We will watch Richard laying out brace joinery and we will see Steve
cutting the joinery on a girt. Travis is cutting timbers to length and
John is finishing out the saw list.
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Tim's dad, Larrie Chauvin, looks on as
Richard begins the layout work on the brace stock John's crew planed.
Larrie lives on the property in the cottage next to the timber shop. |
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Laying out joinery details on braces is no less demanding than
when working on the larger timbers. In fact, since there are so
many braces, they all start looking alike at some point, so Richard
must be especially mindful. Here is using a carpenter's triangle
to draw the joinery details on the brace.
Later, Keith will check Richard's work then start cutting the
brace joinery.
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Steve is working on one of the girts in the frame. The joinery
he is cutting will allow the girt to rest on a spline and snug
into a housing on its mated post.
The long channel cut into the wood is for the spline. It's a
bit hard to explain but when you see it finished, it is pretty
easy to understand.
We use splines to carry the weight of girts in situations where
there is a lot of complicated joinery going on at a particular
post and where the wood may have a tendency to move in an unpredictable
way. Splines spread the forces applied to the girts and post over
a broader surface making the joinery much stronger in these applications.
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| You've got to be very accurate when cutting any joinery
so the guys spend a lot of time on the knees measuring things! Here
Steve check the cut depth along the shoulder of the girt to make
sure it is correctly formed. We work to tolerances of 1/32"
when cutting joinery... a difficult standard to achieve that takes
a little longer to accomplish, but the finished work reflects the
care given to each joint. |
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While the weather is good, the guys like to work outside
as much as possible. Here Travis is using one of the bigger rotary
hand saws we have to cut the timbers to length before forming the
joinery. |
| It is essential that the end cuts be made right on
the cut lines. If the timber is too short or too long, it won't
be easy to correct it on the job site. When handling these large
saws, the crew is especially careful. |
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It has begun turning colder and is threatening rain
so John and the crew button down the sawmill. They are just about
finished sawing all of the red oak timber we need for the frame. |
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The rain and cold weather have moved in and it has become very
overcast and gray. But the crew feels pretty good about their
progress and there is even a little time left over to clean out
the shops for the next day. Notice the stack of brace stock in
the right front corner of Brace Land.
Tomorrow the crew will continue laying out the final timbers
and working on the joinery.
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