The LEAK was SO much worse that I thought 😳
Вставка
- Опубліковано 29 вер 2022
- Visit www.aquorwatersystems.com/ to upgrade your water system. Use code michaelalm10 at checkout for 10% off all Aquor products
Apparently water has been leaking through our front door for decades, and the results were far scarier than anticipated. The wall was on the edge of collapse, and we spent the month rebuilding that structure.
This channel is supported by Rockler. Thanks Rockler! Rockler Products used in this video include:
Rockler Spring-Loaded One-Handed Bar Clamp www.rockler.com/rockler-sprin...
Rockler Marking and Measuring Tool Pouch www.rockler.com/marking-and-m...
Rockler Joinery Tool Bag www.rockler.com/rockler-joine...
Affiliate links to tools and materials used in this video
ISO Tunes PRO 2.0 Noise Cancelling Earbuds www.bit.ly/almfabiso
Milwaukee m18 rocket tower light amzn.to/3ChHsUj
Milwaukee M12 Drill and Driver amzn.to/3Cn2ulv
Milwaukee M18 Drill and Driver amzn.to/3BQwfti
Fein Multimaster Occulting Multi-tool amzn.to/3UUkLhp
GVS Half Mask Respirator amzn.to/3SBrr1U
Ryobi miter saw amzn.to/3CmxAtm
Ryobi Universal miter saw stand amzn.to/3dZ5Ams
Milwaukee M18 30 Degree Framing Nail Gun amzn.to/3SO0tnB
Milwaukee Sawzall amzn.to/3UTs1tA
Estwing 15” Forged Pry Bar amzn.to/3fzje01
Cats paw nail puller amzn.to/3BS81iu
Little Giant M17 Ladder amzn.to/3dQd8rH
Little Giant Ladder Platform amzn.to/3ChIr6X
Milwaukee M18 Palm Router amzn.to/3RvO7iV
Ryobi Battery Powered Jigsaw amzn.to/3UPtIbI
Festool TS55 Track Saw amzn.to/3Cm8xqj
Milwaukee M18 Fuel Circular Saw amzn.to/3SJRtQt
Hammer Tacker Stapler amzn.to/3y6hstE
Wood Hardener amzn.to/3SpXnXb
Diablo Auger Tip Spade Bits amzn.to/3ULfSal
Aquor Ground Hydrant www.aquorwatersystems.com/pro...
Vycor Self Adhesive Flashing Tape amzn.to/3fA9tid
Camera Gear
Sony a6600 Mirrorless Camera - almfab.com/sony-a6600-camera
Cage for Sony a6600 Camera - almfab.com/rig-cage-sony-a6600
Camera-Mount Shotgun Microphone - almfab.com/shotgun-mic
17-70mm f/2.8 Di III-A VC RXD Lens for Sony E - almfab.com/tamron-lens-17-70m...
77mm NXT Plus UV Filter - almfab.com/uv-filter
577 Rapid Connect Adapter with Sliding Mounting Plate - almfab.com/rapid-connect
MT055XPRO3 Aluminum Tripod - almfab.com/tripod
Orion Jr DVC50 4' Compact Camera Crane / Jib - almfab.com/camera-crane
Aluminum Travel Tripod - almfab.com/travel-tripod
MC RGBWW LED Light - almfab.com/mc-led-light
PavoTube II 6C RGB LED Tube Light (10") - almfab.com/pavo-tube-light
Heavy-Duty Portable Tripod Dolly - almfab.com/tripod-dolly
360° Pan Lockable Bearing Mount to 3/8" Tripod Legs - almfab.com/bearing-mount
Tilt Brake for Orion DVC200, DVC210, and DVC250 Camera Cranes - almfab.com/tilt-brake
Laura Kampf’s Video • Whoopsie! I wish this ...
For project plans and more Alm Fab visit almfab.com
Instagram @almfab / almfab
Pinterest @almfab / almfab
Facebook @almfab / almfab
TikTok @michaelalmfab / michaelalmfab - Навчання та стиль
Love that you’re wearing a Laura Kampf shirt while intro’ing a video about dealing with rotting beams. 😂
😁🤣
haha, noticed the same thing!
