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We failed framing inspection. Have to wait for engineered solutions before reinspection! 💩 happens

Пікірлер: 170

  • @Jackthomas701
    @Jackthomas701 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for showing your inspection fail- helps us all to get better. Keep up the awesome vids.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    We definitely want to be authentic and to be so means that we need to show all the aspects of our work as builders. We’ll post another video when we find out what the engineers say and the solutions they come up with! Thank you for checking us out and for your feedback

  • @2brazy4ubitch

    @2brazy4ubitch

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllcnice attitude i like it

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    We really try to show the good the bad and the ugly. Successes we have and the failures we learn from. I’m still new to filming so like all things in life we’ll progress as we practice. We hope that our sincerity and smart a$$ ness(🤣) will be appreciated. And we’re always happy to get positive feedback. So many haters out there. Thanks!

  • @armchairobserver4747
    @armchairobserver47473 ай бұрын

    "Knock these pipes out for a minute" Spoken like a true person who fears the trades will milk this HARD

  • @user-ky6dc4ot6r

    @user-ky6dc4ot6r

    Ай бұрын

    Actually, they should do it for nothing because they are the ones that butchered the joist and created the problem. I once had electricians completely ignore my instructions for how to drill through some structural members to install their wiring. I left a copy of the plans, the joist and LVL manufacturer's spec sheets, AND drew holes, exactly the right size, on the members where they were to drill, AND wrote copious instructions ON THE LVL, all in permanent marker. I then took "before" pictures of everything. Well, you guessed it, they did what they wanted, I believe intentionally, and butchered my framing. I immediately called in another framer to give me a quote to fix everything and had the local building inspector come by, fail it, and write the exact reason for the fail. I then reached out to the electrical contractor and told them they would be back charged for everything needed to fix what they messed up. They stopped work and sued me. I sued them back. As the initial hearing date approached, their attorney contacted me and asked me what my position was and what evidence I had. I told him what I had and sent him a few representative pictures, the notes from the building inspector, and all of the relevant emails to and from the contractor. They dropped the suit and sent me an invoice with a balance due of $0, along with a settlement agreement. Documentation and meticulous note taking saved me $8000.00 because the electrical rough in was complete at that point. They saved maybe one hour of work and some right angke, tight quarters drilling, but cost themselves $8K in the process. 🤷

  • @joshuajones8455
    @joshuajones84558 ай бұрын

    I do agree with the inspector on the shear wall. That wall needs a better connection to the floor diaphragm to carry lateral loads. Like you did great on the gravity load aspect but it needs better connection to the floor.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    The fix was just a bunch more squash blocking. The door above was so big that there was no shear to connect the middle anyways. But it needed squash support under it

  • @traveling.down.the.road56

    @traveling.down.the.road56

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllcSo that shear wall wasn’t needed? What a waste.

  • @joshuajones8455

    @joshuajones8455

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc I'm glad it wasn't too bad then! I live in a seismic category D2 area so structural requirements can be nuts.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    We get crazy ones here and there. Straps everywhere. The interior shear I think was boosting the side walls. Then it was strapped there 2 times to concrete and 2 floor to floor straps. With the huge door it took away any real shear connection in the center anyways.

  • @andrewsonnemann5533
    @andrewsonnemann553317 күн бұрын

    Got to commend you on putting this out. Takes balls to show mistakes. That being said,and this is for the guys coming up behind us, a couple of things to know: -shear wall systems are designed to be continuous from foundation to foundation. That means NO breakers from anchor point, up the wall to the roof, over the roof, and down the opposite parallel wall to the foundation again. -all bearing walls, interior and exterior, are required to have full baring through the floor. Standard is at least 2 joists. -the structural engineer trumps both the architect and manufacturer. The residential building code trumps them. Local building codes trump the RBC. It’s our job as contractors to understand it all and put it together. Remember, all plans are just lines on paper till we get our talented hands on them. Learn to expect that NO set of plans will ever come out perfect. Something will be missed by everyone else in the chain and it’s on us to anticipate, find and work through these discrepancies to make everything right to meet all requirements. Good luck out there, boys and girls. Cheers

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    17 күн бұрын

    Gotta always show the good with the bad. The fixes were easy. Took about 2 hours. Engineer wanted more crush blocks beneath the door. 2’ oc. Shear was already taken car of by the 2 wing walls and floor to floor straps. The joist the plumber hit simply required a head out. Draft stop. Easy fix. Put it in.

