I love this video. It shows the reality of working on a crappy old building and not spending a million dollars engineering a new wall. Dirty and fast. Personally I would have used a can of spray foam, like caulking on the brick, then attacked a 1" xps foam board. Then 2x4 wall with R15 mineral wool. R20+ wall assembly.
Hmm, I believe a box of firelighters would have been the better option ... Whatever caused the rot should have been "unearthed" and remedied long before knocking in that "pitprop". Lovely precision engineering ... TOH ... FFS treat the audience like adults ... that was no more than a lash up. For shame.
Putting up a layer of continous insulation would be the best way to do this. This wall rotted because of its inability to dry out. Closed cell foam on the brick would stop the water vapor from driving towards the interior of the house.
@@mikecampanella1990 How does that solve the problems? Your patch up job merely masks the symptoms of something much worse. For shame! You people are hopeless. I speculate the wall was soaked because of possibly: no damp proof course, leaking guttering or downspouts or hoppers. As said before it is a slum. Torch the lot and build decent homes, not just patch up what is in reality just heaps of (damp) firewood. The authorities are as bad as the bastards who built one of our tower blocks ... except it turned out that "tower block" really should have been called a "high rise crematoria".
@@t1n4444 first of all, the best assembly for a wall is to have an air gap between the exterior siding or brick and then a wrb that is best for that climate zone that goes over the sheathing. Short of ripping down all of that brick, there is no other way to retrofit just that one room. So, if you add a layer of closed cell foam, it stops the vapor transfusion from the outside rotting anything on the interior. The brick will dry itself outward. It is simple building science. Should it have been built better from the start? Absolutely. Do you have to make cupcakes out of dogshit sometimes? Yes. I dont believe these guys in this video did it correctly at all. Simply putting a vapor open tyvek over that section of the wall will not help much. The problem needs to be stopped at the brick.
Hi guys, long-time fan here! Feel like coming out West to escape the snow and cold? I've got a house that needs a whole house re-wiring in Fountain Valley, CA that's only 8 minutes from the beach. Tacos on me 😋
Love the show but this didn't really show anything. Even the footage of the guy laying down the boards for the 2nd floor seemed 100% for footage and not for instructional purposes.
I like the idea but with 2 x 4 studs you don't really have much room for insulation. Unless you use closed cell foam the most you can likely get is about R8.
This is an TOH from 2017 when they were in Detroit working with the Detroit Land Bank's "Rehabbed and Ready" project. The idea was to rehab a house that's abandoned, foreclosed, and has problems that prevent it from going on the open market as-is> The R&R project gets it up to code and liveable on a basic budget, assigned out by a bidding system. And the project selects the new owners based on some sort of criteria. The new owners then finish the place.
This is the one time you would not need to force me to wear a MASK. It looks like a cloud of tuberculosis in there....They get the new exterior wall set in place and the exterior brick wall its behind falls down.
@@803mastiff9 You lot are so concerned about being "told" what to do 😂😂😂. The advice is to help you 😂😂😂. Of course you should wear appropriate PPE for the task in hand. Your OSHA outfit goes to a fair bit of effort to safeguard "your" working environment. Seems a bit daft to ignore their advice just because you are awash with testosterone and "can't" be told what to do. We've all read about some clown scoffing at the use of masks in another context ... and we all what happened there ...
I'm assuming, since they mentioned it's a bathroom, that the rot was there due to a leaky old shower or bathtub. I've seen almost identical damage in a 1939 house I remodeled that hat a shower with a drywall tub surround.
That guy in the green shirt was like I don't want anything to do with this video.
Pro trick : you can watch series at flixzone. I've been using them for watching loads of movies recently.
@Aldo Jay yea, have been using flixzone} for since december myself =)
My house is 106 years old. This series is so helpful.
I love this video. It shows the reality of working on a crappy old building and not spending a million dollars engineering a new wall. Dirty and fast. Personally I would have used a can of spray foam, like caulking on the brick, then attacked a 1" xps foam board. Then 2x4 wall with R15 mineral wool. R20+ wall assembly.
Hmm, I believe a box of firelighters would have been the better option ...
Whatever caused the rot should have been "unearthed" and remedied long before knocking in that "pitprop". Lovely precision engineering ...
TOH ... FFS treat the audience like adults ... that was no more than a lash up.
For shame.
Putting up a layer of continous insulation would be the best way to do this. This wall rotted because of its inability to dry out. Closed cell foam on the brick would stop the water vapor from driving towards the interior of the house.
@@mikecampanella1990 How does that solve the problems? Your patch up job merely masks the symptoms of something much worse. For shame! You people are hopeless.
I speculate the wall was soaked because of possibly: no damp proof course, leaking guttering or downspouts or hoppers.
As said before it is a slum.
Torch the lot and build decent homes, not just patch up what is in reality just heaps of (damp) firewood.
The authorities are as bad as the bastards who built one of our tower blocks ... except it turned out that "tower block" really should have been called a "high rise crematoria".
@@t1n4444 first of all, the best assembly for a wall is to have an air gap between the exterior siding or brick and then a wrb that is best for that climate zone that goes over the sheathing. Short of ripping down all of that brick, there is no other way to retrofit just that one room. So, if you add a layer of closed cell foam, it stops the vapor transfusion from the outside rotting anything on the interior. The brick will dry itself outward. It is simple building science.
