I am always inspired by your work. In fact I followed your videos when I built my own garden shed during the first round of lockdown. Keep it going. We appreciate what you're doing. Well, at least I do
Hey nice work! A question why using I’m guessing asphalt board instead of plastic wrap? Also isn’t that board stopping moisture from escaping the isolation layer? 😅
I presume you didn't get the memo on youtube comments, those who say are professional usually aren't at all ... or are just an employee in a company forced to slap something together quickly and move onto the next task, so he thinks that is the only way. I wouldn't pay much attention to that. There's no such thing as overbuilt, guidelines and regulations are a minimum something should be done to. Sky is the limit when it comes to quality and overbuilt. Companies care more for time than quality, and to be honest, some people dont care about quality either. But some do. If you can relate quality to your customer and customer wants it, you have no problem. But it is important to recognise the type of customer and realise time is money. The current trend in europe is a huge problem, slap something crappy quickly to a minimum and demand top price like you are selling the most quality item there ever was. I would rather have your shed/garden room from this vid than anything I have seen so far on offer. Btw overbuilt and rubbish are mutually exclusive.
Thank You. I think you are spot on. I also think a part of the problem is that people also want things really fast these days, which of course will affect the quality.
@DieterSchneider very true, especially with younger generations. I think the trick is to make something as pretty as possible (good looking stuff sells) and as quick as possible (your time is your profit) but without sacrificing minimum quality. I also think that modern hybrid polymers (stuff in tubes, sealant and adhesive all in one, some are even fillers) could be used to your advantage. With those you can simplify some time consuming details without compromising quality you have clearly set to achieve.
I would ignore the saltiness of "Professionals" as especially in the Construction Trade, their "Professionals" have the worst reputation for cutting corners, rushing jobs, hiding bad craftsmanship behind layers of chalking and filler, and spending more time gossiping like hens than actually doing their work! The majority of them have information that is decades out of date and they have no interest in learning or applying new techniques to their craft, they just regurgitate what they learnt during their apprenticeship and all of the bad habits that they learnt from their mentor.
Yes, I think you are right about that. I have seen some pretty bad jobs that had to be redone. Everyone can make mistakes, but sometimes it's pure sloppiness unfortunately.
Hi, it’s difficult to determine ‘overbuilt’ without setting a baseline for ‘adequately’ built. I suppose you could determine requirements based upon locational, environmental and regulatory requirement. Then estimate man hour and material needs to complete the project and then compare ‘overbuilt’ and ‘adequately’ built projects avoiding location specific costs. I’m with you in that a throwaway comment by a ‘keyboard warrior’ is not worth consideration. Too often these comments are bandied about as fact rather than opinion and when in my opinion the commenter is not basing it on evidence but rather ‘feelings’. I welcome debate and challenging of results but be prepared to defend your argument.
Love your builds and videos. Ignore negativity
Thank You
I am always inspired by your work. In fact I followed your videos when I built my own garden shed during the first round of lockdown. Keep it going. We appreciate what you're doing. Well, at least I do
There is no such thing as overbuilt.
Excellent work!
Hey nice work! A question why using I’m guessing asphalt board instead of plastic wrap? Also isn’t that board stopping moisture from escaping the isolation layer? 😅
Agree with most of these comments. Great build. I was wondering how you were going to get it out of the shop. Hope the customer is happy.
Thanks 👍
Skal i sommer bygge min egen hytte med anneks. Annekset er svært likt ditt og mye løsninger er fått fra dine videoer😊👍🏻
I presume you didn't get the memo on youtube comments, those who say are professional usually aren't at all ... or are just an employee in a company forced to slap something together quickly and move onto the next task, so he thinks that is the only way. I wouldn't pay much attention to that.
There's no such thing as overbuilt, guidelines and regulations are a minimum something should be done to. Sky is the limit when it comes to quality and overbuilt.
Companies care more for time than quality, and to be honest, some people dont care about quality either. But some do. If you can relate quality to your customer and customer wants it, you have no problem. But it is important to recognise the type of customer and realise time is money.
The current trend in europe is a huge problem, slap something crappy quickly to a minimum and demand top price like you are selling the most quality item there ever was. I would rather have your shed/garden room from this vid than anything I have seen so far on offer.
Btw overbuilt and rubbish are mutually exclusive.
Thank You. I think you are spot on. I also think a part of the problem is that people also want things really fast these days, which of course will affect the quality.
@DieterSchneider very true, especially with younger generations.
I think the trick is to make something as pretty as possible (good looking stuff sells) and as quick as possible (your time is your profit) but without sacrificing minimum quality. I also think that modern hybrid polymers (stuff in tubes, sealant and adhesive all in one, some are even fillers) could be used to your advantage. With those you can simplify some time consuming details without compromising quality you have clearly set to achieve.
Lets see how good the critic's build is, then the conversation starts. Ignore "keyboard warriors".
I would ignore the saltiness of "Professionals" as especially in the Construction Trade, their "Professionals" have the worst reputation for cutting corners, rushing jobs, hiding bad craftsmanship behind layers of chalking and filler, and spending more time gossiping like hens than actually doing their work!
The majority of them have information that is decades out of date and they have no interest in learning or applying new techniques to their craft, they just regurgitate what they learnt during their apprenticeship and all of the bad habits that they learnt from their mentor.
Yes, I think you are right about that. I have seen some pretty bad jobs that had to be redone. Everyone can make mistakes, but sometimes it's pure sloppiness unfortunately.
Hi, it’s difficult to determine ‘overbuilt’ without setting a baseline for ‘adequately’ built. I suppose you could determine requirements based upon locational, environmental and regulatory requirement. Then estimate man hour and material needs to complete the project and then compare ‘overbuilt’ and ‘adequately’ built projects avoiding location specific costs. I’m with you in that a throwaway comment by a ‘keyboard warrior’ is not worth consideration. Too often these comments are bandied about as fact rather than opinion and when in my opinion the commenter is not basing it on evidence but rather ‘feelings’. I welcome debate and challenging of results but be prepared to defend your argument.
Yes, I agree with this.
So it is overbuild but rubbish, bit of a contradiction