Timber Frame vs Conventional Stick Frame
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- Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
- Can't make it to our in-person timber frame class? Take your first (FREE!) step into timber framing with our Online Mini Course - onlinecourses.shelterinstitut...
People often ask us what the difference is between timber frame construction and conventional stick frame construction and which is better. If you are planning to build and trying to pick what style of framing is best for you, unfortunately, there is no simple answer you can reason your way through a decision by knowing more. In this clip, Pat Hennin provides a series of points.
We believe this is the most accessible and comprehensive timber framing education you can find on the Internet, and we are so excited for this course to be available.
Here are two pieces of feedback we think really sum up why we created this online course:
“…thank you for finally putting this online. I am a busy working mom without the opportunity to travel to Maine…I’ve been lurking on your website for years hoping to squeeze a class into the family vacation schedule, but have been out of luck. This will be great! I can’t wait to get started!”
“...I am very excited to see and participate in the online course. Just watching the teaser videos I gleaned some gems that I somehow missed when I took the in person Post and Beam course. I think both methods will have their benefits...so glad I was able to take the in person class (interacting with the staff and building relationships with like minded folks is amazing!) but really looking forward to seeing what you all will be presenting with the online format."
We really appreciate the votes of confidence on this new way to teach timber framing.
See you in the course,
- Pat, Gaius & Blueberry
Take Your First (FREE!) Step Into Timber Framing with our Online Mini Course - tinyurl.com/u4ty9nm
We have taught thousands of ordinary people how to build their own timber frame structure, starting with raw timbers & ending with a beautiful 24' x 24' structure. Also check out our 5-day, in-person intensive Purely Post-And-Beam class - shelterinstitute.com/course_offerings
I have built for many decades, hundreads of structures , most every type of log home, post and beam to include conventional . There is a a time and place for each type and method with the many products that go with them. It takes months or years just to master even one of the trades but much longer to be a qualified builder. Having to meet the different codes of each state, county and or city and the codes for ever and ever changing will take far more than a five day course. I do agree that one can build their on house and save lots of money but that depends on the person and their circumstances. I disagree totally about the structural integrity part of this video. I would suggest learning all conventional carpentry first and then move on to beam works and or log works.
@assassinlexx look into ancient Japanese beam construction. ancient Japanese buildings were made with wood-to-wood joinery and no nails and still stand today even though it's a highly earthquake prone area.
Shelter Institute 👍
@assassinlexx modern earthquakes require modern solutions? Build underground on high ground. No more problems. Immune to earthquakes, tornadoes, and fires.
@ Grant Johnson. Surely you are not saying that I'm a shill for big construction ? I have had many home owner / build it their selves come to me halfway through building their homes or additions to help them, major works in place needing to be taken out from the roof down to the footings, two homes on unstable soil and sinking, dozens of issues. Most of these good people had one common denominator - a person who knew enough to be dangerous for them, a Carpenter or Carpenters helper or another tradesman . People that meant well but found themselves in a world of shit! I have helped a few in my life , worked for low wages for the best and nothing for the worst. I love the can do rugged spirt of American individualism but don't be a penny wise and a pound foolish or bite off more than you can chew. If you have the help and know how to permit and build your house like many do then go for it ! Maybe you have the ways and means to do parts of the work, say the finishes such as drywall ,painting, finish trim and or cabinet's , maybe set windows and installation of the siding or building the decks. There are no codes for the paint job or if your window trim doesn't fit perfectly and most would never know it but you. I am not for big construction when it comes to residential and for those that have or will bite off more than you can chew remember this " you will be stronger for what doesn't kill ya"
I'm starting to get the feeling this guy prefers timber frame construction.
The hints are subtle but they are there
@@trollisourbriteeggs6282 it was a joke, you knob
Probably because that’s the best way to build a house that will last
Gee i wonder why...
@@youngillinoisan4270 I wonder why Americans don't often build brick houses. In my country stick construction is basically unknown and mostly brick houses are build covered with styrofoam for isolation.
Is it just me, or are those small model frames the coolest coffee table centerpiece? They're like artwork.
I think every house should have a tiny replica house inside.
@@Broken_robot1986 "Houseception"...
@@75blackviking Xzihibt - "I heard you like houses inside houses"
architecture and scale modeling are indeed, art
I used to have one. I just ended up with it somehow, I don't even know. I enjoyed having it around (it was huge though, like a 2' cube) until my former stepmom chucked it into a dumpster because she sucked.
Also fire resistance. Thick wood takes longer to burn through, whereas 2x4 are quick to burn through and you have a collapse sooner. Also less salvageable. Great video.
You'd be surprised how quickly a fire consumes a building
@@crispycream6882 once you've see how quickly a building goes up because of the containment of the heat inside the space you'd understand
As a firefighter, from experience and from the book. Heavy timber frame (Type 3 construction) with stands heat so much better than the modern houses today. The modern homes today are so scary, and once they catch fire, they’re done
it still doesn't negate the fact that thicker woods are better at fire resistance. @@oftin_wong
@@nhitc6832 sure...buy think about how often you've seen buildings that are still used with charred timbers inside them ...can you remember seeing even one ?