  • @mof4104
    @mof410411 күн бұрын

    Discrepancies are common, it's important to resolve them prior to starting the work. Sometimes you guess, and fall back on "I know the inspector it'll make sense to him" and sometimes spector is in a bad mood and fails you. No big deal, get the plans from the engineer and finish er up. Best of luck.

  • @2brazy4ubitch
    @2brazy4ubitch Жыл бұрын

    to prevent future headaches / schedule issues like this you should start drawing your projects in sketchup in full stud by stud detail before building. not that hard. more time up front but protects your reputation. normally i have control of floorplan but if i had to build room dimensions to architect’s plans I would be even more sure to do a stud by stud sanity check.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the advice. I’ll have to check out sketch ups use. I do have drafting experience but it’s mostly autocad and inventor!

  • @2brazy4ubitch

    @2brazy4ubitch

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc doesn’t really matter what software you use but sketchup is nice because it’s easy to draw shapes from scratch, you don’t have to deal with “wall tool” “floor tool” etc just make a component for each type of lumber going in and make sure you dimension everything as you go instead of trying to fix the scale afterwards

  • @2brazy4ubitch

    @2brazy4ubitch

    Жыл бұрын

    used to be free now it’s $300/year but chump change relative to catching a couple mistakes each project

  • @chrisanthony579

    @chrisanthony579

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc I wouldn't waste your time with sketch up. EVERYTHING eventually falls back on the design professional that stamped and signed the drawings. Something I learned very quickly in the commercial game, the most important tool as a contractor/tradesman is the RFI; Request For Information. "I understand, I have been told, I have been doing it like that...." is meaningless. Written documentation from the top is the only fool proof way to CYA.

  • @LaFox23

    @LaFox23

    8 ай бұрын

    Make the engineer/architect 3D model everything. GC shouldn’t have to. These problems could be avoided if you have good subs and communication.

  • @tictactoe325
    @tictactoe3258 ай бұрын

    Well done you on thinking ahead with load points. This is going to be a stunning home

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for seeing what we were trying to do and for leaving a positive comment

  • @joeycmore
    @joeycmore8 ай бұрын

    Oh those damn plumbers!

  • @matthiasmacandrew1267
    @matthiasmacandrew12678 ай бұрын

    I’m a former structural engineer and you’re doing a great job! (I can also attest to the sad fact that many engineers these days don’t have enough hands on experience to understand the basics to make proper call and may just go with an overly conservative / complicated “solution”). Best of luck!

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the positive comment. Solution wasn’t bad. Squash blocks 2’ oc. The wall wasn’t a shear force problem. But it needed solid squash for the 16’ door above.

  • @andrewbratos6907
    @andrewbratos69078 ай бұрын

    great job and great video, im sure a nice Walnut railing wood be nice

  • @yodaiam1000
    @yodaiam10008 ай бұрын

    Usually there is a general note and/or detail showing the point load carrying down. The plans don’t necessarily show each and every point load on the lower floor.

  • @GreenOne01
    @GreenOne018 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this. Definitely encouraging. You're doing great work!!

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for checking us out and leaving a positive comment

  • @toddwheeler1526
    @toddwheeler152610 ай бұрын

    Looks like some good framing. Someone dropped the ball on that lower shear wall and it's design function. I believe that it was intended to be tied into the floor diaphragm via a drag/ horizontal connection? Don't think you're building in a seismic zone? Talk about crazy and intrusive hardware to work around! Nice work sir and I hope that the fix is simple. Not really a big problem to rectify.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for checking us out and the positive feedback. The fix wasn’t too bad. They just wanted a bunch of squash blocks all along the top of the wall. And then nailed wherever possible down through the upper floor sheathing. Wasn’t to bad.

