jared fink

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since Feb 21, 2014
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Recent posts by jared fink

Mike Jay wrote:I'm not an expert but I'm guessing your 16-18" diameter poles are plenty big enough.  Would they be going down underground or sitting on pads?  

I think your ridge sounds fatter than in needs to be if it has supports every 8 feet.  Same for the top plates.  But bigger never hurt anyone (unless they fell on someone's foot).

The rafters may be undersized at 4".  6" sounds good to me.

Here's a possibly horrible idea.  What about using pallets as the roof deck and purlins?  If you had enough of the same size pallets, you could space your rafters to match the size of the pallets.  Then you wouldn't need the 2x4 purlins and you could reduce the plywood to one layer or maybe even skip it altogether.  

Are you sure you want all those support poles in the middle of your barn?  Unless I'm misunderstanding, you'll have poles down the center and 1/4 of the way in from each side.  They'd be on a 6' by 8' pattern so you couldn't fit a trailer or tractor in there very easily.  I'd be tempted to find a way to space out the poles much farther (12-16') or have bigger rafters and no intermediate ridge poles.  

But, like I said, I'm not an expert so take it for what it's worth





I appreciate the banter. You are not misunderstanding the layout, I am glad you understand my idea. Its a critter barn, so I am using the additional poles for interior walls. The bigger barn/garage comes next (in a few years).

The lumber is free - were clearing for a house, garden, barn, etc. I'm just using what we are cutting. I live in a pine forest.

I am tearing pallets apart to use the slats as shake siding, so the 2x4's are the runners from the broken down skids. But I really like the idea of just putting whole ones on the roof and using them as is. I think i'll do that, and use the extra pallet wood elsewhere. hmmm....

The posts I have not quite figured out yet, I am looking to score some utility poles. If I can't find any by the time I am ready to start building I will need to use the pine from our property. I can't put pine in the ground so I will have to get them on pads.


8 years ago

Mike Jay wrote:Sorry to ask this, but is your structure strong enough to hold up a living roof?



Good question, and honestly, I am not sure. I haven't built it yet and am planning to speak with a few folks about it before I commit to anything.

However, here's my plan - maybe some of you can chime in:

Pole structure, 24' wide by 40' long.
8' spacing on the poles which will be around 16-18" in diameter.
Gable roof, ridge supported by pole's every 8'.
With a 6/12 pitch and a 2' overhang, I'm looking at 16' rafters or so.
Rafter will be 4-6" logs, spaced 4' oc.
Rafters supported in the center by a secondary ridge supported by additional poles.
Ridges and top plate will be around 16-18" in diameter.
Everything buttoned together with 2x4 perlins, 24" on center and sheeted with 1/2" plywood. (I'll double up sheets on the roof so its 1" thick)
8 years ago

Glenn Herbert wrote:Do you want the green roof for cheapness, or insulation? I suspect there are numerous materials that would be cheaper, and far easier to do on a 6:12 pitch. Metal may be the most durable, easy and lightweight option. That would allow your framing to be significantly lighter than a large green roof would require.

If you want insulation or thermal inertia, I think you would be better served by making the pitch flatter, which probably means the sidewalls would be higher if you are looking for loft storage. I doubt there is a good way to make a structural grid to hold a green roof on a 6:12 pitch without treated wood, unless you have access to black locust or one of the other highly rot-resistant woods.

For plastic as a membrane under a green roof, recycled vinyl billboard material can be gotten relatively cheaply. That is what the wofatis at Wheaton Labs are made with.



I did a quick search for recycled vinyl and I like this idea. Any advice or thread you can point me to about using them? Wonder if I should layer multiple sheets and how to seal overlapped joints...

I have plentiful access to ruff sawn cedar that I would use for a grid. Not sure on the spacing though or what material to use to prevent growth medium from flowing under.
8 years ago

Travis Johnson wrote:Nice idea on the pallets.

One word of advice if I may, don't try to rip the pallets apart. They are made with ring shanked nails, driven by pneumatic nailers that have glue on the nails. It is far faster and easier to just use a reciprocating saw (sawzall) and cut the nails between the wooden joints. You also won't lose boards to broken slats.




