Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully

   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully
  • Thread Starter
#41  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

From the left front.
 

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   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully
  • Thread Starter
#42  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

From the left side.
 

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   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #43  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

Jim, I would leave any bracing that you can. Unless it is in the way of putting up your horizontal boards I would leave it.

Spence
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #44  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

I've seen that contractors don't put the cement in the pole holes until they have a good part of the frame built. They just leave the bracing up. I guess this gives them a little nudges if the poles are a little off.

What do you all think about that? Most telephone poles aren't perfectly straight and it might be a good thing to have them a little loose to square them up?

gary
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #45  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

Jim ,
Leave the bracing on until you've got the trusses and decking in place . In fact , if you can add longer braces to the poles . You'll be adding girts and headers to those poles and it tends to move them A LOT ! After you get your girts and headers on , run a string along the header at 1-1 1/2 " . reset the poles as required . then install the trusses . After the trusses are set , recheck the line .( putting braces from the bootom chord of the truss to the base of each pole also helps lock things together ) Also, before you deck it pull a diagonal measurement from peak to gable end (truss tails )
both ways . I know it sounds overly complicated . But you get a square and plumb building . Also check the corner poles for plumb,and brace them diagonally after the girts and heaqders are in place . All the best , John
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #46  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

If you want to increase the life of your poles, don't use concrete at all. Put a foot on the bottom of your pole to keep the wind from pulling it out, and just tamper in soil, or rock and soil.
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #47  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

Jim , not many folks concrete their poles in . One reason is as you mentioned ... you may need to true the poles . The other is that if you pour a concrete slab it'll lock the poles together as if you'd poured the holes . As was mentioned before ... nailing anti lift blocks on the poles would be nice . But, as you've set your poles ..... a bit of rebar drilled into the poles below finish level in the concrete will work fine . John
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #48  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

Jim,
Looks like you're making great progress

Jerry
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully #49  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

Things must be a little more relaxed there as far as the permit process. Where I live, the building would not get through the engineering review stage if the poles were not cemented. The cement not only prevents the building from being lifted - it also provides shear strength.
 
   / Jim's Pole Barn Project - hopefully
  • Thread Starter
#50  
Re: Jim\'s Pole Barn Project - hopefully

Not much progress, but I have gotten the rest of the poles up on the "left" side.
 

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