He forgot to get rid of the gaps between the edge of the pavers or he doesn’t know how to cut out those angles that is preventing the edge to be tight
@Pixelology9 күн бұрын
Yikes, one winter here and this would be all topsy turvy.
@mcflurry747914 күн бұрын
Brother, you are not going to be happy when i say this, but I went from my weber to nexgrill, thought i would be happy with nexgrill, but, my third cook, the grill came up in flames because of the residue grease from my previous cook burgers. I never cleaned my previous weber for 5 years and never had this problem. So, i brought back nexgrill and bought a weber again. I bought a grill because i need a durable, minimal maintenance food cooker, Not a grill i need to clean every time after i cook. have you had this problem with your nexgrill? I personally thought it was annoying, and that's why i went with weber again. Let me know! Thank, and thanks for the helpful video!
@OutdoorBeards14 күн бұрын
Yeah I clean mine on a regular basis, but I enjoy the whole process of prep, cook, clean. It’s therapeutic in a way I think.
@mcflurry747914 күн бұрын
@@OutdoorBeards I agree with you on the (prep and cook), but the clean for me is the hard part 🤣🤷♂️. Well, I just spend $650 for a weber, so i'm going to make damn sure I start enjoying the clean part, because i want to keep this maintained well to last a good amount of time. Thanks for the tips! I appreciate your help.
@RileyGrubbs19 күн бұрын
awesome job! im interested in making one for my wife. What size screws did you use? thanks!
@OutdoorBeards19 күн бұрын
2.5 inch for the regular screws and 2.25 pocket hole screws
@bradlanders653722 күн бұрын
Thanks for the review. I currently have a 2023 Sierra AT4 but am upgrading to a 2024 AT4X that is being delivered in 4 days. They are both such amazing trucks.
@TryingYourLvck7 күн бұрын
what made you upgrade?
@lilredheadmlh28 күн бұрын
Great video! I used it as a guideline to build my own!
@adhengeАй бұрын
First time actually trying to build something more complex and it turned out fantastic! Didn’t even have a circular saw so the cuts could be better but this is THE BEST tutorial. Def could have used screw size and tips on pocket holes bc that part was tough
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
Glad it turned out well for you! Thanks for the feedback about the screws. Didn’t think about that.
@adhengeАй бұрын
@@OutdoorBeards yeah the pocket hole part was weird just didn’t know how big of a drill bit to use - where do we share the pics?
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
You can send them to [email protected] and they will get to me. Would love to see the finished product!
@dsb227Ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for the tips!
@JosephSastreShowsYouАй бұрын
I like this. Thank you.
@adhengeАй бұрын
How long should the screws be?
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
I used 2.5 inch pocket screws and 2.5 inch construction screws.
@jonaton202Ай бұрын
What’s a toobye?
@LA-cf2hh26 күн бұрын
2 by 4 or 2 x 4. Referring to the thickness and width of the wood.
@sgsnowhikerАй бұрын
Congratulations!!
@B-rad303Ай бұрын
Did you sign the paperwork at the dealership with or without lotion?
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
Lmao
@tcrwdr8209Ай бұрын
Your yard looks great! The flip flops while you're working stresses me out, tho!
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
It was too hot for shoes! Lol
@brittaneyyost7597Ай бұрын
Gonna make this to sit and watch my goats in the morning 😊
@mitchellandre268Ай бұрын
My backyard slopes away from the house, any suggestions - should I make the border level or follow the grade ...
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
Definitely follow the grade. Unless you’re wanting to re-level your whole yard. Set a 10-12 foot 2x4 down on the grade and put a level on top of it. Note where the bubble is on the level. Then do the same thing in the video but adjusting where the bubble sits. Also, depending on the severity of the grade you may need to include the rubber paver edging keep the sand in place.
@mitchellandre268Ай бұрын
@OutdoorBeards great 👍🏽. Definitely appreciate the suggestion. I will follow the grade; levelling the whole thing would be too much of an undertaking and I'd have to get it done professionally
@RyanMoss-bh6owАй бұрын
so average gas mileage is 10 mpg?
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
When I haul my trailer I get 9, around town is 14-16, long trips on the highway is 21. At least that’s my experience.
@stephenhenderson4174Ай бұрын
I heard of people using quickcrete as a base- thoughts on that idea?
