But its not a flat arch vut a shallow arch or cambered arch. If it was a flat arch (a bit of a misnomer) the bottom cord would be flat and it wouldn't work as an arch.
@@mervmervalot2296 As an Architect I can confirm that the steel is there to initially provide temporary support whilst the arch is formed and secondly as its an infill the arch will sag a little if put under full load thus creating horizontal settlement cracks. For this arch to perform on its own the whole wall would have to be rebuilt, putting the steel in is cheap and prevents possible serious results, this way the arch has only to support itself/
@@razzek2638 I’m guessing you mean cutting voiswars where the bricks are shaped like a v….if that’s what you mean then this arch doesn’t need them cutting the brick works in!
@@razzek2638 Oh right, no this is a Camber arch, it replicates the one on the original opposite side….thats how they’re designed. Some of the flat arches do that, depends on their design! If you look the full UA-cam I made on my channel you’ll see the whole job👍
Proper bricky,,,,no flip flops and knows his stuff and doesn't bore his mate to death 😂😂
But its not a flat arch vut a shallow arch or cambered arch. If it was a flat arch (a bit of a misnomer) the bottom cord would be flat and it wouldn't work as an arch.
Lovely work chris
Thank you👍😊
Cambered
Whats the steel for if you have all that masonry under it?
Holding the weight above the RO due to the opening
Ask the architect
@@mervmervalot2296 As an Architect I can confirm that the steel is there to initially provide temporary support whilst the arch is formed and secondly as its an infill the arch will sag a little if put under full load thus creating horizontal settlement cracks. For this arch to perform on its own the whole wall would have to be rebuilt, putting the steel in is cheap and prevents possible serious results, this way the arch has only to support itself/
i like what you do especially cutting a slot out to hide the girder thanks for the video
@@eddieMurphy11111 nice one, thanks 👍
Can i ask - why arent you creating angled joints? No criticism, just curious as most i see have continuous levels for the joints through the arch.
@@razzek2638 I’m guessing you mean cutting voiswars where the bricks are shaped like a v….if that’s what you mean then this arch doesn’t need them cutting the brick works in!
No, more the joints between the header and stretcher of the arch are not in line or cut to be parallel with the beds of the courses running through.
@@razzek2638 Oh right, no this is a Camber arch, it replicates the one on the original opposite side….thats how they’re designed. Some of the flat arches do that, depends on their design! If you look the full UA-cam I made on my channel you’ll see the whole job👍
@@foundationgood123vousoirs?
Good work
Thank you! Cheers!
Cambered
Canverd? what?
@@ryan2387 The word is cambered lol