FredWalter
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2008
- Messages
- 95
- Location
- Southwestern Ontario, Canada
- Tractor
- John Deere 5300, Gravely 8163G, BCS735, etc
Last week I had the south side of my bank barn resided.
Originally I was just going to get the missing boards replaced, but then I decided to replace them all, so I wouldn't have to deal with blown off boards from that side for a while. I should have stuck with my original plan - then the old boards would have been there, as a guide for how much below the sill/plate beam the barn boards should hang...
I work far enough away from home that I'm not there during the week.
The carpenter that I hired, said he has worked on barns before. Mainly he frames houses.
He put on the bottom row of barn boards so that they didn't overhang the sill plate/beam. In some spots, as much as 1 1/2" of sill plate/beam are now exposed. He and his helper didn't bother looking at the other sides of the barn, to notice that the barn boards were at least 1"-2" lower than the sill plate/beam.
I paid him time+material, so saying 'redo it' to him would just means my paying him a bunch more money.
What's the cheapest/easiest fix for this, so the sill plate/beam is best protected from rain/etc?
My cousin suggested getting galvanized drip edge, and sliding it under the bottom row of boards, so that it hangs at least 1" below the bottom of the sill plate/beam, and there is at least 1" under the barn boards. But I'm wondering, since the walls aren't watertight, and some water will still get onto the sill plate, if having metal there will slow down it drying out enough that it will start rotting. Has anyone done this?
The carpenter suggested wedging the bottom of the barn boards up enough so the nails can be cut, and then putting a barn board under them, so that it hangs lower than the sill plate, and the barn boards are then nailed through it to the sill plate.
I'm wondering, if having a horizontal board there, instead of vertical boards with gaps in between them, will slow down the sill plate/beam from drying out after it gets wet, so that it starts rotting? Has anyone done this?
Am I worrying over nothing, since sill plates/beams get wet somewhat when it rains because of the gaps between the boards? (It seems obvious to me that you want the barn boards to overhang the sill plate/beam to keep most of the water off of it, but it wasn't obvious to the carpenter.)
Any suggestions/comments from someone that has experience fixing barns?
Originally I was just going to get the missing boards replaced, but then I decided to replace them all, so I wouldn't have to deal with blown off boards from that side for a while. I should have stuck with my original plan - then the old boards would have been there, as a guide for how much below the sill/plate beam the barn boards should hang...
I work far enough away from home that I'm not there during the week.
The carpenter that I hired, said he has worked on barns before. Mainly he frames houses.
He put on the bottom row of barn boards so that they didn't overhang the sill plate/beam. In some spots, as much as 1 1/2" of sill plate/beam are now exposed. He and his helper didn't bother looking at the other sides of the barn, to notice that the barn boards were at least 1"-2" lower than the sill plate/beam.
I paid him time+material, so saying 'redo it' to him would just means my paying him a bunch more money.
What's the cheapest/easiest fix for this, so the sill plate/beam is best protected from rain/etc?
My cousin suggested getting galvanized drip edge, and sliding it under the bottom row of boards, so that it hangs at least 1" below the bottom of the sill plate/beam, and there is at least 1" under the barn boards. But I'm wondering, since the walls aren't watertight, and some water will still get onto the sill plate, if having metal there will slow down it drying out enough that it will start rotting. Has anyone done this?
The carpenter suggested wedging the bottom of the barn boards up enough so the nails can be cut, and then putting a barn board under them, so that it hangs lower than the sill plate, and the barn boards are then nailed through it to the sill plate.
I'm wondering, if having a horizontal board there, instead of vertical boards with gaps in between them, will slow down the sill plate/beam from drying out after it gets wet, so that it starts rotting? Has anyone done this?
Am I worrying over nothing, since sill plates/beams get wet somewhat when it rains because of the gaps between the boards? (It seems obvious to me that you want the barn boards to overhang the sill plate/beam to keep most of the water off of it, but it wasn't obvious to the carpenter.)
Any suggestions/comments from someone that has experience fixing barns?