Paddy said:
N80,
You are getting way too excited here.
I think you'd be surprised at how un-excited I am. And please, call me George.
I have a degree in engineering and have been involved in the building industry for 25 years.
That makes your misconceptions and unsupportable arguments all the more surprising.
In this day and age ther are better materials for the exteror coverings and designs that better maximize energy consumption. If you can't see that, I give up, you win. Logs are the best thing ever created....
Ah, if you can't support your opinions, just change the argument. At no time did I suggest or argue that logs were the best thing ever created OR that modern materials were inferior. That is totally you. Not me. And it has absolutely
nothing to do with the arguments you made against log homes.
If you are a highly trained engineer, support your arguments and don't try to change the nature of the argument or my position.
When I stated log home are for charm, nothing wrong with that. No different than gold for rings, looks nice but a bit soft.
That's were you are dead wrong and that's not what you said. You said log homes were for the charm ONLY. You come into a thread about people living in and building log homes and make a totally unsupportable statement like that and then accuse someone else of being insulting. Now
that is irony for ya.
So I sumize the advantage of a log home is that it is sturdy.
The log walls of my cabin are 8 inched thick and are more sturdy than brick, hardi-plank, vinyl, cinder block and wood siding. My daughter can put a hole in any of those with a claw hammer. I can kick through some of them.
How is your roof attached? SIPs, ICFs and stagered studs have huge advantage both structurally and energy efficiency.
Once again, you are distorting the argument and my position. This is where you need to pay attention:
You stated that the only asset of a log home is its charm. I contended that this is an untrue statement. It is incumbent on you to prove your statement, which I have amply disproved. I in no way have to prove that log construction is superior to everything else in order to disprove your original, and incorrect statement.
Log walls leak air more than any other type of modern construction.
This is an unsupportable generalization. My log walls are stacked in tongue-and groove fashion. The tops of the logs have two parallel 'tongues' that fit into parallel grooves on the bottom of the log on top of it. In each of these grooves is closed cell foam tape. Then the logs are screwed down tight with 18" lag screws about every foot. Between the abutting ends of adjacent logs a 1" hole is drilled and a dowel is
driven into that hole which extends into the log below. Abraham Lincoln's logs may have leaked air between logs, but mine do not. I've explained this twice now.
Funny how you state logs hold tight but then you finish that air tight is not good for you!
Its more funny that you claim to be an engineer but forget that even a log cabin has windows and doors. Mine are not, nor were they intended to be energy efficient or tightly sealed. But just because my doors and windows might be leaky doesn't mean the logs are. See?
ICFs are built air tight, poured walls will do that with out debate. We use heat exchangers that control fresh air but extract the heat first.
I don't know what ICFs are and don't have any idea what you are talking about but I'm pretty sure is does nothing to support your statement that log homes are only for charm.
You mention this additional insulation on your log walls, where do yo have it?
You really don't seem to be paying attention. I have a log cabin for weekend use. I never said I had additional insulation. I don't have any insulation. I simply said that many people have standard sheetrock or wood paneling in the interior of the log walls. The space created there can be insulated if needed.
And if you cover your logs with insulation, what's the point of logs again.
Well that's just it. But you can't understand it because you think the only function of the logs is charm! The look of the logs is NOT the
only thing that drives people to build log homes.
Read the Oak Ridge National Labs reports on insulation.
No need. I don't think anywhere in this long thread did I make any claims about the insulating quality of the logs. It is not much of an issue here down south.
Did not jump the thread on shrinkage.
Don't need to. Didn't you read the part about where I've had ZERO problems with shrinkage? What more need I know or need I say.
if you don't belive me throw a 2x6 out on your porch and let her set a bit, take a pare of digital calipers an measure it. Is it exactly 5.500"?
So what. Wood changes. Probably 99% of the homes in this country are stick built of wood. My residence changes all the time. Doors constantly change fit. Windows too. But not the cabin. The logs have reached a steady state. If kiln drying has no impact on that, again, so what. They are steady and there is no perceptible change day to day, year to year, season to season. Can't beat that in my book regardless of what an engineering text book might say.
The point I made about roof "splash".......
The east and west walls of my south facing cabin gets soaked every time it rains. I mentioned this a good many posts up above. The water beads and runs off. The stain is thick and oily and after five years without maintenance it is still working well. About time for a new coat, but the logs still look fantastic.
I say again, I loved the charm of my log home. I was proud to live in the woods. I've moved on....
Patrick T
That's great Patrick. I'm sure you'll be happy in whatever you decide to build. But you moving on is irrelevant to the gist of this thread unless you have facts to support that the sole value of the log homes that the rest of us are quite happy with is 'charm.' And so far you have presented some good arguments for superior materials, but you've done nothing to support your original statement. No one in this thread ever claimed that logs home were the best and only. Maybe you misunderstood that.
I may have time to check back on this thread tomorrow morning....but after that I'll be down enjoying the charm of my LOG CABIN where TV and internet are not welcome.