UA-cam algorithm: “You wanna learn the difference between timber and stick frames?”
I know, where was this when I was researching building my shed? No where,. but 4 years later it shows up!
Hell ya!
I legit tapped on this video thinking it was from the Onion. The channel icon got me
YES
I
DO
It's interesting though, because I'm just about to tear down my old kitchen (standalone building) and build a new stick-framed building. I haven't done any related searches.
Can someone please tell him that no one can live in a house that small!!! It has to be at least 5 times bigger. My god.
Shaaron Elisha lol I’m dying 🤣
A home with a floor area of 2 sq. ft. Is. a little cramped but you get used to it.
@[The] White Rabbit It's a Zoolander quote. He is surely joking.
Hence the Tiny House craze.
Hahahahahaha I don't know why I can't stop laughing at this comment!
I've spent the last thirty + years doing barn and historical building's restoration.
Nothing matches the elegance of a hand hewn, timbers framed structure.
I live daily with the satisfaction knowing my work will be enjoyed and utilized for generations to come.
Leaving my mark, and preserving the iconic American landscape of the pioneers and our ancestors have left me blessed.
MTpockets Woodenickle I tip my hat to you sir. 10 years in the business and working I get a deep sense of satisfaction when handling 100 year old timbers. Even when hung as aesthetics in mc mansions in Vail / Aspen.
Not with all those SIP panels on it
@àsper Sounds kinda like you're proposing that lots of people should be killed off, specifically anyone you deem materialistic/don't agree with... treadin on dangerous ground there friend.
@àsper your notions are simply a myth.
overpopulationisamyth.com/episode-1-overpopulation-the-making-of-a-myth/
@àsper have an open mind; you may be wrong in your assumptions.
www.humanprogress.org/topic/dead-wrong-series/
I remember watching a home renovation show and it showed this method of "timber framing". I asked myself why that house had less materials used compared to the "stick framing" method, I often see in other renovations. Thank you for the explanation.
The timber frame method reminds me of the cabin style houses and even the traditional Japanese houses.
we dont have access to the mass amounts of virgin and old trees to create homes of this type anymore as its almost all been logged
@@patdud that's the trade-off, I'm no expert but I would trust what was said in that 2x4s are likely not the most insulating thing out there. Timber will use much less wood in many cases, I'm sure, but as you said, 2x4s are much easier to make and come by in your average tree than a massive timber framing piece due to continuous size requirements. That said, timber framing looks awesome, and surely a part of this cost increase can also be attributed to the fact that stick framing is almost certainly much more common on the prefab market than a timber, and that likely lowers the average cost of stick framing by a significant amount
(what I mean is that it seems like the fact that if a hosue is timber-built, it's much more likely to be a custom job than if it's a stick one, and custom jobs have inherently significantly higher costs)
There's a lot more wood that goes into the timber frame than what is shown in this video. Before the SIPS go on the roof it would have t&g boards spanning across the trusses to support the SIPS panels depending on how far apart they are spaced. Of course the big factor when deciding between timber frame vs traditional stick frame is cost. Timber frames are much more expensive than traditional framed homes.
Yes, but in his models displayed neither has a roof. Even on a stick home you can use SIPS. Perhaps the major problem with timber frame is having access to the dimensions of lumber you need to build it, many homes now use 6x6 as 2x6@3 due to costs and availability.
Don't forget you will still have to frame in windows and doors and any vent/plumbing/electrical... and to frame that in you'll have to fill in those voids to attach it to the structure... this is like when people try and tell you shipping container homes are cheap... then you go to make one and realize it cost about 3x as much unless you just want a tin can with bed in it and black mold on the walls... the reason everyone builds houses like they do is because it's better.
@@scottsthaname1 ...which wouldn't even be allowed for all I know. Maybe this is just a California thing (I'm European so I don't know a lot about how y'all build), but I eagerly watched "The Modern Home Project", a guy making a few AirBnB's out of shipping containers back when that was the cool thing to do, and was surprised at the fact that they had to basically build an entire house inside the container. Seems like construction laws will require you to make something that cannot simply collapse on itself due to owner neglect, as in if you sold this thing on and the new owner didn't know (or care) to repaint the steel every once in a while, and as a result the roof caved in on them after 3 years because the welds rusted
its expensive because nobody does it.
@@luke2806 Maybe nobody does it because it is expensive.
Cost, cost is the reason we build with dimensional lumber. You can get a whole bunk of 2x4s for the cost of one timber
Yup. Timber makes sense if you own the trees as he said. But out here in the midwest where 90% of land is plains. 2x4s are the way to go.
Thought there must be a reason.
