New House Build in WV

   / New House Build in WV #191  
I worked for a jail manufacturer wifes father retired from APCO
 
   / New House Build in WV #192  
I had friends in hurricane, but they no longer there.
 
   / New House Build in WV #193  
Hope the snow has not set you back too far
 
   / New House Build in WV
  • Thread Starter
#194  
Hope the snow has not set you back too far

We got 2” or so. Plenty to do on the inside, so shouldn’t halt progress. The cold will be worse than the snow. I guess I’ll have to cover the window openings in plastic until the windows get here, so I can keep the wind out. Going to order a natural gas torpedo heater today.
 
   / New House Build in WV
  • Thread Starter
#195  
Good news today, windows will be delivered tomorrow!
 
   / New House Build in WV #196  
Good news today, windows will be delivered tomorrow!

Should help with keeping out the cold snaps.

My hat is off to you folks who work so many long nights and weekends for your dream homes. Wish I'd had the money 30 years ago to do it.
 
   / New House Build in WV
  • Thread Starter
#197  
Should help with keeping out the cold snaps.

My hat is off to you folks who work so many long nights and weekends for your dream homes. Wish I'd had the money 30 years ago to do it.

Yeah, windows will allow a torpedo heater to make it manageable to work through the winter, I hope.

We have been planning and preparing for this for years, we came close to doing it several times, but life kept coming up with ways to get in the way of it. This is the last house I’ll ever build, no doubt about that. It is taking a huge physical and mental toll on us, but in the end, it will be worth it, and we will be proud of it. If I had done it 10 years ago, I’d be a lot further along, but slowly we will get there.

Camper never moved this year, but we plan to make up for that next year.
 
   / New House Build in WV #198  
We have been planning and preparing for this for years, we came close to doing it several times, but life kept coming up with ways to get in the way of it. This is the last house I値l ever build, no doubt about that. It is taking a huge physical and mental toll on us, but in the end, it will be worth it, and we will be proud of it. If I had done it 10 years ago, I壇 be a lot further along, but slowly we will get there.


I understand that feeling -- when we built our house in 2012-2013, I started thinking to myself that I plan to die here, whether by old age or because all the work killed me!
 
   / New House Build in WV
  • Thread Starter
#199  
I understand that feeling -- when we built our house in 2012-2013, I started thinking to myself that I plan to die here, whether by old age or because all the work killed me!

Exactly and some days you really question which one it will be!
 
   / New House Build in WV #200  
Not sure if I mentioned yet or not, but I purchased a set of forks for my tractor just before starting the build. One of the best purchases I致e made and I知 not sure how I would have done most of this without them. Here痴 a shot of the tractor helping lift the 16 garage door header in place.

View attachment 677574

How do you like the Zetor? Some would say it's an odd choice, but I came close to buying a Zetor myself about 20 years ago.

Your house looks well planned out. Simple and strong with lots of room is a good way to design for the build-it-yourselfer. Chosing to build very traditionally with a concrete basement with framing and sheathing on top makes sense for a homebuilder too. We built ours that way about 15 years ago and like you we had the fun of designing our own house from sketches... and then building it ourselves with subcontractors hired as needed. Anyone can build a simple frame house, and end up with their very own custom home. And then sit our on the porch, grow older, and be able to say, "Yep, we built it ourselves....mostly in the evenings after work. It was actually a lot of fun."

The fun part comes with making the right initial decisions on design, and that involves some luck for us amateurs. But I think you did a lot of things right. You just cannot have too much insulation, drainage, sturdy fastenings, waterproofing, or venting. All of which seem done right on yours. Hydronics too.

At your stage in our construction - before the insulation and drywall go up - my wife walked around inside with a video camera and made a complete video record of each framed room and wall in the house. About a dozen videos in all and labeled room by room. That gave us a permanent record of where all the electrical and plumbing was located in the walls, which has been a real handy thing to have through the years.

Now when I go to hang a picture, or put up shelving, or cut into a wall for anything I can first open the computer and look at the video to see what's inside the wall. Nice.

I wish I had done the same thing for all the utilities outside under the lawn.....some I did, but some I didn't even photograph.

Another thing we did right was to leave a lot of exposed knotty pine and hardwood trim inside which we varnished instead of painting. The contrast between off-white eggshell drywall and varnished wood came out right for us... although not everyone's preference I'm sure.

But varnishing the wood is an example of a small thing but important and hard to foresee. Selecting a varnish itself turned out to be a pain. My wife and I knew wooden sailboats, so we knew what we wanted was a traditional varnish that would last a long time, wear well, stand up to the sun without cracking, and be able to be recoated without having to remove the old varnish. Those are normal qualities in traditional natural varnishes, but those natural varnishes are getting hard to find and when we did find a good one they tended to be expensive. Le Tonkinois is a good example of an excellent natural varnish. Top notch product...but expensive.
I think that part of the problem with the expense of old style natural varnish is that the modern pseudo-varnishes like varathanes and urathanes have taken over the market in spite of their downsides. These synthetic varnishes eventually crack, discolor, and can't be easily re-coated without removing the old varnish. Smell weird, too. And they are expensive as well - although since they are a petroleum product that is probably because of profit more than raw materials.

The best cost solution for us was to step back and figure out how to mix our own varnish using a traditional formula. It took some experimenting, but it worked OK from the first and now we can say it has stood up for 15 years now. In places like exterior doors where our homemade varnish has weathered on the exterior, recoating it has been easy - just wash it, lightly sand (or more likely not even bother), and apply the new coat. It sticks and builds a deep lusterous coat. Just like a varnish should.

There's a lot of hints and kinks to home owners building their own place that we could probably write a book on the subject. Maybe someone should.

Anyway, I'll let you get back to work, and with our "Thank You" for allowing us to follow along with your build.

And please tell us a bit about how it is to have not one, but two unusual & older tractors? Has their age been a problem? Or is it an advantage?

rScotty
 

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