Once again, a very exciting episode. Now that the walls are installed with excellent craftspeopleship, I am looking forward to the roof. Just some advance advice, once you have the roof and wall fully dried in with doors and windows and the underneath of the floor joists sealed, run a dehumidifier before installing your interior installation package. Believe it or not, it will remove a lot of water content that has accumulated. Until the next episode of "Life on the North River".
Why are you framing the walls be doing the sub floor ? Now you've given yourself a good chance of seal damage between floor and the perimeter of the outside wall of that floor.
@@johnpearce3011 Hey There, we've gotten this question a couple of times. The main reason is to facilitate the insulation of the floor with blown in insulation. I only want to be underneath, on my back once to install the sheathing on the bottom of the floor joists....then we're filling the floor cavity with blown in cellulose insulation. This makes it easier to get around all the blocking, bridging, plumbing, and wiring. We need to be dried-in walls and roof first before doing that. Sub floor under plate isn't as critical for post and beam foundation as with other builds. There is a stronger connection between plate and girder without the subfloor sandwiched in between. Once our sheathing is on we'll be running full sheets of rigid insulation past the sill plate to the base of the girders. We're also covering the underside with rigid insulation and taping all seams to prevent moisture in the crawlspace from infiltrating. That should provide a pretty solid drainage plane and keep all seams "high and dry". Thanks for watching!
Love your videos
@@davidlukason9543 thank you! 💕
Your house is starting to look good. Great video.
@@Hillbilly007-yd9gu thank you 💜
Once again, a very exciting episode. Now that the walls are installed with excellent craftspeopleship, I am looking forward to the roof. Just some advance advice, once you have the roof and wall fully dried in with doors and windows and the underneath of the floor joists sealed, run a dehumidifier before installing your interior installation package. Believe it or not, it will remove a lot of water content that has accumulated. Until the next episode of "Life on the North River".
@@herbrotter thank you for the kind words and the advice 💕
WONDERFUL!!!!! It looks amazing and the snow is beautiful!!! Stay safe and well and warm. Love to you both MOM & DAD xoxoxox🎄🎄🎄🎄❄❄☃☃💖💖
Thanks! Love you both 🤍❄️🤍❄️
Why are you framing the walls be doing the sub floor ? Now you've given yourself a good chance of seal damage between floor and the perimeter of the outside wall of that floor.
@@johnpearce3011 Hey There, we've gotten this question a couple of times. The main reason is to facilitate the insulation of the floor with blown in insulation. I only want to be underneath, on my back once to install the sheathing on the bottom of the floor joists....then we're filling the floor cavity with blown in cellulose insulation. This makes it easier to get around all the blocking, bridging, plumbing, and wiring. We need to be dried-in walls and roof first before doing that. Sub floor under plate isn't as critical for post and beam foundation as with other builds. There is a stronger connection between plate and girder without the subfloor sandwiched in between. Once our sheathing is on we'll be running full sheets of rigid insulation past the sill plate to the base of the girders. We're also covering the underside with rigid insulation and taping all seams to prevent moisture in the crawlspace from infiltrating. That should provide a pretty solid drainage plane and keep all seams "high and dry". Thanks for watching!
@@lifeonthenorthriver🤡 Clownada