  • @benbell2997
    @benbell29978 ай бұрын

    Framer knew better and plumber knew better but they didn’t g.a.f…

  • @thebullgator

    @thebullgator

    8 ай бұрын

    This falls on the Designer/Architect and the builder, full stop unless the framer didn’t follow the plans. I’d fire any plumber that would cut a joist without asking for approval so I find it hard to believe the plumber cut this without builders knowledge.

  • @stevelopez372

    @stevelopez372

    8 ай бұрын

    A trade screwed up, tell me it ain’t so. Lol

  • @PhillTheGreat

    @PhillTheGreat

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@thebullgator BullSh!t, the builder f@cked up. All engineering plans and architectural notes tell you not to do this. To see this and not call it out to the plumbers attention prior to calling the inspectors is lazy! The builder should have caught this potential mess when he was laying out the T-joist, them moved the layout according.

  • @Christofuzz-hc9xl

    @Christofuzz-hc9xl

    8 ай бұрын

    I put that more so on the plumber. The lead framer, the guy doing the actual layout work also needs to know about things like this, and toilet flange framing. In general I mean, I didnt look close enough to the plumbing here.

  • @richardthomas1566

    @richardthomas1566

    8 ай бұрын

    No one gives a blank because most are making what they made 20 years ago they’re very lucky they have anyone show up period. They can get their current job anywhere anytime so give them to much crap they will just leave.

  • @137loller
    @137loller8 ай бұрын

    Everyone in construction should know how to follow load paths. Good for you for being able to do it and KNOWING to do it. Did the plumber get a charge back?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    This builder doesn’t really do charge backs very often. They do however pay us extra to handle the repairs or alterations.

  • @Lakeman3211
    @Lakeman32118 ай бұрын

    A typical gable end is virtually load free…so transferring any non existent loads should never be of issue!

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    How is a gable end load free? And what about wind snow etc? I’m not being a smart a$$.

  • @patrickbellefleur5508

    @patrickbellefleur5508

    7 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc OP is somewhat correct. On stick frame it is, with trusses it is different. On stick frame the walls and ride are supporting the rafters, so the studs are just infill for sheathing at the gable. With trusses I would imagine that it is holding a load with how they are made.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    7 ай бұрын

    If you’re gable end has only vertical chords with no angles it is not a free span truss. Therefore the load is spread onto the exterior wall it’s sitting on.

  • @hepparade
    @hepparade8 ай бұрын

    Next time adjust your joist (placement/or pack it out) to sister on shear wall with ceiling nailer backer and shear transfer ties... Add cross blocking on 16c layout. We do it all the time.

  • @godbluffvdgg
    @godbluffvdgg21 күн бұрын

    That's a big ass house, I've had dozens upon dozens of framing inspections; never flunked one, but; our stuff is easy; an addition or whole house remodel...I'd hate to build something that big..I couldn't find enough framers to do it...All the real framers are working...Hope it wasn't too bad sorting it out...

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    19 күн бұрын

    Me and 1 guy with an occasional 3rd as a laborer.

  • @godbluffvdgg

    @godbluffvdgg

    19 күн бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc That's a LOT of work for 2 guys...Good health to you and yours...

  • @Urbanhandyman
    @Urbanhandyman8 ай бұрын

    A person can really see how much disconnect there is between the initial architectural plans, the engineers structural requirements, and the subsequent various trades punching holes where they shouldn't (because they had no choice) to get their scope of work completed. I'm glad I no longer work in housing construction/remodeling. Too much grief.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Definitely a headache sometimes dealing with all the separate components for a build

  • @evictioncarpentry2628
    @evictioncarpentry26288 ай бұрын

    I have a 1904 house where all sorts of framing has been removed or messed around with over the last 120 years before i did a total remodel and the house hasnt moved an inch. Some of this engineered shit is just dumb.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Some seems silly. Some was just to make things a little cheaper to build for the average Joe. But now everything is expensive anyways

  • @kenwindsor7264
    @kenwindsor72647 ай бұрын

    All this is bull shit!!! Inspectors gotta cover there butts!! Great build my friend! I ot out of framing 10 years ago, just because of these situations

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I bounce around trades because I get bored. Love framing and finish work!