I just binged the last month of her house series. So crazy to see the corellattion.
I was about to write a similar comment 🤣
Laura has a rotten wall? Ok, i want one too!😅
As a contractor I have done more than my share of rot repair. Fortunately I have learned a lot about what NOT to do when building! I was trying to see why the leak occurred in the first place and didn't see any flashing on top of the deck ledger. I suspect the door wasn't properly installed either. A 10 dollar piece of Z flashing would have prevented most of the water intrusion. VERY important to repair these flashing details or the problem will happen again. Look forward to seeing the door replacement. Sorry this happened to you!
Agreed, simply bolting the ledger back on the way will just lead the same problem again. The bolts are a major penetration just below a collection point for rain. Deck ledgers work if done correctly, unfortunately it was never done correctly on the original build, ledger simply bolted to wall on top of siding, the flashing really need to be behind the siding with enough space from the bottom of the siding to avoid wicking, etc.
@@michaelpayne8102 He did say he'd be replacing the door in the future
@@WowCoolHorse As mentioned the problem goes well beyond replacing the door. You can't just bolt a ledger on a wall and expect water to stay out of the structure. A common recommendation with decks is to not attach them to a house due to the issues with ledgers and flashing.
If you have another joist repair like this will waxing the board help reduce the friction to hammer it in?
@@jasonhudson7697 Hydraulic jacks are a contractors best friend.
Yes please! I would like to see the door/awning/landing/seating improvements in a video.
I cannot express how much I dislike the sticks and plywood construction in the US. Houses should not rot or be eaten away under your feet!
If you ever get to the Churchill War Rooms museum in London, you'll see that double opposing wedge technique throughout the facility. All of the initial wooden bracing that was installed when they first built the War Rooms is put into compression with that technique. They just drove nails through the wedges to set them in place, and it's held up for over 70 years!
I think the plastic is a vapor barrier since that was a garage for exhaust fumes to not get into the living space.
Hey Contractor here. that plastic was there to do exactly as you guessed. It's used as what's called a vapor barrier. It stops or hinders gas exchange between living spaces and non living spaces. that was probably there to stop gas exchange from your workshop into the living space up above.
Contractor Matt Risinger on his channel has an extended conversation on the inside vapor barrier issue looking at studies. His conclusion is generally not to use the plastic for the negative issues. Here's the video: ua-cam.com/video/q8fOMBlfh3A/v-deo.html. He deals with the zones where it probably should be used but in most of US he thinks no.
Use of plastic as a vapor barrier is standard practice here in Finland where temperature may vary from +30 C to - 30 C and I am pretty sure that is also the reason why you have it in Seattle. From outside in the structure is outside cladding, wind breaker/shield, frame with insulation, PLASTIC, additional structure for the inside wall. The plastic has to be air tight. All seams have to be sealed. The idea is that when you are inside the house, taking showers, making food etc., you are generating moisture that remains as gas in higher temperature. Then when ythe gas moves from inside to out in the structure the temperature drops and the physical state from gas changes to liquid. If this temp change happens within the the insulation it is guaranteed that you will get mold. The purpose of the plastic is to prevent the gas/moisture from getting into insulation material. This is basic physics. There is a gradient of temperature within the structure and at some poinrt there is a change from gas to liquid, Because of this it is difficult to make houses with heating and cooling in areas where temperature changes between winter and summer are drastic. In summer the plastic should be on the other side. In your case I would say that the main main reason for the rot is leakage from outside. Reconstruct, isolate, add plastic, tape all seams etc. BUT you need to have proper air circulation/change. Never use plastic on both sides - then it will not breath.
@@pekkahilden6802 Vapor barriers are standard in Denmark too. They're also codified, so neglecting to put up a barrier, essentially means the structure won't pass inspection
Same for Canada I’m pretty sure or at least I see it on all homes built in Ottawa then again our temp is like -40C (with wind chill) to +40 (with humidity). 😢
@@pekkahilden6802 All this....spot on! Standard code here in Canada.