Do americans mostly build their homes with 2x4s? That seems far too flimsy and uninsulated for my liking.
Иван VII.
2x6 exterior walls, sometimes 2x8.
Interior is 2x4.
Usually 2x8 - 2x12 floor joist and a mixture of 2x4 and 2x6 for the trusses.
Cover that with cheap 1/4” - 3/8” OSB and you’re set.
So go somewhere and get them.
"Gypsum palace" I died. lol
Yup ,true too wall to wall gypsum
heavy ass panels of chalk all over the place, uy vey!
xxcurtisx21x Also know as a vinyl palace.
J Sev, gypsum isn't toxic... it's a fucking food additive... Gypsum boards are dumb due to other reasons, but toxicity ain't one.
@@livedandletdie sure it is.
try breathing the dust for a while and get back to me.
I took the home builder class back in the late nineties. We helped to frame up one of the sons home and another project further up the coast. I bought a few of the best Japanese pull saws and chisels I’ve ever had.
Back then I got a room at local landscaper’s house.
It was a special trip.
Our barn is oak timber framed and the lumber was harvested off the farm almost 100 years ago. Something about seeing those old beams that warms your heart
Ever since I saw that movie Witness with Harrison Ford I've always wanted to build a timber house. Super cool!
When you're Amish, you don't need things like wiring, plumbing, and HVAC, so, enjoy.
@Da Squirrel D'oeth!
I grew up in Lancaster, a couple miles from where that movie was filmed. The Amish are not as idyllic as they were once portrayed to be, and most have taken up more traditional construction methods. Most newly built barns and homesteads are quite sleek and modern. I guess they are still maintaining their traditions, but "Amish" is a very commercial term now.
good movie
@@Banryu95 you’re right. They’re not as behind the times as their initial appearance leads you to believe.
I worked as a carpenter for over 25 years and never had a chance to build a timber frame home. It really looks like it would be fun to build. I built one post and beam, we called it, where the trusses on 2' centers lined up with 2x6 studs on exactly the same layout--it was quite a strong structure.
I don't know how UA-cam knew that I wanted to see this, but I'm so happy that it did. I'm hooked.
I absolutely love the warmth of timber frame houses!
Wood has lived years before it finally became a timber frame house. I think it's an ode to the tree itself to show its magnificent lines and colour, and a warmth you'll get nowhere else.
Seems to me this guy loves wood so much, he has wood dust coursing through his lungs.
That can also be caused by a mild allergy to his high blood pressure medicine.
Except, of course, that he doesn't actually know very much about real-world framing.
Maybe he enjoys to hit a few joints from time to time. Have a couple smokes. Couple beers. Eh
Doesn't sound too healthy
Is that a 2x4 in your pocket or do you just like wood
Who else has never watched anything related to this and doesn't know why this is in their recommend?
Idk what it’s here but I sure did enjoy it
Im actually interested now tho
@@thinkfirst6431 most buildings here in Germany are mostly bricks and concrete. They are very solid and mostly well isolated. I thought that other countries have picked up but well . Old structures that are built with bricks and wood are also not hard to find, but I have never seen a house made completely out of wood/drywall. This concept is very foreign to me and I am blown away how easy it is to build these.
So whats better? Concrete houses? or Wood houses?
Here!
The timber frame is just so beautiful once finished, plus the craftsmanship is just mind blowing
And the durability can’t be overstated, I live in a house built by my great great great grandfather in 1873, still standing strong, even after a pipe burst and the house was abandoned for 10 years, I doubt any newer stick frame house will be standing nearly as long without an incredible amount of maintenance and money.
@@youngillinoisan4270 There are some timber frame houses nearly 900 years old still in use. I hope your children and great grandchildren and distant descendants get to enjoy your family's legacy home =)
You’ve sold me on building myself a timber frame house. Someday I want to build a retirement home for my wife and I in the mountains and I want it to be off the grid with well water and solar power. This seems like it would meet our needs nicely. We wouldn’t need anything large and I’m fairly handy. I’m sure with a few more decades of experience that I could build the entire thing myself. I would save money on materials, construction, and utilities and I could put those savings towards buying a large plot with good views.
I hope you attain your dream. I also prefer to put my money into land rather than a house
.... for my wife and (for) ME....
@@nanwuamitofo Hay man. I’m sure your a nice guy butt this dude doesnt even no you . Why would he want too build a house for YOU and youre wife?!
😬
4 bents at 10' is a 30' building. same as fence posts
smort haha
Ikr I caught that too
@doc hall no, look at the model- there are only 3 spaces or bays between the 4 bents, = 30'
Eh, well you, mnh, know... unh, it must be hard to concentrate in between clearing your throat every ten seconds.
Yep, have to count the first
A stick-framed house can be insulated on the outside of the framing just like a timber-framed house. That being said, timber framing is certainly an elegant way to build a house.
i added foam to mine easily...just ask
How do you insulate on the outside?
