I want to thank the carpenters of Australia for chopping through electrical cables with no worries and keeping me in work for so many years. Service work is awesome
I'd like to not thank the electricians and plumbers of BC Canada for drilling holes in joists and studs where they should damn well know they're not allowed to - fixing those kinds of f*ck ups is no fun at all even if it pays..
@@adammacer first thing I was taught was learning to be conscious of what I was drilling. Over here we do have some specific rules and the last thing we wanted was for the other trades to hare us more than they already do lol
I remember coming across your channel as it was starting, thinking how refreshing it was to watch quality content without the annoying loud music and over the top presentation of other channels. Amazing to see how far you guys have come and your progress as a youtubers. Thank you for sharing you amazing content with the rest of the world and keep up the great work!
I always worry about laundries in middle of house, lived in too many that just don't get enough ventilation and end up with wet walls and eventually flaking paint. If i ever do renovation or move into new place that's one of the first things i look at whether shower has window that can be used as ventilation
Hi Scott, I remember doing some framing in my first house in NZ, also with Rimu framing and trying to hand hammer 100mm nails in to the Rimu. The nails literally bounced off the Rimu or bent immediately. Took me a while to work out what the issue was. I ended up pilot drilling all the holes in the Rimu in the roof space. I guess years of high heat in the roof space and the Rimu being bone dry now had made it super hard! Really enjoying the series I'm sure you and Jess are going to end up with a super nice house once it's all done. Oh and hope the toe heals soon, I broke a toe as a kid and remember how painful it was for such a small bone. Cheers Pete..
Rimu of any age is harder than a coffin nail, when I was doing some repair work to a 90 year old house in Kaitaia here, even my Milwaukee framing nailer was only JUST sinking 90mm bright nails flush with the depth stop all the way down, and the recoil was intense too.
Interesting points you made about Rimu, it's classed as a medium density softwood with a Janka score of 5.6 kN, whereas some of the eucalyptus species are even harder with scores between 9 and 11 kN. I often work with Jarrah (Euc. Marginata) with a Janka score of 8.5kN...
@@james-jq8sk I've worked with both those timbers. Jarrah is like concrete but it finishes up so nice. The neighbour bowled this old gum tree the other week, got it all bucked up into rounds and set it all up to dry. His enthusiastic little young fella grabbed the wood splitter and took one big swing and it went BOOOOOOOONNNNG and he went rattling back off inside. So at some stage I'll grab that splitter and put a grind on it so its a bit nicer to use, and let those rounds dry out a bit
Having complete some work on our 100 year old home I had no nail gun and drill a pilot hole in the timber to get nails in. Thanks Scotty and Jess have a great weekend
I really enjoy using LVL and glulam beams, I used to work at McIntosh Timber Laminates (now Timberlab which was recently sold to Red Stag Timber) and made glulam beams and also worked with LVL for seismic resistant framework. The LVL was extremely hard on the planing knives and required a fresh dress up every job. But LVL is so nice to work with, its a hell of a lot straighter and more dimensionally accurate than compared to working with dirty, knotty wobbly old SG8 Radiata Pine. Also I run Milwaukee so I don't have issues with sinking 90s like a Paslode does, but repairing some framing on a 90 year old house in Kaitaia was pushing the Milwaukee to the limit trying to shoot LVL into Rimu slightly skew, the Rimu was like concrete and the recoil was insane
That was actually a great little comparo of the nail guns at the end. Those Milwaukees really look the goods. Nice to see the experts have the same problem with renos we mugs have! Great channel, thanks! PP
Haha Scott you were right about the sparky comments part. As a sparky the only thing I would have suggested is to not rely off of a pen tester like that as they can be misleading. Good for indication but you should always verify using a volt meter or electrical tester as it would be very sad to not get any more Scott brown videos with the cheeky kiwi personality.
I am fully impressed! It's just a complete ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxGqOCINHE0Z0E5gxzSdNi9NWGugRY5Hm2 plan with the best resources and step by step instructions . These shed plans are so satisfying as if the sheds build themselves on their own. Worthy work Ryan!
I first found your channel because I needed to take my cylinder out and wanted to reframe it myself and here we are watching this exact thing, just 20 months later! Chur bro!
sometimes those little volt sticks can give you a false positive reading, if you stick your finger on the end of it when ur testing something it can reduce the likelyhood of a false read. Its only ever happened to me a couple times but if you ever get confused thats why!