Hey Michael, props for tackling this, it was a monster. You had quite the battle on your hands. When you swap out the door, and please do it quickly as your fresh kiln dried lumber will soak up water like a sponge. Don't ask me how I know. Also, get some deck spacers to go around the carriage bolts to gap the landing away from the siding. These are plastic discs which allow water to flow between your siding and decking material to allow good drying to occur. Look forward to seeing what is next. 👍👍
Thanks Tom! I'll check those out. It sounds like exactly what I need.
Likewise, I'm really wondering how your fix will avoid failing like the original in the exact same way. Does the deck plate attach outside the siding? If not, and it goes through the siding, how do you prevent water intrusion?
@@haphazard1342 have the same concerns. Fixed the problem, but not the cause. Water on the deck will still go into the wall and the wall will start to rot again.
@@whyme6742 - If Michael is replacing the deck, and perhaps the stairs, having the planks at a very slight tilt may reduce the problem by getting water to drain away from the house.
could slip the peel and stick membrane flash between the wall and the deck too. as is is a bad idea
Oh no, that is scary to find. My porch had rotted and I did not find it until I fell through the planks. This could have been a lot worse, glad you took care of it when you could.
When you replace the door and rebuild the stair platform, you really need to carefully flash all of these areas to prevent a recurrence of the problem. I really wish you had lined the sheathing/beam behind the platform with the vycor before bolting the platform back..
Yeah, from what I can see this fix is doomed to fail in the same way. The deck platform needs to be attached outside of the siding, not cut through it. If that's not feasible, extensive flashing where the deck plate attaches to the house framing is absolutely necessary. Otherwise water will just continue to collect at the deck when it flows down the siding, and continue to intrude into the wall resulting in more rot down the line.
True, and the mid stair landing attachment needs to be looked at also.
@@haphazard1342 If you watch to the end it sounds like the plan is to put an awning over the door to keep water out of the area. He could reflash and go crazy around the landing, but an awning both makes the area usable and fixes the water issue.
An awning doesn’t stop wind-driven rain.
I love that Laura is learning how to fix her house as she goes, and you are already learning from her!
i would love to see more of the house upgrade saga! Just like Laura's video series, its incredible and inspiring to see you guys tackle such daunting tasks and keep a good head about it while filming it all! thank you and well done 👏
Please no, there are already 100000 house reno channels on youtube. What's next, rusty tool restorations ?
@@kz.irudimen There are also 1000000 other ways you could have given more tactful feedback, and countless other channels to check out if you have no interest in watching a free episode of something. So don't worry, you have plenty of options
Good catch Michael. Looking forward to this veranda build. Nice to see that Laura's struggles have given a little bit of positive to someone, she's truly neck-deep in her 'little' project.
That shirt was no coincidence 😄
Great video Michael!
I thought this was a Laura Kampf video at first 😄
Hahaha! it basically is 😅
Ugh, what a nightmare! You and Ashley and all your wonderfully kind friends and neighbors did a fabulous job fixing everything. That was so much work, Michael! Thanks for taking us along. It’s always helpful to see how this kind of “unglamorous” stuff gets fixed. Would love to see more of this project.
Home projects are scary and this one was definitely a nail biter. Amazing job and the next owners will be thankful. Please cover your work for the door and deck landing replacement! Looking forward to seeing this entire place redone which is how home reno goes!
Considering the topic I appreciate your Laura Kampf shirt in the intro a lot
What an ordeal. It's never fun to find surprises like this in your home. Nice job fixing it up. Thanks for sharing!
Wow! What a mess. It's great to have friends and neighbors who are willing to help. It''s looking good now. I look forward to seeing you finish it up.
I'm so sorry this happened to you, but glad you discovered and repaired it before anyone was injured. Kudos to your friends and to Ashley for all their help and much needed moral support.
What a nightmare, well done! Be very interested to see you finish
Great video! Absolutely terrifying discovery! Really liked how you showed the whole process here, warts and all! Would love to see some more updates as you work through this!