@@MsElijah16 just nail on foam board
@@MsElijah16 Virtually the same procedure. The house must have no overhangs then sheath the exterior With any number of products and seal the gaps, again many ways. Here is a video by Matt Risinger. This one of many he has on this topic. ua-cam.com/video/7YO0t1FtyCg/v-deo.html
As you said, it's not a nice look with 24" inch studs on the inside. Wider gaps with wider timber is what makes that aestetic possible :D
This is so cool. I have always admired timber framed buildings but had also assumed that they were no longer possible, simply due to the prevalence of stick-framed houses. Now I can dream again!
Really quite fascinating. There is a definite allure to building structures that could last centuries. I'll keep this in mind when I have the opportunity to build a home.
Absolutely. The average modern American home is just a slapped-together pile of building materials that will last for 60-80 years, tops. I wonder what will happen in the coming decades when they start reaching the end of their lives.
Most homes will be torn down in the future because of fashion, not because of construction. 60s bungalows are perfectly fine but being replaced with massive two stories people suddenly want.
@@HawkGTboy they will be replaced with something better.
@@HawkGTboy What do you think will happen to these slapped-together piles of building materials? I do renovations and work on that age of house all the time. Seems to be plenty of life left in them.. On the other hand, the looming problem I see is the steady loss of people who want and know how to do repairs and upkeep.
Amish do this. They're so many of them on the job they look like ants devouring a sandwich. They are just everywhere at once. Once it's up, the youngest get on the roof and start and then a group on each corner working one direction, and a crew framing out windows and doors and a crew in the inside, it's amazing.
If ever society collapses the Amish may be the only ones left lol
Can I pay the Amish for them to build me a house?
@@Matachilangos yes you can, at least in the upstate NY area near watertown you can
Lancaster PA has a number of Amish construction companies who do barns, homes, outbuildings, etc.
Nope, cause they won't fight .
I didn’t know how much I want a timber framed home
Your arguments are very convincing. This is a very informative video. However, I have my doubts about learning timber framing in five days. I live in France, where the cathedral builders go through a ten year intensive training. They live in dormitories, work ten hours a day, study technical drawing at night, and work in their specialised internal workshops until midnight. All weekends are devoted to preparing their first apprenticeship piece- not before 4 years. 2 weeks off a year. If they are accepted they continue their Tour de France- very gruelling. Then they prepare their grand masterpiece, always of mind- boggling complexity. These are the Master Builders. An extreme elite; they are called upon to do the most complex and difficult restoration and building across the whole globe. They are called the "Compagnons du Devoir". They date back to Medieval times.
Thank you for posting this video. I am a humble cabinet maker myself. Best regards.
I don't think he is implying that you will be an expert in 5 days. Rather, you would learn the basic skills and process.
Seeing those models reminds me of back in high school when in one of my elective classes we were given a model kit to build a home of about similar style in size. The material was balsa wood, and we used mainly a miter-box with a small hand saw to fit the frame. Small pins and some wood glue to put it all together. It was incredibly fun to learn how to build a home on a smaller scale, but also learning the techniques and proper spacing of the material.
I will say there's something immeasurably satisfying about putting/making something with your bare hands.
I may have been admiring the model house on the left too much and missed it but there may be another factor you could add to strengthen your cause for this building method: Longevity.A timber frame house can last for hundreds of years whereas conventional framing will be lucky to last 100,especially with contractor shortcuts and lack of inspectors.There was a timber framed barn from Germany that was 500 years old in my town in British Columbia,Canada.The owner had German carpenters label and dismantle it,crate and ship it to Canada and reassemble it for him as a home upstairs/restaurant downstairs.Imagine building a house on your own land and out of your own trees that your great grand-kids could live in one day.That's special.It also makes the high initial building cost very affordable over the long term.
Timber frames are adaptable and durable!
There are a lot of old timberframes and they are truly beautiful and I hope to build one myself one day.
But conventional framing lasts as long, there is nota difference there, wood is wood.
Issue as you are describing is bad workmanship and bad techniques, My old house in sweden was from 1925 and it had a conventional frame, after refreshing most of the interior of it while I lived there I found no issues att all with the structure, if moistrue is propperly planned and everything is done right the conventional frame will last just as long as a Timber frame.
In sweden we learned the hard way with -30c winters and +30c summers and become moisture experts tbh, and now with full mechanical ventilation that controls moistrue too it's going to be even easier.
So it's not the frame that doesnt last, it's the surrounding systems that make or break it, you can as easily fuck up a Timber frame, enclosing it with no moistrue transportation and airing and if a timber frame rots then you have a 10 fold bigger problem then if a conventional fram would rot, just saying
@Linus Surface area has alot to say as well, thats why a log lasts so much longer than a small stick. Conventional frames here are Timber frames? 99% of the houses i se in this area is timberframes. Ive renovated a few houses, never came across anything else than timber frames. Greets from your neighbor :P
from your own trees ? you need first to remove resin, then make it dry... do tou have a river ? then do you have 7 years to wait for dry wood ?