  • @justinlindle3122
    @justinlindle312214 күн бұрын

    Framing is great

  • @aservant2287
    @aservant22878 ай бұрын

    As a carpenter to another carpenter the sheer wall continues the second floor load bearing points that was a given to ladder the that load bearing wall.

  • @Vaticider69
    @Vaticider694 ай бұрын

    The plumbing inspectors ok with banding iron holding the ABS without even electrical tape wrapped around it... I guess I'm being critical just seems odd to me..

  • @TheBostonstapler
    @TheBostonstapler7 ай бұрын

    As a plumber, why didn't the tee of the tub go on the other side? Prevents the need to cut the joist...

  • @kevinhornbuckle
    @kevinhornbuckle8 ай бұрын

    Your interior shear wall connections look good to me.

  • @jlspunn
    @jlspunn8 ай бұрын

    Your honesty and transparency is admirable. You didn’t knock other trades, you just pointed out mistakes made. Definitely commendable in my book. I’d definitely have you as a builder. Really great job. What state are you in? Thats going to be a beautiful home. Sure hope you put high lift on that garage door, would be ashame to not utilize the headroom, Lol. I’m a garage door installer so I notice stuff like that. Looked to be several feet of headroom from the outside of the opening to the roof, didn’t show any content from inside the garage So its kinda hard to tell.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Was only a 7’ tall door. After the slab it ended up with a 9’ ceiling height I think. The engineering fix wasn’t bad. A bunch of squash blocks and a joist headout. Some minor draft stop sheeting.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I’m in Western Washington

  • @jlspunn

    @jlspunn

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc understood completely. I’m just a fan of putting high lift on doors with appropriate headroom. Maybe even consider putting 20” radius track even in that headroom and can still use a draw bar opener or definitely can install a RJO side mount. The doors roll so much better in a bigger radius. Thanks for your response, take care and Merry Christmas to you and your family Glad you got that framing straightened out, i had total faith you would, you do great work

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the positive comments and the holiday wishes. Best wishes to you and yours as well this holiday season!

  • @jlspunn

    @jlspunn

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc yes sir, you’re very welcome!!

  • @francismarion6400
    @francismarion64008 ай бұрын

    I hate those low slope flat roofs using wood. Never seems to be a 100% surefire way to waterproof those.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I liked this in theory. But I feel it should have had the floor trusses on 16 oc instead of regular roof layout of 24” oc. It felt a little bouncy to walk on.

  • @ForensicCats
    @ForensicCats9 ай бұрын

    That interior shear wall appears to be the outside wall's (second floor, under porch door) load path. Basically, you have a "garage portal"; with that said, you have osb behind the new siding (exterior wall plane) and osb on exterior wall around that porch door... Yes, i tend to default with building inspection and would like to see an uninterrupted load path wherever you can. I get your floor joist (second floor) offset to the shear wall, i would like to see solid blocking and maybe double hurricane clips from joist to top of shear wall and of course crush blocks on webs of floor joist... So, crush blocks, solid blocking and hurricane clips for the shear wall. I am interested to know where the wall or joist were placed in the alternative design. Alternative to all my above statement is just get your engineer to say it's okay as is... Again, think if this as a garage portal opening and some designs might have floor joist extend into being a floor joist for exterior porch (meaning, u can't run a shear wall up the entire exterior... but, you would solid block it and maybe even schrib osm around floor joist from lower wall 🧱

