javatom

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Posts posted by javatom

  1. I would lose the garage idea.  It is pushing the structure to far down the hill.  If someone has the budget for it, I sometimes place the garage on the upper floor with the living space under it.  The power lines along HWY 97 will make it tough to use a crane for anything.  The uphill retaining wall will be a feat of engineering, It is supporting a highway.  Most of the builders will not want a job that far around the lake.  A very small cabin sizes structure with no garage may come in at 1 to 1.3 million.  Your first draft would be somewhere in the 2 to 3 million range.  I liked the trailer house idea though.  It is instant and does not need the same setbacks.  FYI - KC building department is now taking around 5 months for plan review.

  2. I think he is talking about the zip wall panels that have an inch of insulation panel on the inside.  Be careful specifying these.  Some areas will not let it count toward the brace wall panels because of the insulation that sits between the sheathing and the wall framing.

    • Upvote 1
  3. I recently saw a very impressive but very involved way of creating an arched top cabinet.  (see fun challenge #4)   It involved many steps and a lot of parts. I often solve things with this same idea of poly line solids to create something. I was a really nice looking finished product. Nice job Rene. I made this to show a really fast way of creating this if your client might want to keep adjusting the size of it and you want to do it fast. This only takes a few minutes.

     

    Build window on an exterior wall so you can control inside and outside casings. I added the thicker exterior wall after I built it but you can always made it a symbol and use it on another plan. Changing the size is a simple matter of adjusting 4 controllable things. 1. adjust window to new cabinet size. 2. adjust width of base cabinet to new size. 3. adjust width of wall cabinet. 4. adjust width of one poly line solid.

    Adjusting this would take less time than it took my to type this explanation.

     

    Advantages - lightening fast, looks like a tolerable representation of the real thing.

     

    Disadvantages - less detail, could never be used as a shop drawing, can not be shown with the doors open (because it is really a window).

    arched cab.jpg

    arched cab 2.jpg

  4. I have always done this with 2 roof planes.  The bottom one has the curve.  I try to set the curve at a point that it could be framed with a sistered 2x12 that is cut to match the curve.  That will be a small flare but should look ok.  For more of a flared look, you have to increase the curve amount and the intersection point will move up toward the top of the roof.  It looks better that way but would be tougher to build.

  5. 5 hours ago, robdyck said:

    Frieze settings using the roof dialog. The only thing it won't get right is the centering. The images below are all auto-built using the roof dialog box. If you feel like discussing it further, feel free to send me a PM.

    image.thumb.png.800d1c745b56084a7c8914a41241f385.pngimage.thumb.png.162b41c033e7aebd482ab103a62639f4.png

    I think he wants the blocks running plumb.  This one has them perpendicular to the roof plane.

  6. A slab supporting a wall is not entirely about the compressive strength.  It is about the lack of a footing.  A slab on grade could become subject to frost heave.  The OP is from Eagar AZ.  The elevation is 7000' so it might be an issue for the project.  I would hate to be trying to defend the choice of eliminating footings at some point in the future but then again, anyone that wants to live in a pole barn probably doesn't really care.