@@DGDG0000000 Cut the trees down in the spring,peel them,and stack them up off the ground.Go back the next spring and build with them.That's how my friends built log cabins.I know some that sent their logs to mills to be kiln dried so they could start sooner but most are willing to wait the year and save the transport and kiln cost.As for building a timber frame house,I would have to hire someone and do what they recommended.
My house been up since the the civil war. We even have the old deed for the land. The structures are all axe hewn still see the deep cuts. The old drywall or Masonite was made with plaster and horses hair. Crazy the history a house can hold
this man looks like an excellent teacher and person.
My buddy bought a woodmizer sawmill and we not only built our first timber frame, we also milled every part of it. It is a huge barn with hay loft, horse stalls, tack room & an entire house all in one.
It is going to last hundreds of years.
Great to hear. How satisfying.
Love how this video is just subtly dropping shade on modern construction.
Modern construction is coded for one reason only and that is to enrich the largest lumber companies that have huge budgets for lobbyist. There are numerous practical ways to build your home but you will not be approved by the code. Many techniques have been used for centuries and are still standing. In my coastal NC town the codes have become ridiculous and let's not forget that they are interpreted by some local jackass who has never built a doghouse. Some older homes here (100 years or more) are standing on stacked stones and are ballon framed for cooling. They have been through all the same damn hurricanes as all the rest of the homes in the area. Just saying that building codes are necessary to weed out the idiots but you should be able to build by other methods if you desire. There is more than one way to build a home.
I love that style, my wife does to, exposed wood inside. Beautiful.
My beautiful wife likes my exposed wood inside.
Same words different meaning.
The look of timber is very hard to beat!
@@wisconsinfarmer4742 LMAO! I was thinking the same!
you are saying your wife loves your exposed wood?
That's the only way my wife likes wood inside too. 😊👍
The man is an enlightening Guru of construction
Friendly reminder: Don't have ice cream before a presentation.
😆
@@afn-bd2ro frequent throat-clearing but that's probably just a mild nervous tick ... lots of people do it and don't realize it.
I noticed that too very early. I wish I was the person that didn't notice, because when you do, it's awful to listen to.
We played a drinking game where we took a shot every time he cleared his throat. I'm the only one that survived following a liver transplant.
@@genxscott4650, it's a sign of being quite dehydrated. Moreso than many will respond to.
You can do a combination of the two. You don't have to have the beams showing in a timber frame house. And you can use thicker lumber with modern fasteners in a "stick frame". It's not one or the other.
Cough drops will fix that.I have trouble with that too. Great presentation.
I had a professor that did that all the time... his was a nervous tick... brilliant man just had a tick... they both are very smart men and have great knowledge to share
@@markthompson4225 For me it is from years of wood working with poor dust collection ans dry air in the shop?
@@williamoverton7265 honestly it could be his also... He is not a personal friend or anything... just from what I seen from him here and on the other channel he has been on... Pure Living for Life... it looks like a tick to me... just like the professor I once had... both being very smart men with great knowledge that they like to pass on to other people... which seems like a great thing for people to do... I have a bit of the cough and hack from my youth for the same reason, along with smoking (my parents and my own)
@@williamoverton7265 the one big down side to power tools over hand tools.
wouldn't help this guy have a chronic problem with his sinuses.
Great video and really glad I found it. I'm working on plans for my house and I think I'm going with timber. Cant wait. One thing I like is you can do almost anything with it on the inside of the house.
Id much rather have a timber house than a stick frame house.
Which is why so many trees are being cut. It's really bad for the environment but who cares about that, right
@@jminkvihubyb 00:35 ...
@@jminkvihubyb You are backwards. Rewatch the video.
@@davidbeppler3032 wasn't entertaining enough so I closed the video. I already am in trade work so I know exactly what I was saying. Everyone thinks wood is better than everything else and so much of it is wasted. Just looking at the frame, one had more wood than the other.
@@jminkvihubyb Yes, the traditional house uses more wood. You were backwards. Either way noting wrong with building using renewable resources. Not sure why you think we are running out of wood, in the US we buy most of our framing wood from Canada.
Almost 2am and this what im watchin
Qwalay 1.35 👍🏼
It's 3am and I'm never in my life going to need this info.
0930 and I knew all this. Still watched for no good reason. Life’s a ride.
I’m from Lancashire England & there are thousands of timber built houses hundreds of years old, many 500 hundred years old mainly built of oak
Well that's where the old growth forests went.
@@johnnymcblaze also the navy.
Thanks UA-cam, I didn’t know I needed to know the difference between timber framing and stick framing
While I love the tradition of timber frame construction I have a problem with the concept of using sips panels for insulation. Sips panels are structural. You can build a very strong house just with sips. A timber frame house with a sips exterior is a double built house, a luxury that few can afford.