I love a mix of home renovations between projects! It’s a nice little escape and you do great work!
I'm struggling to express how good this video is, on so many levels. It's just real. You found an issue, tackled the problem with skill and native knowledge, did it cooperatively with your spouse and your friends, and completed the project knowing your house is sealed and secure. That's pretty awesome. Made me feel good, I'll tell ya what 😀.
I am really glad you all found and repaired the issue before it got wildly unstable
What 🇺🇸 houses are made of is terrifying 😳 😬. Its pretty much how we build a shed, just with adding insulation.
yes
structural woodchips and structural glue, with some thin veneer on top to make it look pretty for 20 years
Great job man. I’ve been a renovation/finish carpenter for 30 years. I saw a woodworker doing Reno stuff and thought, this should be interesting. I’ve been doing jobs like this by myself for the past 20 years. I appreciate your struggle and satisfaction of getting it done.
When we replace the siding on our addition, it was clear the previous people knew there was damage, and covered it up based on the patchwork bits of chip board used to fur out the spots on the 2x's that had rotted away... I was beyond infuriated... It is somewhat cathartic opening up, finding the issue, fixing it and making it right.. giving the peace of mind know it's NOW correct
Absolutely yes to more of this as you need. It helps to see what can be done beyond woodworking, because, as you’ve shown: there’s definitely the possibility of other things that can/need to be done.
Wow! Great video- And from what I gathered, water damage was much more than expected… so this was pretty much an unexpected project?… Either way, you, Ashley, & what I’d say are “the nicest neighbors ever!” did a great job in the time you had. Anyhow- Thanks for taking time to film & share your journey. Looking forward to seeing the new door install 👍🏼
That was some serious damage. Glad you caught it and got to fix it.
Plastic was a vapor barrier. You use plastic if the insulation batts are not craft faced (paper covering on the fiberglass). It's a code.
Only in areas where you heat more then you cool not sure where seattle stands
@@joelhuppe3725 quite a lot of people in the Pacific Northwest don't even have cooling in their homes. But I live in southern New Mexico now and a vapor barrier is required.
Wow! And thank goodness for good neighbors
I like how you used patterned plywood trusses to shore up your roof. Elegant, yet sturdy. It was nice of Mr. Pask to come and help you all the way from Australia.
Man. You can now add "House Surgeon" to your resume after this. Great work getting this fixed man!
House surgery is probably the best way to put it. 😂
Thanks!!
Between you and Laura, watching y'all tackle surprise water damage and rot has been a wild ride. Glad you caught it in time! Can't wait to see how you update the stair landing. ❤
As a longtime woodworker and recent homeowner, this video is the stuff nightmares. I am so glad that you fixed this issue before it became a safety incident, and can get to properly installing a replacement door quickly. I don’t blame you for not being able to sleep well during this ordeal and thank you for showing your process.
I love this video. I love that you showed the kind of thing that would make most people panic and systematically worked through investigating the problem and fixing it well. I don’t know if you were feeling calm but you seemed it, and I think whether your viewers are handy enough to tackle something like this or they’d have to call some help watching this would inspire confidence with the process. ❤
Yes please Michael, would love to see the rest of the upgrades. Glad to see you were able to get all of that taken care of before something really bad happened, (Laura). Looking forward to the rest of the projects.
Great work Michael! Was looking forward to this video after hearing some of the story when we were out west. Great video as usual and really interesting to see a home repair from time to time. Best of luck to you and Ashley. Be well!
Glad you found this out before someone was hurt. Good lord that was horrible!!!
Thanks Tricia 😅 it’s a relief
@@MichaelAlm you also make me scared to pull back and see the damage from the leak from my roof. Especially since I have plaster walls. Ugh! If I leave it sealed up, it will be fine, right?
Thanks for sharing this "adventure". Would love to see more of how this project continues in the future.
Absolutely would like to see the rest of the project!
Could not stop thinking about Laura Kampf's water woes with Lisr Lotte. Then, of course you were wearing the merch and mentioned her. So cool to see the community reach like that.
I am so in for more house project vids. This was amazing to watch. I loved seeing all the team work that went into it.