@OutdoorBeardsАй бұрын
Quickcrete instead of sand would be a great idea, however you would have to use the plastic/rubber paver edging to hold back the quickcrete. Otherwise the grass in front of the flat paver will not have enough space to grow roots. I went back later and added quickcrete behind all the vertical pavers to hold those in place. Turns out kids can be rough on the edging. Also, I would not do that in areas where tree roots might affect the edging down the line as it would be difficult to fix.
@K-zq6tpАй бұрын
Great work and thx for sharing!
@vivianschoung88512 ай бұрын
Thank you for this excellent video! This is exactly what I have in mind for my backyard. Love the brick color you chose. How has the edging held up as a barrier to weeds and grass migrating? Do you still have to use a sting trimmer to cut the grass along the lawn edge? I saw that you recommended putting concrete behind the upright bricks. If starting from scratch, would you recommend putting a layer of concrete down below both flat and upright bricks too?
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
Helllo! The edging has some grass coming up through here and there. I think it’s in areas where I didn’t quite get the gap full with the poly sand. I do use a string trimmer along the edge just because I prefer the look. If I don’t then the grass kind of leans over the horizontal paver and obscures the nice line. As for concrete below and behind. This depends on your area. Where I live the soil is more like a clay, so the dirt that’s on the yard side is pretty solid and holds the horizontal paver in place. The reason I had to go back and put concrete behind the upright was the dirt I put back there was garden soil for my wife to plant flowers and such in. That soil is much softer so the concrete hold the upright in place. You could just use the rubber or plastic paver edging stuff which holds both the sand and pavers in place but it’s expensive. Concrete is cheaper. If using concrete be aware of trees near by. If a tree root messes with the edging it will be much harder to fix if concrete is involved.
@matthewturner29892 ай бұрын
Congratulations 🎉
@robbyrodriguez99842 ай бұрын
Very helpful, I've been wanting to grill for the first time for a while now and didn't know how to go about it. Thank you for this!
@nemrichu72902 ай бұрын
as an 18 year old girl who has never made a bench before, this video was very helpful thank you i'm planning to build my dad one and i learnt a lot, thank you
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
Good luck! Hope it goes well
@samdub2 ай бұрын
Some great tips in this video thank you, and congrats on the new arrival news!
@alectb75352 ай бұрын
Made this for the wife for Mothers Day. Turned out great, thank you!
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
That’s awesome! Thanks for sharing!
@leirujr27722 ай бұрын
Amazing work I’m a fan! ❤
@Knee-grr2 ай бұрын
What size screws you using
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
The pocket screw are the ones for 1.5 inch wood. I think they are 2.25. Could be off on that. Anytime I used a regular screw they were 2.5 inch.
@Knee-grr2 ай бұрын
@@OutdoorBeards thank you for the info. Im going to try to build this exact bench. It’s my first time building something. Any advice for a first time builder?
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
@amart63 what a great question. I have some good ones from different mentors I’ve had over the years. Enjoy the process. It’s one of those “the journey is more important than the destination” things. The process of building is where the joy comes from. Normally when I finish something I am proud and a little sad at the same time. Mistakes are a good thing, see them as such. They teach you more than success. We work with things that are dangerous, I have a 3/4 thumb as evidence, respect your tools but don’t fear them. Fear makes you tense up and is the worst thing to be when using power tools. Don’t compare your work to others, compare it to your previous works. I think that’s the best one for a new builder. People will be amazed at your finished project while you will know every flaw. Have fun and let me know how it turns out!
@Knee-grr2 ай бұрын
@@OutdoorBeards that is great advice. I took a screen shot of it so I can look at it and reference during the process. Thank you for your time once I’m done I’ll reach out to you see if I can send you some pics. Thank you again you really helped. Also you said that when your done your proud but sad that it’s complete, that is the same feeling I get when I’m done building a lego set or when I assembled all the furniture in my house. I’m sure this is going to bring lots of excitement into my life and I will try to enjoy the process. Thank you again sir
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
You can email the pics to [email protected] I look forward to seeing it! Side note: I grew up on legos. Miss those days.
@User-qu7pq2 ай бұрын
Do you know what trees were planted?
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
Ivory Silk Japanese Lilac. My wife chose them because they are not root invasive and will eventually provide shade. They bloom pretty white flowers in the middle of spring
@spencerk91842 ай бұрын
Great video! Im building one now for my father. A couple questions, if i did pocket holes on the back of the armrest would that be stronger than screwing it from the back into the endgrain? Should i fill the screw holes on the seat portion to prevent water sitting in? Thanks!