I've have actually used pallets a number of times for different projects, and have cut them with a sawzall as you mentioned - no better way. This time I have taken a different approach though and am using a circular saw to cut the slats on the inside of the runners giving me ready made shakes. Plus this helps collection and movement. Have a bin in the back of my car and a cordless saw. Fine a pallet, cut it up, move on. Get home and nail them to the wall
8 years ago

Steven Kovacs wrote:Green roofs are wet and heavy.  I suspect they can't really be done as cheaply as you like.

Can you use scrap metal for roofing?  There are a lot of metal-roofed shanties in the world, which suggests it's a good frugal roof material.

What climate are you in?  If it's warm enough there may be other natural roof options.



I'm in the southern portion of North Carolina. It gets cold, but not for long. What other options are you thinking about?
8 years ago
1k for a pond liner of that size is more than what I expected. However it would be worth it to prevent future problems. Id rather drop the cash now, than chase tail later. I love the idea of a living roof and would chose it over metal for multiple reasons if they are going to be near the same cost, which it seems like they are going to be...

Thank you for the book recommendations.

I am actually using shake on the walls, roof too would be a bit overboard. Pun intended. Using pallet wood that I will seal.

Any ideas on the gridding?

8 years ago
I have been searching the web for a guide on green roofs and their use on standard buildings to no avail. I need some help and advice, or maybe just a point in the right direction for sourcing information.

I am building a barn, 28x40 feet, and attempting to do so on a low budget (under $500). I have sourced all of my material, with the exception of the roof. Hence the thread.

The majority of the information I have located details extensive expensive roof systems. I am looking for the opposite. How can I get this done with limited resources? Is there a guide, or thread out there somewhere that anyone knows about that details the use of recycled and or inexpensive material?

Also, I would like to build that barn with a 6/12 pitch. I cannot find any information about building a grid to prevent the sliding of material.
8 years ago

R Scott wrote:Not that complicated. I thought I had a picture, but can't find it or remember which blog I pulled it from.

They used pressure treated plywood, cut into strips a little narrower than the bales--I don't remember if it was 9 or 12 inches (either 4 or 5 strips per sheet). Nails both directions. Simple continuous nailer/porcupine board.



That makes more sense, and a heck of a lot easier. Should I run the straps under the plywood, or should I include a course of bags as well?

Whats your opinion on the loft?
10 years ago

R Scott wrote:You can do nail boards, like toe-ups with nails both directions to "velcro" both directions. Build it like a wooden bond beam. That should be enough barrier but tar paper is so cheap you should use it as well.




So your saying, build a second 'box beam' as a foundation plate for the top of the bags with nails on both sides and wrapped in tar paper? Should I just use timber, or should I wrap it with plywood and fill it with some insulation, or no plywood and fill it with stone?

10 years ago
Building a small 'guest house' as a practice run for our forever home down the road. Heres what I am looking to do:

1)under 200 sqft
2)simple rectangle
3)lean-to style roof
4)sleeping loft
5)load bearing


Two questions that I cant find answers on and am hoping you all might be able to help me out.

My first is concerning the foundation: I am comfortable with using a slab on grade with toe-ups, but do not want to invest the dollars into having that amount of concrete delivered and troweled. So, I am thinking a simple earth bag foundation with an earthen plaster floor. My concerns come in with attaching the bales to the bags and creating a moisture barrier. From what I have read, with toe ups you just use some 16 penny nails to velcro the bales to the lumber, cant really do that with bags. So, should I pin the bales to the bags with some rebar for the first course or two? And, how do I create a moisture barrier between the bags and the bales? Bags filled with stone, I got that, but do I put some plastic down between the layers somehow?


My second concern is the sleeping loft. I would like to just build this on top of the box beam, but i cannot find any information anywhere about calculating load capacity, or if this is even a good idea. (keep in mind this is under 200 sqft and does not need to meet any code requirements) I am thinking it may be a better bet to just build the loft like a free standing deck on the inside of the structure. Not a big deal to do it this way, I would just like to build it all as one, and save a few dollars and not have to buy a bunch of posts.
10 years ago