I’ve been following your great Chanel for 3 years now, great content, filming and format. Did you ever consider franchising in Auckland? You have a quality name, your friends work to a great standard, seems like an opportunity for the customers and you could be missed ??? All the best 👍
Once upon a time, there was an old man in China who had one horse and one son. One day, the horse wandered away and was lost. Upon learning this, the neighbors went to the old man and told him they were sorry to hear about his bad luck. “How do you know it is bad luck?” he asked. Soon thereafter, the horse returned, and brought back with him many wild horses. Upon learning this, the neighbors again went to the old man, this time congratulating him on his good luck. “How do you know it is good luck?” he asked. Having so many horses, the son took to riding, and it so happened that he was thrown from a horse and broke his leg. Once again, the neighbors went to the old man, this time expressing sorrow at his bad luck. “How do you know it is bad luck?” he asked. Soon thereafter, a war broke out and the old man’s son, because of the injury, did not have to go to war.
So, break your toe and have a quirky angle for your UA-cam videos? Are you saying it might be a positive thing if next time he breaks his back? His neck?
Your difficulties with the laminated timber - I used that when building a shed a number of years ago. Yes. It is more resistant to nailing, but on the other hand tends to be more accurate as to size and maintaining its straightness.
Missed opportunity to put in a Heat Pump Hot Water system Scott! Much more efficient and no gas which is better for the environment. A little more pricey up front but if you’re going to add solar then it’s free hot water!
I've fractured 2 toes, one was just a simple stubbing on a coffee table, the other I was playing soccer with kids at work, I went to kick the ball and instead kicked one of the kids in the ankle. Broke my big toe he was fine. Walking is a pain but having a hard sole on your shoes makes things super easy.
As a sparky I was thinking. So close but so far. Under 52v is extra low voltage and 52v-240v is low voltage. High voltage is anything over 240v. Also the hot water pilots and relays used to turn your cylinder off in high peak power usage times like when everyone is cooking and heating their homes. They no longer operate like this as NZ power decided it wasn't worth while. Thats why we dont run HW pilot wires anymore. I also take the HWC off the pilot and put it on with the standard mains in renovations as the pilot and old control relays tend to create problems.
hey scott. that chipboard was used as structural framing in some parts of nz. can still get it under name metro panel. i'm not a fan of it so fair call to get rid of it. chur from kaikoura
Those were the standard in NZ before everyone started to upgrade to battery. No more fumes or having to get your nailer serviced every year, oh and they are mega loud in inclosed spaces.
Hi Scott - Just having a closer look at your plan and here are some things I would consider doing. 1. Keep the kitchen in the original place but redesign and you could have a very nice large modern kitchen in that area ( with a decent pantry 800mm- 900mm- drawers down bottom of pantry are good) other drawers minimum width 600mm - Benchtops stone/kymira or granite well worth the spend . Keeping the kitchen in this area allows you to maximise the use of the lounge dining area and also allows more seating for lounge. (i.e I would go with two three seaters and one armchair , armchair placed on the wall by the snug room . This gives seating for seven and dining room table of eight for seating. I would also highly recommend to open the flow with french doors or preferably double stacker sliders on wall where new kitchen is this would be great for indoor outdoor flowing out possibly to a new decking area all would add more light into the whole lounge area. Minimum 3.6m space for doors . The sacrifice is of course the bedroom but you could make the snug the third bedroom. As a snug in this size house is a bit of a luxury and should n't come at the sacrifice of lounge/kitchen . 2. The area where the fire place was would be an ideal place to put a TV console/ music station etc and large TV. ( especially if snug is now the bedroom/office) 3. I would place a door on the snug and and this then could be used for - office /snug/bedroom or multi purpose room. 4. The remaining bedrooms place wardrobes where recess allows. That's about it ... the rest of the plan I think works okay. Just my 10 cents worth I/m sure you wil do what fits best for you. I would recommend to do virtual walkthrough/perspective with all furniture placed including flooring - as in where would the flooring for the kitchen in the present plan go and the carpet and also see a kitchen designer - Kitchen are one of the most important rooms to get right and this design with dining room beside and L shape does not work ( personal opinion) . Things which might not become obvious until you are living in it talking from experience and then expensive to alter later. Cheers
Out of interest as a home DIYer when I've been doing non load bearing walls on my home I've been using steel frame lately. always available and very easy to use. Do you ever use the stuff?
That ebike is hilarious, but also terrible. If Mitre 10 sold those, they'd be branded Number 8... Looks like you're still able to have fun on it though, so that's a bonus.