Thanks Dominic!!
Definitely interested in the adding awning and benches to the deck!
so glad you both are safe
Bravo!!! Fantastic job. You handled all that unfamiliar media like a pro and, best of all, kept smiling!
Dang you guys have been busy! Amazing work and amazing friends and neighbors. I personally really like these videos for content. I would be very interested in seeing a whole series made out of this section of the house and all of its projects. Thanks, as always, for the awesome content.
Hey Michael
I would suggest having a step down from your door to your stair case landing. It should help with water not entering. Love your channel.
awesome video! very cool to follow along and would love to see the platform being redone. great job michael!
It's great that you were able to repair it before any disaster happened. My first thought when you put up that temporary wall was that you needed diagonal bracing. I'm glad you added it. Overall that was a lot of work but necessary.
Bill
Enjoying some of the more house building/fixing specific videos. It's nice variety.
Great repair job and your attention to details was awesome. In the future there should be a rain screen between the tar paper and your siding. You do not want trapped moisture between the moisture barrier and your siding. It sounds like you plan to but better siding in the future, the manufacturer of the siding will spec out the rain screen.
opening a wall or pulling up a floor and seeing that much of an issue sure can be discouraging, but the only way out is forward and it sure feels good in the end
Even though I live in a dry climate, I redid a tub surround in a 15 year old former rental house. Not only was there no insulation in the 1970 outer wall, but the studs were partly or completely gone. There was a huge fungi growing in the cavity. It was at that point that I realized that the owner, my dad, was a slum lord.
I’ve done a much smaller version of this type of project, it can be quit daunting. Good problem solving, and lucky to have folks to help out on it.
That's a ton of work and you did a great job showing all of the steps. The thing that got the biggest reaction from me was the 18" 2x4 idea for the trench. Totally not woodworking or anything that brings me to your channel but a brilliant idea!
Moving that joist may have been less noisy with a ratchet strap attached to your blocks pulling it in. :) Ah.. the true price of home ownership
Yes please film that process ❤
thank you so much for including tools in the description
Would love to see you adding the awning, etc!
Great video, I enjoy seeing the home repair side as a learning experience for myself. My vote is to continue the coverage of the repair, and improvement, as you go along.
Nice work on the repairs Michael! Thank you for sharing the video with us!💖😎👍JP
I assume the plastic/poly is vapour barrier but they didn't caulk it or seal it with tuck tape so... who knows. I'm not from your area, is vapour barrier not part of your building code? It usually goes to the "warm side", but in places like Pacific Northwest it's hard to say which is the warm side since it depends which 6 months you pick.
Good to know! I'm more used to there being a vapor barrier on the insulation. Is plastic another common option?
@@MichaelAlm I'm not a building scientist, I just play one in random UA-cam comments. But yeah, around here (East Coast Canada) pretty much every house has plastic. Only exceptions I can think of would be homes that used ICF, or homes that used a closed cell 2 lbs spray foam where the foam itself acts as a vapor and moisture barrier. When we sprayed 1/2 lb open cell foam there was a paint we could spray over it that was certified as a barrier but it was a tonne of grief getting the building inspectors to accept it since it was outside the norm of poly.
Thanks so much! GREAT INFO and resources.
Well done on this project!! When I saw the rotten joists I was like "oh crap!!!" Those bolts on the staircase were super bad. 10/10 for all the hard work on getting the house fixed. Love the channel!!
Nice to see the hard work put in.
An for an idea. How about putting those 4x4 posts back under the stairs and building a tall shed. For anything tall that needs storage. Maybe a smoke house for your food.
Keep up the great work
Would love to see you complete the project. Thank you.
My heart was in my throat when you showed how much damage was there. Thank goodness you found out and were able to fix it. egads.
Oh... Wow! 😳
That was really scary, Michael!!! But fantastic work there!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
When you have a tall support wall, you can also put some of the studs sideways
That's quite the project to tackle! Can't wait to see the landing rebuilt!