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
Hey sorry I missed this. I’m normally much better about responding fast. Regarding pocket holes on the back of the armrest. Yes it would be stronger, however, I don’t think there is enough space to get the drill in at the proper angle to install the pocket screws. Which is why I went through the back. That joint is not going to be holding a bunch of weight so I don’t think strength is a big consideration. For the screw holes, as long as you don’t bury the screw head this should not be a problem. But if you bury the screw too deep you are opening up wood fibers to the elements.
@spencerk91842 ай бұрын
Thank you for the reply, much appreciated
@Order66Wfries2 ай бұрын
This looks amazing!
@OutdoorBeards2 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@gsilcoful2 ай бұрын
Very nice.
@EL.JEFE12312 ай бұрын
Congrats! My 1st was a girl, and I will tell you I wanted a boy, but she was the best travel and fishing buddy that you could ask for; now she's 21 and still an amazing pain in the butt for her fiance.
@ArtClark-ub7ce2 ай бұрын
Well done you! Cheers!
@gensanchez95352 ай бұрын
Awesome and great job!
@user-lt9wo3se1h2 ай бұрын
You are patient!
@fria11203 ай бұрын
Lol very nice, I'm doing the same but mixed with decorative rocks😅 making a mosaic
@HexerGaming3 ай бұрын
Great video. Do you have any idea how many pavers you bought or needed?
@OutdoorBeards3 ай бұрын
I bought 1,200 but I was also doing the 2 step edging all around the yard, that’s in a different video. This patio took a little less then 800 of those.
@user-ln3eh7bb5c3 ай бұрын
How do you stand pavers up on there side s for edges
@OutdoorBeards3 ай бұрын
As long as your sand is flat and smooth they will stand on their own.
@Quik223 ай бұрын
Ive had my 24 AT4X for 2 months and absolutely love it. Thunderstorm grey with the duramax and as part of my deal, the dealer switched all emblems to black which made a huge difference. I was on the fence with the 6.2 but have been thrilled with the duramax so far.
@tresiii200113 ай бұрын
So total base layer was 3.5 yards and sand was only 1 yard?
@OutdoorBeards3 ай бұрын
I was also doing edging so I had bought 6 yards of base and 1 yard of sand. The sand did stretch through some of the edging project so may 3/4 of a yard of sand on the patio.
@DREVY823 ай бұрын
Well done
@bon21983 ай бұрын
I’m about to do the same exact thing but 18’ across where a pool used to sit. Wanna come over and help? 😂
@OutdoorBeards3 ай бұрын
Only if pizza and beer is involved!
@bon21983 ай бұрын
@@OutdoorBeards absolutely!!!!
@egorlisitsa41003 ай бұрын
I will make it myself this week I think. Just got instructions from woodprix and I'm ready for do it :D
@gmedwid13 ай бұрын
Sweetest video
@cmsbeth3 ай бұрын
Awwwww!!!!! She will wrap you around her finger!!!! And...the paver edger education was invaluable! Thanks.
@SteveGoulet3 ай бұрын
This was a great video and a great garden bench. I just built this for my NC back yard for $30. You are a great teacher and I appreciate your time and sharing the plans!
@OutdoorBeards3 ай бұрын
Hey that’s awesome! Thanks so much for sharing that. Made my day!
@gmpatriots253 ай бұрын
Thanks for the helpful video. I just bought a new gas grill after not using one for many years. This video helped me get started. Thanks!
@Fla_Photography_Travel3 ай бұрын
nice. thanks. will try do this. ✌️
@bodyfusionsmassage77744 ай бұрын
Congratulations on your new upcoming baby. 0:49 Thank you for this information. It is helpful. I needed to know that. I’m working on an area where the pavers continue to sink in the ground.
Пікірлер
I don’t drink beer. What do I do now?
Live longer than me!
He forgot to get rid of the gaps between the edge of the pavers or he doesn’t know how to cut out those angles that is preventing the edge to be tight
Yikes, one winter here and this would be all topsy turvy.
Brother, you are not going to be happy when i say this, but I went from my weber to nexgrill, thought i would be happy with nexgrill, but, my third cook, the grill came up in flames because of the residue grease from my previous cook burgers. I never cleaned my previous weber for 5 years and never had this problem. So, i brought back nexgrill and bought a weber again. I bought a grill because i need a durable, minimal maintenance food cooker, Not a grill i need to clean every time after i cook. have you had this problem with your nexgrill? I personally thought it was annoying, and that's why i went with weber again. Let me know! Thank, and thanks for the helpful video!
Yeah I clean mine on a regular basis, but I enjoy the whole process of prep, cook, clean. It’s therapeutic in a way I think.