Another option as said in the video is Straw-Bales (multiple benefits including excellent insulation) when building Timber Frame.
I would love to come try this course someday if my finances would allowed me to build a new home. Great Video and Amazing Work, I love seeing the timber used in construction be an aesthetically pleasing feature of any home. Peace and Love from Canada
Here in germany we have houses build with timber frames that are well over 500 years old. Or our beautiful and centuries old half timbered houses. With some maintainance they really last forever - in human time scales.
Today we build almost all our houses out of brick and concrete, some with steel framing and some still with timber framing. There are almost no stick frame buildings at all because they don't last and aren't very sound proof. You can see in american cities that many stick frame houses are just falling apart after 50 years.
The brick house of my parents was build in 1892. My great great grandparents build it. The facade never needed any substantial repairs. Only all the stucco ornaments need some touching up every 20 years or so. The roof is covered with slate shingles broken out of a mountain near our town. We still use slate shingles today. They are all natural and almost ever lasting. And aside from a few broken shingles now and then the roof never needed any substantial repairs, either. Everything still is in great shape. The inside of the house has been modernised many times, of course.
That is how you should build houses. They should be build to last 100 years without any substantial repairs.
I was working as a timber framer for a while, favorite job so far.
Its kind of nice to know that even though the exterior walls on timber frame have to be stick framed to simply have nailers. At least the question of what is load bearing is an easy question to answer.
Makes for easier remodeling.
Brad Evans yup! Big timber frame and you can stand whatever walls you want, can even use soffits to run the mechanicals so it’s even easier to change interior configurations.
Thank you had the joy of watching you with Jesse and Alissa's build in Idaho!
The rest of the house is awful. Jesse is a blowhard as well.
Yessss this is what I’ve been looking for and he answered a lot of questions in that short time.
Thanks for the mini-course. Just signed up. This stuff is fascinating to me!
I really liked the info given in this video
5:41 MAFELL saw ! the one and only !
I have a barn, about 150 years old, which is made of oak beams, all pegged, and has stood against many Hurricanes/Tropical Storms...just now survived Tropical Storm Lee...with the huge surfaces it has, it's truly amazing that it doesn't yield, though it shakes and creaks during such tough tests. I love the building and feel grateful to the builders every time it toughs out another storm! I'm a woodworker, so, maybe I'm 'biased'...haha! Cutting joints in a heavy beam is just so much fun!
What about some of the drawbacks to Timber Framing?
1. Fire resistance: Gypsum is non-combustible. Covering the framing with drywall helps reduce fire spread.
2. Upgradeability/modularity: Timber Framed structures are often much more difficult to expand. Stick framing is simpler for the DIY person to repair, add-on, etc.
3. Labor: Heavy timber is well... heavy and can be tough to frame with. A 16' long yellow pine 6x6 weighs about 140 lbs dry!
4. Building materials compatibility: Fixtures such as windows are engineered to work with stick framed structures...
We moved away from heavy timber in the mid 1800's largely due to labor and material costs. Heavy timber construction requires skilled craftsmen and significant time. If you've got a bunch of skilled carpenters, lots of money, and/OR time heavy timber is definitely still a good option!
Thank you UA-cam recommended and happy Christmas
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Jesse and Alyssa with Pure Living For Life is we’re I first seen the timber frame concept in place...and you were there!
We were there! What a busy week that was!
You must be a timber farmer otherwise that’s where you would have “first saw the timber frame concept”.
Natedoc808 No, not a timber farmer, nor a timber framer, just a guy that got hooked on the Timber Frame concept through Jesse. and Alyssa’s build...and yes I picked up on your witty remark right away....because I saw what you did...😬😬
Jesse and Alyssa did a great job of showing off their class, and Levi did a great job filming the Idaho class! I really enjoyed watching all of it.
aw! Thought you were making a reference to those middle school history reinactment videos thatalways ended with, "And YOU were THERE!"
Thank you, Pat Hennin & Shelter Institute 🕊 great info, cool models
Thank you!! Stay tuned, we have a few more videos coming out in the next month.
This was great. I wasn’t looking for this, but I learned a lot. Thanks so much.
I’m beginning to design my home. I don’t have property yet, and I know I want to build it myself. I can’t believe how useful this was!!
How is the plan going, and how much experience do you have
I did a basic pole barn with an elevated floor, I got the experience while in Southern Africa. 32x24 three level and around 9k in materials
@@gumecindogarcia1070 That is solllid!
It's interesting to see this a few years after I built a small structure with no framing experience. (so many years had gone by that the construction experience I had was lost anyway). The inspiration came from an abundance of free wood in the form of 120" pallets that had pine and oak 4x4s and pine 2x4s and pine 1x6's. I could get as many as I wanted, idk what you'd call my framing but it sure as hell worked.