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    9 ай бұрын

    The upper was in theory spread out through the header beam down through the trimmers solidly through the lower wall and lower floor and to the concrete. There was also in theory enough shear from sheets and straps that it structurally wouldn’t have been a problem. I didn’t like that the 16’ door was sitting with no support under it. So I of my own volition added some squash blocks. Which was close to what was needed. I just didn’t put enough of them. I had said something to the powers that be prior to but it wasn’t supposed to be a problem. Added a bunch of blocking later which wasn’t fun but we got it in there and onto the next one

  • @pcatful
    @pcatful8 ай бұрын

    Yeah that is typical for a shear wall. The plans should have had a detail to connect it to the floor diaphragm. Maybe there's a plan to drag it into the exterior walls, and you say there are straps somewhere--could be... I know it's a big hassle, and you worked hard for the inspection, but not so bad an outcome.

  • @jamesdannelly6760
    @jamesdannelly67608 ай бұрын

    Gotta love plumbers!😂

  • @mysticlaketilapia7559
    @mysticlaketilapia75598 ай бұрын

    That shear wall needs to transfer the resisting load thru the floor. Truss design does superceded the building engineer.

  • @drumswest5035
    @drumswest50354 ай бұрын

    Ive yet to meet a plumber that understands structure. Sounds like you have a crappy set of drawings, load paths and hold downs/ shearwall details should be clearly indicated. EOR should review all joist and truss design regardless as they take the liability issue, not the manufacturer.

  • @troyholder1
    @troyholder18 ай бұрын

    And this is why I never build with those I joists, always use floor trusses. Mechanicals run thru without cutting. Plus I joists are horrible in a fire.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    We don’t get too many floor joists out here but I could definitely see how they’d be nice for mechanicals

  • @jeremyfoster6942
    @jeremyfoster69424 ай бұрын

    is there not detailed spec before you start, that has been passed by the planning dept?

  • @user-bz2or2hi8u
    @user-bz2or2hi8u8 ай бұрын

    I thought what you did was great. I saw your electrical and plumbing, but really no hvac. What type of heating and cooling system are you installing.?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    The hvac was ran through the crawl I think and then up through a few chutes framed into the corners of the buildings

  • @DeloreanJack
    @DeloreanJack8 ай бұрын

    You know what's amazing. That homes were built to better quality before government stepped in and said hold my beer.

  • @traveling.down.the.road56
    @traveling.down.the.road568 ай бұрын

    As a former contractor, inspector and plans examiner, and chief building official, your inspector is correct. That shear wall is almost useless if not properly extended to the floor diaphragm above it.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    There’s a 16’ slider above this wall that holds zero shear. The engineers actually shoved the shear out to the sides with wall sheets and mstc straps. What was needed ended up being a bunch of squash blocks to support the heavy door

  • @papatutti59
    @papatutti598 ай бұрын

    Damn those plumbers. All they know is Friday is payday and shit goes downhill.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Wasn’t trying to call out the plumbers. Only noting that they hit a joist. Could have been my fault during framing if I missed something on layout. Or just bad design. The list goes on and on.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Super funny comment 🤣😂🤣😂

  • @papatutti59

    @papatutti59

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc It was something my Auto mechanic instructor taught us.

  • @randywl8925
    @randywl89258 ай бұрын

    Looked more like setbacks than fails. Plumbers should know what they can and cannot do to structural members. They should at least ask for permission if they run into a "situation" Hopefully the inspection didn't hold back your progress.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    It was too big of a deal. Took a day to fix. Wasn’t too bad on delays or anything

  • @johngallati8164
    @johngallati81647 ай бұрын

    IF THE "ENGEERS" HAD TO FIX THEIR OWN PROBLEMS...THEY WOULDN'T CREATE THEM.

  • @yodaiam1000
    @yodaiam10008 ай бұрын

    That shear wall is definitely wrong. There is no point in the shear wall unless the shear can carry through the diaphragm above to the shear wall below. I don’t know if you have a shear wall above or not but you would have to carry shear from the upper wall to the lower wall as well.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Above is a giant 16’ door opening so there really isn’t shear there anyway. What was really missing was squash to support the giant door. Which I knew and put some, but I didn’t have a detail to tell me how often to put it. Ended up every 2’ which we were able to slip in without too much difficulty.