Should it have been built better from the start? Absolutely. Do you have to make cupcakes out of dogshit sometimes? Yes. I dont believe these guys in this video did it correctly at all. Simply putting a vapor open tyvek over that section of the wall will not help much. The problem needs to be stopped at the brick.
@@mikecampanella1990 Quite agree.
The problem should be stopped at the brick alright ... by bulldozing the brick wall in the first place.
0:52 dude almost get’s his finger stapled is like, “hey watch it man!!!!” 😂💀😂💀😂💀😂💀💀💀😂💀😂💀😂💀
Thank you!
That is correct.
yes thats how you fix a old house :)
Hi guys, long-time fan here!
Feel like coming out West to escape the snow and cold? I've got a house that needs a whole house re-wiring in Fountain Valley, CA that's only 8 minutes from the beach. Tacos on me 😋
Heath will be right over!
Where's the respirators !! Geeez
Their lungs filter out any harmful debris
For a sec I thought they trap one of them behind the wall. Had to rewatch.
Title says interior wall,but video shows exterior wall
Exterior wall was brick. This is the actual Interior wall to the bath room...
@@MasterChief-sl9ro incorrect.any wall around the perimeter of the house is an exterior wall.
@@davidgarfinkel7033 FFS!
@@davidgarfinkel7033 Go watch it again.. Tyvek faces the "Exterior" wall... This is how Brick homes are made...
@@t1n4444 am I supposed to know what that means ?
Love the show but this didn't really show anything. Even the footage of the guy laying down the boards for the 2nd floor seemed 100% for footage and not for instructional purposes.
Over the years of the old uploads of this video I thought he was the owner until now 😂
I like the idea but with 2 x 4 studs you don't really have much room for insulation. Unless you use closed cell foam the most you can likely get is about R8.
This is an TOH from 2017 when they were in Detroit working with the Detroit Land Bank's "Rehabbed and Ready" project.
The idea was to rehab a house that's abandoned, foreclosed, and has problems that prevent it from going on the open market as-is>
The R&R project gets it up to code and liveable on a basic budget, assigned out by a bidding system. And the project selects the new owners based on some sort of criteria.
The new owners then finish the place.
The insulation for 2x4 walls is rated for R13 with fiberglass rolls..
@@berniemac8413you can easily fit R15 insulation on 2x4
So much for a how to
@1.55 interesting!
This is not a how to and it also isn't an interior wall. You're slipping This Old House.
Why move debris twice? What about a plywood floor?
How about a mask? Ya know, for the dust?
Shut up
Safety patrol is here, watch out everyone!!!
@@dannyfleck9051 you shut up.
They had them.... Didn't you see? Everyone had one around their throat....
mold? maybe
'Labor ready' crew
how the hell did that wall rot like that? water somehow got behind the brick?
if it was a old bathroom it might have come in from the inside, just a random thought
this is exactly what I was thinking
This is Not a "how to" video.. yall need to stop with these video titles that are so misleading.
that interrier exterier wall was not in there square
Yes first comment
Congrats
We are all saved, woohoo.
Don't have to be that jealous guys hahaha
@@dust09100 I am not jealous - I got my piece of cake - first comment to the first comment
@@MariuszChr touche
And 2 years later, they all died of asbestos and mold.
1:45 look at the mortar in around the bricks, They really had a hurry building that house
Bricks and mortar have to look good on the outside of the house.
"How to reframe an interior exterior wall"
😎
. support all small business and contractors..
You guys going to just keep posting 50 second clips from previous seasons and call that an upload?
Yea, that’s exactly what their gonna do.
This is the one time you would not need to force me to wear a MASK. It looks like a cloud of tuberculosis in there....They get the new exterior wall set in place and the exterior brick wall its behind falls down.
You shouldn't need to be forced any way...
@@NorthernChev I agree. Its always better to blindly comply like the 4 leggers that go moo. They spook easily which leads to stampedes
@@803mastiff9 ...or, you know. Science.
@@803mastiff9 You lot are so concerned about being "told" what to do 😂😂😂.
The advice is to help you 😂😂😂.
Of course you should wear appropriate PPE for the task in hand.
Your OSHA outfit goes to a fair bit of effort to safeguard "your" working environment. Seems a bit daft to ignore their advice just because you are awash with testosterone and "can't" be told what to do.
We've all read about some clown scoffing at the use of masks in another context ... and we all what happened there ...
Tom i need your help!!!
See the goofy job
Where did all the lobstahs go?
Ohn dah vahcahtion. Jus lihke da rest of us. . Dah lobstahs dohn't like Dehtroit.
Dees ehpesodes suhck. 50 sehcohnds of fihxin sohme shithole thaht shoulda goht da buhlldozah. 🦞🦞🦞
they moved to san francisco to be closer to "gabby" and other trans.
Think they need to find out the cause of the rot.
I'm assuming, since they mentioned it's a bathroom, that the rot was there due to a leaky old shower or bathtub. I've seen almost identical damage in a 1939 house I remodeled that hat a shower with a drywall tub surround.
instructions unclear: stapled self to roof.
Anyone want to be my Boyfriend 😍💋 💝💖♥️❤️