@@OutdoorBeards I agree with you on the (prep and cook), but the clean for me is the hard part 🤣🤷♂️. Well, I just spend $650 for a weber, so i'm going to make damn sure I start enjoying the clean part, because i want to keep this maintained well to last a good amount of time. Thanks for the tips! I appreciate your help.
awesome job! im interested in making one for my wife. What size screws did you use? thanks!
2.5 inch for the regular screws and 2.25 pocket hole screws
Thanks for the review. I currently have a 2023 Sierra AT4 but am upgrading to a 2024 AT4X that is being delivered in 4 days. They are both such amazing trucks.
what made you upgrade?
Great video! I used it as a guideline to build my own!
First time actually trying to build something more complex and it turned out fantastic! Didn’t even have a circular saw so the cuts could be better but this is THE BEST tutorial. Def could have used screw size and tips on pocket holes bc that part was tough
Glad it turned out well for you! Thanks for the feedback about the screws. Didn’t think about that.
@@OutdoorBeards yeah the pocket hole part was weird just didn’t know how big of a drill bit to use - where do we share the pics?
You can send them to [email protected] and they will get to me. Would love to see the finished product!
Great video, thanks for the tips!
I like this. Thank you.
How long should the screws be?
I used 2.5 inch pocket screws and 2.5 inch construction screws.
What’s a toobye?
2 by 4 or 2 x 4. Referring to the thickness and width of the wood.
Congratulations!!
Did you sign the paperwork at the dealership with or without lotion?
Lmao
Your yard looks great! The flip flops while you're working stresses me out, tho!
It was too hot for shoes! Lol
Gonna make this to sit and watch my goats in the morning 😊
My backyard slopes away from the house, any suggestions - should I make the border level or follow the grade ...
Definitely follow the grade. Unless you’re wanting to re-level your whole yard. Set a 10-12 foot 2x4 down on the grade and put a level on top of it. Note where the bubble is on the level. Then do the same thing in the video but adjusting where the bubble sits. Also, depending on the severity of the grade you may need to include the rubber paver edging keep the sand in place.
@OutdoorBeards great 👍🏽. Definitely appreciate the suggestion. I will follow the grade; levelling the whole thing would be too much of an undertaking and I'd have to get it done professionally
so average gas mileage is 10 mpg?
When I haul my trailer I get 9, around town is 14-16, long trips on the highway is 21. At least that’s my experience.
I heard of people using quickcrete as a base- thoughts on that idea?
Quickcrete instead of sand would be a great idea, however you would have to use the plastic/rubber paver edging to hold back the quickcrete. Otherwise the grass in front of the flat paver will not have enough space to grow roots. I went back later and added quickcrete behind all the vertical pavers to hold those in place. Turns out kids can be rough on the edging. Also, I would not do that in areas where tree roots might affect the edging down the line as it would be difficult to fix.
Great work and thx for sharing!
Thank you for this excellent video! This is exactly what I have in mind for my backyard. Love the brick color you chose. How has the edging held up as a barrier to weeds and grass migrating? Do you still have to use a sting trimmer to cut the grass along the lawn edge? I saw that you recommended putting concrete behind the upright bricks. If starting from scratch, would you recommend putting a layer of concrete down below both flat and upright bricks too?
Helllo! The edging has some grass coming up through here and there. I think it’s in areas where I didn’t quite get the gap full with the poly sand. I do use a string trimmer along the edge just because I prefer the look. If I don’t then the grass kind of leans over the horizontal paver and obscures the nice line. As for concrete below and behind. This depends on your area. Where I live the soil is more like a clay, so the dirt that’s on the yard side is pretty solid and holds the horizontal paver in place. The reason I had to go back and put concrete behind the upright was the dirt I put back there was garden soil for my wife to plant flowers and such in. That soil is much softer so the concrete hold the upright in place. You could just use the rubber or plastic paver edging stuff which holds both the sand and pavers in place but it’s expensive. Concrete is cheaper. If using concrete be aware of trees near by. If a tree root messes with the edging it will be much harder to fix if concrete is involved.
Congratulations 🎉
Very helpful, I've been wanting to grill for the first time for a while now and didn't know how to go about it. Thank you for this!
as an 18 year old girl who has never made a bench before, this video was very helpful thank you i'm planning to build my dad one and i learnt a lot, thank you
Good luck! Hope it goes well
Some great tips in this video thank you, and congrats on the new arrival news!
Made this for the wife for Mothers Day. Turned out great, thank you!
