereid282

    3 ай бұрын

    They won't be able to do a proper job but that's Oz construction standards for you 😂. Water will eventually weep up through the slab into the frame. Nothing against Dave , it's just the industry in Australia is a joke 😢

  • @aaronpeddle4553
    @aaronpeddle45533 ай бұрын

    A 900 opening for a 820 door is way too much. make it 880mm

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    There was a mark at 880mm. I made the stud work with the end of the wall, and when we have 20mm sheet flooring we will pack the stud to make the opening 880mm

  • @lukebeerls3164
    @lukebeerls31643 ай бұрын

    That aeg framing gun is the biggest piece of crap ,especially for framing ,actually all there tolls are crap and that's coming from someone that owns all there shit but that gun is junk

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    We’ve had two very different experiences with it then. Did it start off good for you and then start to suffer from wear and tear? Or did you never like it. What gun are you using instead of the AEG?

  • @lukebeerls3164

    @lukebeerls3164

    3 ай бұрын

    @DaveDoesCarpentry the firing pin on the gun is too short and makes it hard to shoot noggins or anything on a angle ,I have had the reps out and have showed them how it doesn't fire properly ,there response was they will let them know in the factory ,also its so heavy and awkward, I frame with a makita air framer and the maxx air framer and for trusses I use the paslode or air

  • @kickyourfaceandlaugh607
    @kickyourfaceandlaugh6073 ай бұрын

    Do you guys over there mainly use battery powered nail guns? Here in USA a lot of framers use air nail guns, old school hitachi’s. My hitachis are over 20 years old and still being used. I do have a newer metabo nr83a5 that’s my beater gun.

  • @DaveDoesCarpentry

    @DaveDoesCarpentry

    3 ай бұрын

    Nah almost every framer would use an air nail gun for wall framing. My air framer recently broke, and the guys I’m working with haven’t done enough frames to make it worth buying their own air framer