When I was 7 I stubbed my big running up some concrete steps. Busted it good. Hurt and bled like the dickens. My mom said it would be just fine. 5 yrs later I had to have surgery to fix my shattered big toe that had become fused and wouldn’t bend any more. Lol it’s fine walk it off she said…
One last thing I forgot to mention in the existing kitchen you would just need to close of the door/entry point on the side wall this would then allow you to have a U kitchen i.e cabinets on both sides.
Standard delays mate. I had 5 weeks to get work done on my rental around Christmas time. Injured my back and there went 5 weeks of productive work. Now I’m too busy with paying clients work to get back and get the work completed. Bugger
Hi folks, got a quick question. I remember Scott getting a millimeter only measuring tape a while back, could be a couple of years by now. Does anyone know which video that was? Or even better, do any of you know which brands make a millimeter only measuring tape? I've been looking all over, but it seems impossible to find.
Is a powder room and a full bath a common thing in medium sized New Zealand homes or just nice to not have daytime guests in your bathroom and you had the room?
Pinky toe is a pain. Broken mine in college playing ultimate frisbee. I didn’t realize it was broken until next morning when my foot was purple half way up ankle and swollen to point I couldn’t put on shoes.
Been watchin your Upgrade. Going by what you've found so far al betcha at least one of those walls you are gonna take down was built from matchsticks. Jess is taking the positive spin rather well just waiting for the steam to come out of her ears.🤣
G,day Scott Brown Carpentry from Sydney Australia. Sorry to hear about your toe. Yes splinting will increase healing. LVL 100x50 Is that tested and marked with NZ standard specification. The plans look very professional and the red is new work? 🌏🇦🇺
I want to thank the carpenters of Australia for chopping through electrical cables with no worries and keeping me in work for so many years. Service work is awesome
I'd like to not thank the electricians and plumbers of BC Canada for drilling holes in joists and studs where they should damn well know they're not allowed to - fixing those kinds of f*ck ups is no fun at all even if it pays..
@@adammacer first thing I was taught was learning to be conscious of what I was drilling. Over here we do have some specific rules and the last thing we wanted was for the other trades to hare us more than they already do lol
I remember coming across your channel as it was starting, thinking how refreshing it was to watch quality content without the annoying loud music and over the top presentation of other channels. Amazing to see how far you guys have come and your progress as a youtubers. Thank you for sharing you amazing content with the rest of the world and keep up the great work!
I always worry about laundries in middle of house, lived in too many that just don't get enough ventilation and end up with wet walls and eventually flaking paint. If i ever do renovation or move into new place that's one of the first things i look at whether shower has window that can be used as ventilation
Timing worked out well with not being able to get back to sleep at 4am, I have been really finding the house renovation videos super interesting.
Hi Scott,
I remember doing some framing in my first house in NZ, also with Rimu framing and trying to hand hammer 100mm nails in to the Rimu. The nails literally bounced off the Rimu or bent immediately. Took me a while to work out what the issue was. I ended up pilot drilling all the holes in the Rimu in the roof space. I guess years of high heat in the roof space and the Rimu being bone dry now had made it super hard!
Really enjoying the series I'm sure you and Jess are going to end up with a super nice house once it's all done.
Oh and hope the toe heals soon, I broke a toe as a kid and remember how painful it was for such a small bone.
Cheers Pete..
Rimu of any age is harder than a coffin nail, when I was doing some repair work to a 90 year old house in Kaitaia here, even my Milwaukee framing nailer was only JUST sinking 90mm bright nails flush with the depth stop all the way down, and the recoil was intense too.
Interesting points you made about Rimu, it's classed as a medium density softwood with a Janka score of 5.6 kN, whereas some of the eucalyptus species are even harder with scores between 9 and 11 kN. I often work with Jarrah (Euc. Marginata) with a Janka score of 8.5kN...
@@james-jq8sk I've worked with both those timbers. Jarrah is like concrete but it finishes up so nice. The neighbour bowled this old gum tree the other week, got it all bucked up into rounds and set it all up to dry. His enthusiastic little young fella grabbed the wood splitter and took one big swing and it went BOOOOOOOONNNNG and he went rattling back off inside. So at some stage I'll grab that splitter and put a grind on it so its a bit nicer to use, and let those rounds dry out a bit
Sparky here you did the right thing flicking the main switch then just put a connector each core of the cable till the sparky can do his bit 👍🏻
When you showed the mirror I expected to see myself. How weird is that haha
Ray reminds me of that villain from Home Alone.. Marv... had a bit of a chuckle about that. Great video as always Scott.