  • @richardthomas1566
    @richardthomas15668 ай бұрын

    The plumber drilled it ? I would be shocked if the truss manufacture would not approve . Another fix would be for the plumber to remove his pipe and sandwich the center of the truss with three-quarter plywood on each side glued and then drill it

  • @TT-ik3kd
    @TT-ik3kd8 ай бұрын

    How does draft stop work with no caulk or spray foam… it doesnt.. fail for sure on the firestop front inspectors lackin

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Framers here are only responsible for the wood framing. We will block, sheet, cover whatever hole but there’s a completely different trade that comes through and does air seal and fire foam etc.

  • @beii-c4e
    @beii-c4e8 ай бұрын

    Do you know what type of waterproofing was used on the deck above the garage, the grey stuff just outside of the 16' slider?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I’m not sure of the brand. It’s similar to duradeck but not the same brand

  • @eddluireg
    @eddluireg8 ай бұрын

    Great video thank you !

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for checking us out

  • @Christofuzz-hc9xl
    @Christofuzz-hc9xl8 ай бұрын

    I never really understood shear walls, and how and why they are placed where they are and why in thise specific areas, because they are very specific locations. I need a real mother fkr to explain it,like an engineer or architectural type pretty boy, cant get the shoes dirty type

  • @DeuceGenius
    @DeuceGenius8 ай бұрын

    This is why im a concrete finisher :)

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Whole other set of challenges with the concrete

  • @xslayerizedx
    @xslayerizedx8 ай бұрын

    I feel like the shear wall issue , shouldn't have been an issue in the first place. Everything is laid out in the print , you can't just do whatever you feel like otherwise you run into issues . What's the point of that shear wall not being connected?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Sometimes even the prints get it wrong. Especially when there is multiple prints telling you different things

  • @dritanhotaj2685
    @dritanhotaj26858 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed watching the video but the TJI can't be a header for other TJIs . Framer for 26 years.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I appreciate the comment. I don’t know extremely what joist products you’re using there or the situations you’re using them in but here we’re allowed to do headouts as shown in this video in order to avoid plumbing etc. We’re also allowed to move joists over up to 3” which is our preferred method. However in 99% of situations it’s a pre engineered fix for us here if a plumber hits a joist to do a headout. Web must be filled both sides. Glued and nailed. Must be web filled a minimum of 1 foot. I always do 4 foot minimum or the maximum length possible if it’s smaller than 4’ anyways. I don’t doubt your experience and I’m not starting a debate, it’s common practice here and the requirements I just stated are supplied with our floor package with the LP Solid Start manufacturers manual

  • @Kjconst1970
    @Kjconst197019 күн бұрын

    Btw the 2nd part isn't a load wall..lmao

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    19 күн бұрын

    @@Kjconst1970 which part are you talking about?

  • @dac518
    @dac518 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for posting this😊

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    We try to show the good the bad and the down right ugly! We appreciate you checking out our video and we hope that our successes and our failures are helpful in some way to who ever views them.

  • @leroygreen1877
    @leroygreen18778 ай бұрын

    We failed an inspection once because the engineer didn't account for wall strength because of the window set going in. You could push the wall in and out. To fix it took a stamp and 3 big straps and 200 nails each. Needless to say that wall don't move but the engineer can be your friend and worst nightmare in one go.

  • @DozIT

    @DozIT

    8 ай бұрын

    Sounds similar to an issue Stud Pack had on their garage!

  • @toddburgess6792
    @toddburgess67928 ай бұрын

    How do you keep the tweekers from stealing everything? Live in security?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    You don’t. People who want to steal your stuff are going to find a way. We had thousands stolen from us while we were sleeping in our travel trailer in the driveway. I have tool coverage of 25k

  • @toddburgess6792

    @toddburgess6792

    7 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc That just sucks. More insurance. You get screwed one way or another.