What a joy to begin my day watching this inspiring video... thank you.
Well done sir. Thank you for sharing your passion.
Just curious, how do you wire a thing like this? Where do your device boxes go... Would they all be surface mount and run with exposed conduit?
Jack Duno GREAT question! You could surface mount in conduit. More typically it is run through the hung wall in chases or run through a chair rail mounted on the inside of the exterior wall. And then too run through the first floor platform and any interior partition walls.
The SIPs have pre drilled channels in them for electric and plumbing so they are hidden from sight
Everything wireless.
Chinese!
I built a timberframe/ full scribed log home hybrid once. A very beautiful alternative to cip panels on the walls.
You can also use full logs instead of square timbers. There's more math and work involved, but can be quite visibly rewarding.
Wow I have no idea why UA-cam recommended this video but damn that was REALLY COOL and now I want a timber framed house!!! That’s also really cool that you do classes teaching this! VERY neat!!!
I had to search for this video, it popped right up, thank you so much, I thought I was going nuts trying to find a stub to hang anything on, and nothing! I know my dad taught me well, Rest his beautiful soul, and utter talent! Thanks for filling in the much needed gap in my life! Very well explained. I have to hang tapestries only haha
I am also terrifies of fires, good thing we live literaly across from the fire station, and they are here in a heartbeat when the alarm goes off, and we have months inspections on everything.
Another consideration: Timbers are much harder to set on fire than 2x4s, which go up like matchsticks and are close enough to the next 2x4 to set it on fire too. A stick built house is like a bunch of perfectly spaced kiln dried kindling just waiting to go up on smoke.
I see conspiracy theorists posting about California homes burning down where the trees around them don't all the time. These people don't understand just how hard it is to burn a live tree compared to kiln dried 2x4s. Sure, a timber would burn easier than a live tree, except that it doesn't have any branches to act as kindling. There is a reason why a fire door can be made out of wood. You can make a wood door that takes an hour for a raging fire to burn through.
Though, if fireproofing was the main priority you'd avoid wood in the first place.
@@rollerskdude Yeah, a concrete home with steel beams holding up the roof would be superior but I think a timber frame home with a metal roof would probably be sufficient to save most of the homes in california. Also preferably without plywood under the steel
fella inhaled too much sawdust
One of the drawbacks of timber framing
Yeah he must be doing stick builds more than he lets on
after seeing this video, I now know that I'm very passionate about the excellence of timber framed buildings. Thank you. I would love to be a student.
THAT LOOKS FANTASTIC!
Timber frame: a.k.a. "the way the Amish have done it for centuries".
Robert Ebersold they build the best log cabins.
-amish- Europeans.
@@jhart7304 thank you.
@@jhart7304 Jup, thanks!
I have absolutely no idea why this was in my recommended, but I’m completely interested 😂
That is a riot!! the algorithms of UA-cam . . . . if you really are interested, check out online timber framing course onlinecourses.shelterinstitute.com/courses/purely-post-beam-online-course
There is a free trial that might be fun to watch!
Your love of craft is absolutely infectious. I'd love to be able to afford a timber frame house and to know how to build it myself. Here in Aus it seems like an absolute rarity
A few years ago I built a small timber frame house/cabin out of wood logged off the forested property using only the Jack Sobon and Roger Schroeder book as a guide. It was quite a satifying acheivement, as someone with no real construction experience to speak of.
There are large numbers of timber framed buildings here in England that have survived beautifully for many many centuries. Near my home is a medieval tithe barn dating to a little before 1300 with its original timber roof - it is in excellent condition.
In German this kind of craftsmanship is called "Zimmerei". Come here and study it for 3 years and after that you can study "Zimmermanmeister" and master It.
You will get it for free, more than that you will earn some money, learn some new language and you will have some long holidays.
20 years in Florida as a carpenter. I have helped build both frames.
The quality of build is the most important part.
Both frames can withstand a hurricane. As long as you use a good contractor. I have rode out two hurricanes. Opel and Aron. I traveled rebuilding afterwards to. After Andrew I was in Miami for year.
I have seen streets where you could spot good construction practices for corner cutters easily. The well built homes were still standing. Building codes are there for a reason.
Now thats a superior frame!
Nice presentation...no wasted words 👍
Great points about the heat loss and the tremendous amount of material used in a stick home. Does a timber frame meet California specs for earthquakes? Seems like the unions and economic factors didn't put energy and the consumer's pocketbook first: e.g., the amount of foam insulation, the "perfect wall" with radiant barrier all seem to have come out of the need to deal with inefficiencies from the stick home approach.
They are the cathedrals of home design. Absolutely beautiful structures. Timeless and everlasting.
Very nice presentation. I'll have to look into your institute.