Having complete some work on our 100 year old home I had no nail gun and drill a pilot hole in the timber to get nails in. Thanks Scotty and Jess have a great weekend
Clearly you needed "MORE POWER" "Manly Grunts"
I really enjoy using LVL and glulam beams, I used to work at McIntosh Timber Laminates (now Timberlab which was recently sold to Red Stag Timber) and made glulam beams and also worked with LVL for seismic resistant framework. The LVL was extremely hard on the planing knives and required a fresh dress up every job. But LVL is so nice to work with, its a hell of a lot straighter and more dimensionally accurate than compared to working with dirty, knotty wobbly old SG8 Radiata Pine. Also I run Milwaukee so I don't have issues with sinking 90s like a Paslode does, but repairing some framing on a 90 year old house in Kaitaia was pushing the Milwaukee to the limit trying to shoot LVL into Rimu slightly skew, the Rimu was like concrete and the recoil was insane
Never thought I'd hear some of PREP's music during a Scott Brown video. What a glorious day this is!
That was actually a great little comparo of the nail guns at the end. Those Milwaukees really look the goods. Nice to see the experts have the same problem with renos we mugs have! Great channel, thanks! PP
Haha Scott you were right about the sparky comments part. As a sparky the only thing I would have suggested is to not rely off of a pen tester like that as they can be misleading. Good for indication but you should always verify using a volt meter or electrical tester as it would be very sad to not get any more Scott brown videos with the cheeky kiwi personality.
Duspoles are great for not picking up inductive voltage, like those pens.
Austin Powers reference was the best. 😅 Greetings from Slovakia and best of luck with the renovation.
A good video SBC .. quite technical . take it easy with your broken toe!
Love your e-bike.😮😊
I love that you've literally called it 'problem room' on your consented plans 😂
I am fully impressed! It's just a complete ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxGqOCINHE0Z0E5gxzSdNi9NWGugRY5Hm2 plan with the best resources and step by step instructions . These shed plans are so satisfying as if the sheds build themselves on their own. Worthy work Ryan!
(from my wife) Thanks Jess for explaining the change of plans in terms the rest of us can understand!
Episode 261?? did we go back in time? Nothing wrong with watching another 100 episodes again!
Came here to see if I was the only 1 who noticed ha
Safety glasses when using nailer Scott Brown!
I first found your channel because I needed to take my cylinder out and wanted to reframe it myself and here we are watching this exact thing, just 20 months later! Chur bro!
That water heater is a trip! Never seen one like that.
Yay some building work videos again 🎉 great to see works getting started
I saw on the plans .... a skylight above the entry-way! nice!!
Thanks Jess for explaining the change of plans🙃
sometimes those little volt sticks can give you a false positive reading, if you stick your finger on the end of it when ur testing something it can reduce the likelyhood of a false read. Its only ever happened to me a couple times but if you ever get confused thats why!
Sparky here, more concerned about the state of that fuseboard
Yes, no RCD protection and some of those circuit breakers look so old I bet it won't trip when needed!
I’ve been following your great Chanel for 3 years now, great content, filming and format. Did you ever consider franchising in Auckland? You have a quality name, your friends work to a great standard, seems like an opportunity for the customers and you could be missed ??? All the best 👍
Very enjoyable video as always... Keep em coming..!!
Will wear all the safety kit while building/renovating, rides bike without helmet.
I think that bugged me the most 😂😂
2.50, I was wondering what rayon board was, but then: “Good morning”.
The ebike cinematography was the best thing I’ve seen all year.
Have you thought about safety trainers or slippers Scott? Coming along nicely with the project. Thanks for the latest exciting episode Scott.👍👍
I swear by my safety sandals.
When your in a bad mode don't kick, punch or throw things you always come off worse
In NZ safety jandals. In Oz Japanese riding boots.
Hey Scott
I fractured my toe in nelson 22 years ago ,
dangerous place.
It's amazing that your pop-up tent didn't damage their car! Lucky!
Once upon a time, there was an old man in China who had one horse and one son. One day, the horse wandered away and was lost. Upon learning this, the neighbors went to the old man and told him they were sorry to hear about his bad luck.
“How do you know it is bad luck?” he asked.
Soon thereafter, the horse returned, and brought back with him many wild horses. Upon learning this, the neighbors again went to the old man, this time congratulating him on his good luck.
