Cheap DIY Wall Jacks to Safely Raise the Cabin Walls - EP 21

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  • Опубліковано 30 чер 2024
  • How will I raise massive walls by myself? I have to come up with ways I can do this safely as I really do not want the walls to end up on the ground. I am going over a design for a wall jack / hoist which I will use to hopefully raise the walls. Fingers crossed!
    You want to know the budget for this Cabin and what each stage of the construction has cost me so far? Join my emailing list as I send a monthly newsletter diving into the numbers. Go ahead and add your email there and you will also receive the FREE Cabin Blueprint:
    www.thediycabinguy.com/blueprint
    I am Tristan, I am building a 400 SF cabin at the back of my house. I plan on doing it all by myself. I plan on sharing this journey here on UA-cam where I will show you every step of the way, all the struggles I run into and everything I will learn from this experience. I will then rent the cabin as a short term rental in hope of covering most, if not, all my house mortgage (House Hacking). Follow me here as this will absolutely be one of a kind journey.
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    DISCLAIMER
    Most of the product links are Amazon affiliate links, where I earn a small commission from purchases at no cost to you. Thanks for watching!
    Content of the video :
    00:00 - Intro
    00:48 - What Could Go Wrong ?
    02:14 - Prevent Wall From Sliding
    07:34 - Building DIY Wall Jacks
    14:43 - Bottom of Wall Jacks
    16:04 - Attachment to Wall
    18:06 - Next Time !
    #CabinSeries #TheDIYCabinGuy #Cabin #TinyHouse
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 48

  • @TheDIYCabinGuy
    @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +1

    You can now get the free DIY Cabin Blueprint at :
    thediycabinguy.com/blueprint

  • @mattpoland8200
    @mattpoland8200 2 роки тому +5

    You are killing me with the suspense of raising the walls

  • @jeffreyjacobs6072
    @jeffreyjacobs6072 2 роки тому +9

    FYI..in the future...toenail the bottom plate to the floor. Before you install the sheathing. When you lift the wall ...the toenails will keep the wall from sliding away from you and off the deck. Larry Haun probably had a wall building video showing how that's done.🤠

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +2

      Hi Jeffrey, yes I had seen it when I was looking around. But I still feel weird about it. Have you tried this method ? Has it worked well for you?

    • @jeffreyjacobs6072
      @jeffreyjacobs6072 2 роки тому +4

      Yes...an 8p nail just enough to hold the wall and not damage the plate. Usually buy the time the wall is mostly vertical the toenail is almost out...allowing you to adjust the wall into its final position.

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому

      @@jeffreyjacobs6072 good to know !

  • @jakes1292
    @jakes1292 Рік тому +3

    I am using a framing wall jack. Back off the framed wall by the thickness and toe nail at 45 with 16D nails as a hinge. Also nail plates to the outside of the joists to help the wall to not slide off after the toe nails loose strustural. Pin the jack post and stand on it while leaning on the top part of the jack to maintain depth on the top of the wall. The 2x4 jack spine will degrade over time so use best judgment when working. Please be carefull about imposing ultimate safety to your clients in the designs. With experience and communication we creat value to adding an engineeer to projects.

  • @RobertJLessard
    @RobertJLessard 2 роки тому +5

    The pros I watched just fired in some 16D nails at an angle through the wall plate and use that as a hinge. Definitely the fastest way but no idea how safe it is.

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +2

      I agree, I’ve seen it too, and since I have never raised a wall and that I’m by myself. I preferred going the extra mile to make sure nothing wrong would happen.

    • @westleyjohnson1375
      @westleyjohnson1375 2 роки тому +1

      Sounds like the Perkins brother builders lol

  • @nickzmay2823
    @nickzmay2823 Рік тому +3

    As others mentioned the standard sill plate toe nail to the plywood works well. For critical and or heavy walls use a couple pieces of black metal strap from a lumber yard. Slide the strap under the sill plate, nail to the bottom of the sill plate and nail the other end to the floor ply. Lift.

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  Рік тому

      Thanks Nick, you’ll see that’s what I ended up doing with the front wall, I used a simpson strap nails to the subfloor and to the bottom plate, worked very well

    • @jameskirk3
      @jameskirk3 8 місяців тому

      I've always just nailed blocks on the perimeter that stand up a foot or so.
      Yeah sheathing would be in the way in his case, but he could rip it off and nail it to the band, then wrap the wall (while it's laying down, like a smart person would) and fold up the bottom about a foot.
      Toenailing the sill works, but I prefer to avoid it for the most part. I'll use a few, but it's a pain to push the wall around when it's nailed down.