That’s awesome! Thanks for sharing!
Amazing work I’m a fan! ❤
What size screws you using
The pocket screw are the ones for 1.5 inch wood. I think they are 2.25. Could be off on that. Anytime I used a regular screw they were 2.5 inch.
@@OutdoorBeards thank you for the info. Im going to try to build this exact bench. It’s my first time building something. Any advice for a first time builder?
@amart63 what a great question. I have some good ones from different mentors I’ve had over the years. Enjoy the process. It’s one of those “the journey is more important than the destination” things. The process of building is where the joy comes from. Normally when I finish something I am proud and a little sad at the same time. Mistakes are a good thing, see them as such. They teach you more than success. We work with things that are dangerous, I have a 3/4 thumb as evidence, respect your tools but don’t fear them. Fear makes you tense up and is the worst thing to be when using power tools. Don’t compare your work to others, compare it to your previous works. I think that’s the best one for a new builder. People will be amazed at your finished project while you will know every flaw. Have fun and let me know how it turns out!
@@OutdoorBeards that is great advice. I took a screen shot of it so I can look at it and reference during the process. Thank you for your time once I’m done I’ll reach out to you see if I can send you some pics. Thank you again you really helped. Also you said that when your done your proud but sad that it’s complete, that is the same feeling I get when I’m done building a lego set or when I assembled all the furniture in my house. I’m sure this is going to bring lots of excitement into my life and I will try to enjoy the process. Thank you again sir
You can email the pics to [email protected] I look forward to seeing it! Side note: I grew up on legos. Miss those days.
Do you know what trees were planted?
Ivory Silk Japanese Lilac. My wife chose them because they are not root invasive and will eventually provide shade. They bloom pretty white flowers in the middle of spring
Great video! Im building one now for my father. A couple questions, if i did pocket holes on the back of the armrest would that be stronger than screwing it from the back into the endgrain? Should i fill the screw holes on the seat portion to prevent water sitting in? Thanks!
Hey sorry I missed this. I’m normally much better about responding fast. Regarding pocket holes on the back of the armrest. Yes it would be stronger, however, I don’t think there is enough space to get the drill in at the proper angle to install the pocket screws. Which is why I went through the back. That joint is not going to be holding a bunch of weight so I don’t think strength is a big consideration. For the screw holes, as long as you don’t bury the screw head this should not be a problem. But if you bury the screw too deep you are opening up wood fibers to the elements.
Thank you for the reply, much appreciated
This looks amazing!
Thanks!
Very nice.
Congrats! My 1st was a girl, and I will tell you I wanted a boy, but she was the best travel and fishing buddy that you could ask for; now she's 21 and still an amazing pain in the butt for her fiance.
Well done you! Cheers!
Awesome and great job!
You are patient!
Lol very nice, I'm doing the same but mixed with decorative rocks😅 making a mosaic
Great video. Do you have any idea how many pavers you bought or needed?
I bought 1,200 but I was also doing the 2 step edging all around the yard, that’s in a different video. This patio took a little less then 800 of those.
How do you stand pavers up on there side s for edges
As long as your sand is flat and smooth they will stand on their own.
Ive had my 24 AT4X for 2 months and absolutely love it. Thunderstorm grey with the duramax and as part of my deal, the dealer switched all emblems to black which made a huge difference. I was on the fence with the 6.2 but have been thrilled with the duramax so far.
So total base layer was 3.5 yards and sand was only 1 yard?
I was also doing edging so I had bought 6 yards of base and 1 yard of sand. The sand did stretch through some of the edging project so may 3/4 of a yard of sand on the patio.
Well done
I’m about to do the same exact thing but 18’ across where a pool used to sit. Wanna come over and help? 😂
Only if pizza and beer is involved!
@@OutdoorBeards absolutely!!!!
I will make it myself this week I think. Just got instructions from woodprix and I'm ready for do it :D
Sweetest video
Awwwww!!!!! She will wrap you around her finger!!!! And...the paver edger education was invaluable! Thanks.
This was a great video and a great garden bench. I just built this for my NC back yard for $30. You are a great teacher and I appreciate your time and sharing the plans!
Hey that’s awesome! Thanks so much for sharing that. Made my day!
Thanks for the helpful video. I just bought a new gas grill after not using one for many years. This video helped me get started. Thanks!
nice. thanks. will try do this. ✌️
Congratulations on your new upcoming baby. 0:49 Thank you for this information. It is helpful. I needed to know that. I’m working on an area where the pavers continue to sink in the ground.