“How do you know it is good luck?” he asked.
Having so many horses, the son took to riding, and it so happened that he was thrown from a horse and broke his leg. Once again, the neighbors went to the old man, this time expressing sorrow at his bad luck.
“How do you know it is bad luck?” he asked.
Soon thereafter, a war broke out and the old man’s son, because of the injury, did not have to go to war.
So, break your toe and have a quirky angle for your UA-cam videos? Are you saying it might be a positive thing if next time he breaks his back? His neck?
Lmfao, that Surfshark ad was hilarious!
Your difficulties with the laminated timber - I used that when building a shed a number of years ago. Yes. It is more resistant to nailing, but on the other hand tends to be more accurate as to size and maintaining its straightness.
I love working with Glulam beams and LVL. Yeah its hard on blades and knives, but it beats dealing with knotty warped horrible old SG8 timber
That Austin Powers with the leak reference😂😂
Missed opportunity to put in a Heat Pump Hot Water system Scott! Much more efficient and no gas which is better for the environment. A little more pricey up front but if you’re going to add solar then it’s free hot water!
I’ve been using the Milwaukee framer for over 2 years and it’s awesome. I don’t notice the weight of it. It’s great with hard rimu & LVLs
5:38
“Look it hit your gutter”
“oh fuck” 😂
A few select cuts, a spot of welding, a good clean, and some black paint and that old water tank would make a great BBQ.
I got the hikoki gun off the back of watching you use it on the channel, & I’m a spark ⚡️
I have the Hitachi nailers here in the states. Was totally rooting team green here.
Great gags in this one Scotty! I larfed alot
I've fractured 2 toes, one was just a simple stubbing on a coffee table, the other I was playing soccer with kids at work, I went to kick the ball and instead kicked one of the kids in the ankle. Broke my big toe he was fine.
Walking is a pain but having a hard sole on your shoes makes things super easy.
Perfect timing
You really need to do every advertisement while riding an eBike while playing 70's sitcom music.
Never been this early before. what a treat.
As a sparky I was thinking. So close but so far. Under 52v is extra low voltage and 52v-240v is low voltage. High voltage is anything over 240v.
Also the hot water pilots and relays used to turn your cylinder off in high peak power usage times like when everyone is cooking and heating their homes.
They no longer operate like this as NZ power decided it wasn't worth while.
Thats why we dont run HW pilot wires anymore. I also take the HWC off the pilot and put it on with the standard mains in renovations as the pilot and old control relays tend to create problems.
Greater than 1000V is HV.
415V is still LV
@@honeheke1128 chur my bro
hey scott. that chipboard was used as structural framing in some parts of nz. can still get it under name metro panel. i'm not a fan of it so fair call to get rid of it. chur from kaikoura
So no pink pressure treating for the new framing wood/plywood ?
You gotta use the paslode cordless framing nailers. Soooo smooth and light as a feather!
Those were the standard in NZ before everyone started to upgrade to battery. No more fumes or having to get your nailer serviced every year, oh and they are mega loud in inclosed spaces.
Hi Scott - Just having a closer look at your plan and here are some things I would consider doing.
1. Keep the kitchen in the original place but redesign and you could have a very nice large modern kitchen in that area ( with a decent pantry 800mm- 900mm- drawers down bottom of pantry are good) other drawers minimum width 600mm - Benchtops stone/kymira or granite well worth the spend . Keeping the kitchen in this area allows you to maximise the use of the lounge dining area and also allows more seating for lounge. (i.e I would go with two three seaters and one armchair , armchair placed on the wall by the snug room . This gives seating for seven and dining room table of eight for seating. I would also highly recommend to open the flow with french doors or preferably double stacker sliders on wall where new kitchen is this would be great for indoor outdoor flowing out possibly to a new decking area all would add more light into the whole lounge area. Minimum 3.6m space for doors . The sacrifice is of course the bedroom but you could make the snug the third bedroom. As a snug in this size house is a bit of a luxury and should n't come at the sacrifice of lounge/kitchen .
2. The area where the fire place was would be an ideal place to put a TV console/ music station etc and large TV. ( especially if snug is now the bedroom/office)
3. I would place a door on the snug and and this then could be used for - office /snug/bedroom or multi purpose room.
4. The remaining bedrooms place wardrobes where recess allows.
That's about it ... the rest of the plan I think works okay. Just my 10 cents worth I/m sure you wil do what fits best for you. I would recommend to do virtual walkthrough/perspective with all furniture placed including flooring - as in where would the flooring for the kitchen in the present plan go and the carpet and also see a kitchen designer - Kitchen are one of the most important rooms to get right and this design with dining room beside and L shape does not work ( personal opinion) . Things which might not become obvious until you are living in it talking from experience and then expensive to alter later.