  • @rocketman.the3rd5
    @rocketman.the3rd58 ай бұрын

    Shear wall I always connected to the load above

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I normally would too but the plans gave me too many options and when I asked project management I was told the floor manufacturer plan superseded all other plans.

  • @MrBigtime1986
    @MrBigtime19868 ай бұрын

    The way they want stuff built is getting ridiculous

  • @user-sd5wi8qf8v
    @user-sd5wi8qf8v6 ай бұрын

    Next time frame a plumbers chase

  • @ericdelanoy5896
    @ericdelanoy58968 ай бұрын

    What header above the slider? Looked very small

  • @daviddiehl-gy2sq
    @daviddiehl-gy2sq8 ай бұрын

    Too many people with their hands in the mix.

  • @killionconstruction
    @killionconstruction8 ай бұрын

    Dude when and doubt ask the engineer that’s what they get paid for Before I can call for framing I need a report form engineer of record Of project that they inspected project

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Where abouts are you from? Here inspections go through county building departments. If they fail you for something structural you have a licensed engineer give you a history stamped approval for a fix. You fix to those specs and recall inspection.

  • @rodgerrabbit2955
    @rodgerrabbit29558 ай бұрын

    I don't have a clue as to what you're talking about, but it sounds like someone is out, a lot of money......

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    It costed the main builder 800$ for us to come fix it.

  • @PhillTheGreat
    @PhillTheGreat8 ай бұрын

    Wish i could see the details. I would have called the structural engineer out during framing and layout and hit them with multiple RFIs and hard hitting change orders to cover my as$, i still say the builder f@cked up by not doing that prior to call for inspection.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I had actually talked with the project manager and made a call in the field. It wasn’t a big deal 💩 happens. The main builder paid us for our time to do the engineering solutions. Then onto the next one. The engineer just wanted squash blocks every 2’ to support the huge door above it. Didn’t even have anything to do with shear really.

  • @chrism6880
    @chrism68808 ай бұрын

    I wouldn't trust anyone who makes vertical video to build my house

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Good thing I’m not building your house then huh 🤣😅🤣😅

  • @chrism6880

    @chrism6880

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc fr

  • @mauriciogonzalez6302
    @mauriciogonzalez6302 Жыл бұрын

    What are the brackets called?….The ones you refer to for the “head out. Can I use these if the floor is already on top?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    They are actually called joist hangers. You can use them on an already sheeted floor but you need to have face nail hangers. Simpson makes some. You’ll also need to webfill the joist before nailing your hanger to it. I have another video up showing you how to do it.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for checking us out

  • @mauriciogonzalez6302

    @mauriciogonzalez6302

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bigbadbuilderllc heck yeah. I’ll check it out

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    Жыл бұрын

    I just had to do another headout. You can check out how on our newer videos

  • @GoatZilla
    @GoatZilla8 ай бұрын

    These are all design failures. The people ("architects") doing layout and design put no thought into the actual implementation.

  • @scotteric8711
    @scotteric87118 ай бұрын

    Those plumbers were lazy. They could have easily cut the pipes to cleaner lengths. FFS take some pride in anything with your name on it..

  • @markinvt
    @markinvt8 ай бұрын

    "You were told that" at 5:44. WHO told you?

  • @samkemmer2916
    @samkemmer29168 ай бұрын

    Pro tip: Turn your phone sideways when making a video.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I never realized it actually records differently. Thanks

  • @brettdestefano1689
    @brettdestefano16898 ай бұрын

    Truss joists solve that problem

  • @sp3165
    @sp31658 ай бұрын

    So 5 months later whats the update video,?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I put a video out. Essentially I was on the right track with the initial squash blocks we put in. But the engineer wanted more. And we had to sneak nails into them down through the floor. It wasn’t really a shear problem like the inspector said. It was a squash problem from the heavy 16’ door. The joist that got hit just got a headout. Had to reroute the plumbing and electrical. Not really a big deal either way. More of just a nuisance

  • @christophergossett5178
    @christophergossett51787 ай бұрын

    Being a slacker will cost everyone. Lousy frame job.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    7 ай бұрын

    What was lousy about it?