So many reasons to feel lucky in this, it isn't raining, not winter, you and Ashley found it early as opposed to later, you have great friends and neighbors. For all those good readon it worked out well. Bummer that it happened at all. Good Luck.
This whole thing hits awfully close to home. A few years back we discovered a huge flaw in the foundation of our house; the previous owner had cut a hole in the concrete in order to add another outside door, but filling the whole back up around the door frame hadn't packed the concrete down enough. After a particularly nasty bout of winter rain we discovered that the wall from the inside was a literal waterfall, ruining basically the entire floor of the basement and the adjoining walls.
It's scary how these things can hide in your walls for years before you notice them.
Dude!!! You are a frigging ninja!!! Most contractors would have just said "move out for 4 to 6 weeks while demo the entire side of the home and rebuild it.". You were like a surgeon with a scalpel...brilliant! Strong work!
Wow! Good catch and yes to the follow up videos!
Wow, what a project. Congrats, Michael. I laughed so hard at that siding panel smacking you in the face, haha.
Looking real good ichael. Yes I would like to see more as you go along with this project
Nice work Michael!! Rebuilt better than originally built!!
Big project, man. One thing i was always taught was that a deck should actually tilt away from the house, 1/4" per 4 feet, so the water flows away. Hope that helps.
What a disaster. Glad everyone was safe. What a disaster though!!
Youve done great, id love to see the project finish.
Great video Michael. As soon as it started I thought wow if I didn't live on the opposite side of the country I would have volunteered to help. This was definitely a big job. Nice shout out to Laura Kampf.
yes would love to see the porch landing get an upgrade and my first thought was an awning over to protect the doorway keep on keeping on
Great video! Huge job to tackle. I would love to see the following videos on the door install. I'm no expert but my guess is the door and deck were originally installed poorly without proper flashing. That's what probably cause all the water damage..
Interesting change of pace. Seems like a challenging job repairing all of that in place.
Yes, I’d love to see the rest of this project. Excellent work, btw…
Amazing job!!! I would love to see how you improve the landing at the top of the stairs. Thank you for the content you post. I learn so much from every video you upload.
Scary to see how bad it was underneath. It would be great to see the door replacement and what your plans are for the deck and stairs.
Laura Kampf ran into some similar issues with a rotted wall of a century+ old house. Traditional carpenters built two temporary walls, one inside and one outside which then had beams to support the second story (while they rebuilt the final wall). This means you have similar strength and are never hoping.
I love what you do and I would love to see the rest of this upgrade.
The clear plastic is a VCL (Vapour Control Layer) which is pretty common in most wall build ups and countries. It's intended to stop the passage of vapour/moisture (showering, cooking and breathing) from inside a room into the wall where it can condensate and turn to liquid and cause damp. I don't think this would have caused any issue with your situation. Now you can get "clever" airtightness membranes from SIGA and Pro Clima rather than just plastic. The external side of the wall should also have a barrier membrane to control water ingress.
Ok, I was genuinely concerned for your safety in this one! So scary! Water damage is no joke. I'm so glad you got it taken care of.
Look like you should build a canopy over the door as well, it' is very exposed. You have strengthened my opinion against timber framed houses. Here in Scotland they are very popular because of the cost of transport being lower but I am glad my house is built entirely from concrete blocks. I even used concrete block for my garage/workshop.
That wedge trick from Laura Kampf was super slick! Good to see it work in another situation.
Gotta love home ownership!! Great job on the repairs. Well done. And yes I would love to see the work continue to finish the project 👍🏽👍🏽
I will say you did a great job on the repair. First thing is that you are correct that T1LL should not be used as siding especially on a house where you have to stack it. It expands way too much and leaves gaps all over which i saw on your house where water is definitely getting in. Second I hate attaching to a ledger on a house like your porch for your door. i always do a deck where its floating and supported from below. Water will find a way and i cant tell you how many repairs we made fixing problems just like this. On your door entry you should put an overhang to try and keep as much rain off the door as possible to help keep this from happening. I personally think your next investment should be new siding though. Keep up the work.....
I know your pain, I found rot on one of our load bearing walls. Will be working on that soon.