Cheers
Is any load bearing walls has been removed?
Out of interest as a home DIYer when I've been doing non load bearing walls on my home I've been using steel frame lately. always available and very easy to use. Do you ever use the stuff?
When you were talking to the architect, when was the other guy holding the phone for you 😂😂😂
OMG! That "fuseboard" is insane! I would be happy to replace that for you. I'm based in Auckland though
That ebike is hilarious, but also terrible. If Mitre 10 sold those, they'd be branded Number 8... Looks like you're still able to have fun on it though, so that's a bonus.
When I was 7 I stubbed my big running up some concrete steps. Busted it good. Hurt and bled like the dickens. My mom said it would be just fine. 5 yrs later I had to have surgery to fix my shattered big toe that had become fused and wouldn’t bend any more. Lol it’s fine walk it off she said…
Is that an oscillating tool with dust control?
Dude, tape the little toe to the next toe!!. It will help you heal (6 weeks!) but it won’t hurt so much when you walk. It’s a real life problem!!!
One last thing I forgot to mention in the existing kitchen you would just need to close of the door/entry point on the side wall this would then allow you to have a U kitchen i.e cabinets on both sides.
What’s the issue with the problem room?
Trust me, even sparkies are often astonished by the originality of wiring in old houses.
Scott, what brand boots are those? They look top notch
Standard delays mate. I had 5 weeks to get work done on my rental around Christmas time. Injured my back and there went 5 weeks of productive work. Now I’m too busy with paying clients work to get back and get the work completed. Bugger
We need to hear more about this “Silent Disco” 😂
Yewwwww love to see it!
Hi folks, got a quick question. I remember Scott getting a millimeter only measuring tape a while back, could be a couple of years by now. Does anyone know which video that was? Or even better, do any of you know which brands make a millimeter only measuring tape? I've been looking all over, but it seems impossible to find.
Long time no see on the airbow. Martinez hammer is getting plenty of use these days?
Enjoyed .. as always ... Scott where does Ray originate from .. I detect an accent ? :)
What was the tool he used to cut gib
Hi Scotteeee
Make sure to upgrade your switchboard 😁
13:22 Boys 'n their toys 🤣
So your architects missed that on their measure-up?
Prolam out near Motueka is also an option for LVL.
THAT BREAKER PANNEL. looks like a ransom note to a sparky...
Aw bro, I'm a sparky in nz and most old houses' switchboards in this country still look like that
Is a powder room and a full bath a common thing in medium sized New Zealand homes or just nice to not have daytime guests in your bathroom and you had the room?
Hows the car, looks like it took a hit from the gazebo too?
Saw all the red on the plans and I was like "whoa, that's a lot of take downs" but I suppose in a timber house it's not so arduous.
😢 I’m so sad your intro is no longer “Scott brown here” that was my favourite
Love your vids, wear a helmet when you ride
Kicked a safety boot, brilliant 😂
TOE-tally good episode.
what work boots you wearing?
All adverts ???
Wow, they had cowboys taking shortcuts back when that house was built too.
Pinky toe is a pain. Broken mine in college playing ultimate frisbee. I didn’t realize it was broken until next morning when my foot was purple half way up ankle and swollen to point I couldn’t put on shoes.
Been watchin your Upgrade. Going by what you've found so far al betcha at least one of those walls you are gonna take down was built from matchsticks. Jess is taking the positive spin rather well just waiting for the steam to come out of her ears.🤣
G,day Scott Brown Carpentry from Sydney Australia.
Sorry to hear about your toe. Yes splinting will increase healing.
LVL 100x50
Is that tested and marked with NZ standard specification. The plans look very professional and the red is new work?
🌏🇦🇺
Creative input jess is the client, for the invoices we are the client. Work this out early for a happy marriage.
20 inch folder is cool
Did scott take a year off from contracting to focus on his own nest? or is there another reason?
Lvl is great, engineered timber is much more stable.
JK! Hope you heal up quickly!
Grrr, baby. Very grrr. Yeah!
Quick shoot out at the end 😂
Hey Scott... Don't ever rely on those volt sticks... We call them death sticks for a reason.
Sparkie btw (;
What cordless framing gun were you using at the end of the video?
hikoki