  • @stevenkaskus6173
    @stevenkaskus61737 ай бұрын

    Can't you just put in some cripple studs?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    7 ай бұрын

    Was part of the fix. Thanks for checking us out

  • @MateoEnFuego
    @MateoEnFuego8 ай бұрын

    All failed inspections are temporary..?

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Pretty much all inspection fails are temporary unless it’s something unfix able!

  • @user-sd5wi8qf8v
    @user-sd5wi8qf8v6 ай бұрын

    Trusses are crap 😵‍💫

  • @3thomasdm
    @3thomasdm10 ай бұрын

    dude, the terminology is 'jack' not 'trimmer'. it's called a jack because it's purpose is to hold or 'jack' the weight above, not to add an ornamental element to the framing. you wouldn't trim your car to change a tire, you would jack it, same goes for structures.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    10 ай бұрын

    We call them trimmer studs here. Easy enough

  • @wll1500

    @wll1500

    8 ай бұрын

    I always thought it was called a Jack stud because the one right next to it is a King stud...

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    Who knows there’s always more than 1 name for everything. But if you google what is another name for jack stud trimmer definitely pops up

  • @3thomasdm

    @3thomasdm

    8 ай бұрын

    sure, but that doesn't make it correct. if you define jack it's 'a device used for lifting heavy objects' if you define trimmer it's ' used to trim or decorate'. I've noticed that 'trimmer' has become the go to word for any structural member used in construction that is not 'common'. but does that make a rafter from the wall plate to the hip a 'trimmer' of course not it's a jack. what about a beam or double joist used to frame a stair opening, are they trimmers? that's what people are now calling them. the first time I heard the term 'trimmer' used in place of 'jack' was about 40 years ago when I moved to southern California. the track framers called them that because that's how they used them, not part of a solid post to jack the weight, but as an adjustable member to accommodate the drywall return or to true up a door opening. they would tack the 'trimmer' onto the king stud with a couple of 12d and then pry it out to obtain the proper dimension and plumb the opening. then they would cinch nail a couple of 12ds to hold the trimmer in place. in the meantime the header was left hanging on by only the nails attaching it to the king studs. so to me when I hear the term trimmer used in this manner I think of poor building skills. another term that I hear misused and sends me cringing is 'pitch' when the carpenter really means 'slope', but that's a conversation for another day.@@bigbadbuilderllc

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    To each his own. I don’t care what you call it as long as it’s built right

  • @BartlettTFD
    @BartlettTFD8 ай бұрын

    PLEASE don’t shoot KZread videos in portrait format‼️That might be what grandma does with the grandkids, but LANDSCAPE is the format used be people wanting to turn out something professional looking that they can be proud of.

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I’m not exactly sure what you’re talking about. I never realized that turning my phone sideways actually changed the way my videos would be seen. So I started doing that. I’m great at building but still somewhat new to filming. Thanks for the tip

  • @Kjconst1970
    @Kjconst197019 күн бұрын

    LMAO WHATA BUNCHA DUMB SOBS

  • @trikelyfe6090
    @trikelyfe60908 ай бұрын

    idgaf what anyone says... laminated beams are the dumbest shit ive ever seen.. if you have to put a sticker up to tell firefighters theres a danger because of shitty materials then maybe you shouldnt use that shitty stuff. i f i have any doubt in my projects i just over engineer it... but what do i know i know im just a GED student millenial

  • @rexmasters1541
    @rexmasters15418 ай бұрын

    Your not educated so what you think does not matter!!!! It about the engineering of the build!!!!!

  • @bigbadbuilderllc

    @bigbadbuilderllc

    8 ай бұрын

    I’m not educated? Are you sure? The whole point of this video was that the engineering of the build was off!