  • @raevanwolfe5416
    @raevanwolfe5416 2 роки тому +5

    I admire your ingenuity and creativity! Sometimes when you're all by yourself you have to take the extra steps to get the job done and still be safe from catastrophe. I agree about the toenails into the bottom plate to keep the wall from sliding but as for the extra people for lifting, as I well know myself, sometimes it's just you. Great contraption idea. I'm looking forward to the hoist!

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks Raevan ! So you’ve also had position experiences with toenailing the bottom plate ?
      I knew about it but was scared it would not be enough and since I could not afford anything to go wrong, I just did not go that route.

    • @raevanwolfe5416
      @raevanwolfe5416 2 роки тому +2

      @@TheDIYCabinGuy Yes, I've had great results with the toenails holding. The nails act as hinges and you put bracing on the outside so the walls don't fall over. It's just the lifting of the walls that becomes difficult when you're a crew of one.

  • @ABSOLUTEALASKAFAMILY
    @ABSOLUTEALASKAFAMILY 2 роки тому +3

    looking forward to it

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому

      Next episode coming up next week hopefully !

  • @bengtriise6504
    @bengtriise6504 2 роки тому +3

    I need that next episode right about now!🌞🌞

  • @brotesser1
    @brotesser1 2 роки тому +2

    This is such a genius Idea!

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +1

      If you have big walls on your cabin and that you’re by yourself, I highly recommend it !

  • @jameskirk3
    @jameskirk3 8 місяців тому +1

    At the bottom just use a 4 inch door hinge and bolt through it. At the top, embed some strapping between the sheathing and the studs, nail it repeatedly with roofing nails or a stapler, then sheath over it, leaving a loop at the top.
    Ive used 2x4s and fence posts for this, the galvanized 3" thick wall commercial fence posts work great if you hsve a welder to mount the hinge at the bottom and a pulley at the top.

  • @denniscarreno8151
    @denniscarreno8151 2 роки тому +3

    You're a genius 👏

  • @jcon6115
    @jcon6115 5 місяців тому +2

    Shipping strap works as a great hinge to prevent the wall from slipping off the deck. Ask me how I know?

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  5 місяців тому

      Oh oh, I hope you didn’t have a wall fall off a platform. That was my worst fear

    • @jcon6115
      @jcon6115 2 місяці тому

      We lost a few being in big rush.

  • @WildGnomos
    @WildGnomos 2 роки тому +2

    Interesting solution! Nice job👍

  • @creeplife2802
    @creeplife2802 2 роки тому +2

    What boots are those?

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +1

      They’re called the Kamik Griffon color charcoal, I’ve had them for a while and they make decent work boots.

  • @prof.danielgarcia901
    @prof.danielgarcia901 Рік тому +1

    Show

  • @CriticasDeCineEn2Minutos
    @CriticasDeCineEn2Minutos 5 місяців тому +1

    You need friends dude!!!

  • @Ukeville
    @Ukeville 9 місяців тому +2

    Why not hire help to raise the walls? Seems like you spent a lot of money and energy on winch system

  • @lyleblake3953
    @lyleblake3953 Рік тому +3

    for the price of all that "stuff" you could have bought some beer & had friends over for a "raising" . On the other hand you now have the makings of a diverse "Junk Drawer"...

  • @richiestaklinski5499
    @richiestaklinski5499 2 роки тому +4

    This is way too much work..A case of beer and 3 friends this video was done in minutes...Good Luck!

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +2

      Probably, but what do you do if you have no one to help? I don’t see any other way I could raise a large wall by myself.

    • @richiestaklinski5499
      @richiestaklinski5499 2 роки тому +2

      Wasn't criticizing I enjoy your videos i have seen them all. You know you could build the walls in place board by board and avoid the heavy lifting. Either way ill be watching... Best wishes

    • @TheDIYCabinGuy
      @TheDIYCabinGuy  2 роки тому +1

      @@richiestaklinski5499 no problem! I always enjoy hearing other ways and I’m very open to new ideas as I’m not a builder and I don’t know it all.