Thank you so much, we think so too. We have not been able to offer any in person courses since last March but we do have a an online course available now. Please let us know how we can help! onlinecourses.shelterinstitute.com/courses/purely-post-beam-online-course
@@ShelterInstitute I went to your link. I'M IMPRESSED! You have certainly given me ideas. I'm glad I happened on to this video! And thanks for that "demo" link. Definitely looking forward to viewing that!
I appreciate your completely unbiased comparison.
i went with a (square) log home. it's been 23 years and i love it as much now as the day i moved in.
HELLO, from chihuahua mexico, thank you, the presentation is amazing, GOD bless you and your family.
You think his throat is clear enough? I'm gonna hear him clearing his throat in my sleep cause I heard it so many times.
Yes lol reminds me of my wifes grandpa
You too will clear your throat with age.. I used to make fun of adults that groaned every time they squat or kneeled over.. Now I sound just like them 🤣
LMAO THISSSSSSSSS
*mleph*
*lmlep*
I just found this video this company. I am in love with this channel. I can't stop watching!! & Listening. All day at work to if I Kept my phone paired to my milwaukee speaker just blaring across the shop. I love these homes so much!!! I ask my significant other!! If we could please change our home build to this. We just got started on developing the land. Thank goodness I found this. 🙌
Absolute beauty WE love this. So....I am excited to say. Timber frame here we come.
I don't think I can resist. I am fortunate in that I have a friend who is a very successful Timber Frame builder. His four port equipment garage is beautiful. He will be a terrific resource if I go deeper into this.
"Gypsum Palace" LOL! Yes, most homes I've ever set foot into are painted gypsum palaces. Most post and beam homes I've seen are very open floor plans that give you a sense of free space and comfort. I've seen some very beautiful wood finishes on them. Plus, you can make timber frame styles out of square steel tubing for a super steampunk appearance, like a pavilion, but with monster windows to enclose it. Exposed water heaters, clearcoated copper plumbing, Stainless countertops. Stairs outside so you can get on the roof.
Where can I take a class here in Lake Charles Louisiana ?or in Louisiana in general.?
Hi James-check out timberframehq.com/timber-framing-101/schools for a great list of locations of classes. We generally only teach our 5-day Timber Framing and 2-week Design Build class (covers all methods of framing) at our location in Woolwich, ME. Also, we just launched an online version of our Timber Frame class here - onlinecourses.shelterinstitute.com
Wow, that's fantastic. I really like timber frames. I love how they look. I didn't know much of anything about them before this video other than I like how they look. I love how you can practically build them from materials on your own property. Maybe one day, I'll take your course.
I love mine!
Very educational video. Thanks for taking the time to post it.
Just saying, you can cover a stick frame building with all exterior insulation too, if you want to reduce thermal bridging. Also, now they have 2x6s that are a foam core between two 2x3s.
Also, I would argue that there are certain advantages to stick framing that are not discussed here. Ease of renovation/modular modification of existing construction, reduced heavy equipment needs to get the real big timbers up and in place, and some other stuff. Not to mention, you don't have the kinds of trees you need everywhere to do timber framing everywhere.
But yeah, for a places woth lotsa big trees, timber framing sure is awesome!
You are just living in the past. You can order laminated timbers everywhere, no big trees involved 😎
@@tip0019 compare costs please....bottom line in about everything
Timberframing can be done with timbers as small as 4.5x4.5" if it's a single story building. And historic methods such as wattle and daub are exponentially cheaper and easier to renovate than modern methods
@@burgeryoufoundbehindthegrill but not now
@@d.e303-anewlowcosthomebuil7 No, it's still true now, both statements. Check out Japanese traditional construction. They do it all the time. Stands up to typhoons well enough. And some of those buildings are older than the USA. Earth building is making a comeback in the West, and simply requires dirt, clay, straw, and/or dung (if you want, lol).
What happened to using full bricks. Instead of plywood and paper (drywall). I want my house to be build from concrete and steel. Slightly expensive but it will survive.
The best decision!
The old house where I live has a very rustic old garage that was made that way. When we were remodeling the rotting walls, I was wondering why the roof support seemed "wrong" and was made that way, so different to modern techniques. Yet it was still standing like nothing. But we had to be careful during the wall changes because taking the walls apart would have jeopardize the whole roof support. Now the garage has modern wall support methods holding an old-style roof on top.
Thank you. Excellent comparison!
Legend has it he is still clearing his throat
That would be so fun to take a class!
Great video. Informative yet easy to digest and straight to the point.
not really, its a bash at stick framing and a promotiom for his timber framing class
he makes so many mistakes and just straight up lies about many aspects of the construction
@@DSkimRS Ok, enlighten me then 😊 I was thinking of learning timber framing for my next garage loft. I'm no pro though. I'm in Eastern Canada (very cold and dry winter and very hot and humid summer) Some of the major pros of timber for me were insulation and cathedral roof/ceiling.
@@ChilledSon you can have as much insulation in a stick frame as you want, and you can also have a vaulted ceiling using a ridge beam