Hi,
We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral ceiling
room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
again with 4x8 beams, with resulting cost and aggravation for our
contractors who lifted the 6x8's in place...
I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend for
one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams that are
in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in length.
Any opinions are appreciated.
Regards, Wolfgang in VT
"Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:JYbef.915$Rb.317@trndny04...
> Hi,
> We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral
ceiling
> room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
> again with 4x8 beams, with resulting cost and aggravation for our
> contractors who lifted the 6x8's in place...
> I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend for
> one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams that
are
> in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in length.
> Any opinions are appreciated.
> Regards, Wolfgang in VT
>
>
Not for that much, best to rent the makita 16" timber circular saw, most
rental places have this.
Now that I realize it's in-place the circular saw would be difficult because
you'd be coming in from both sides, you don't want to use the 16"
upsidedown, I can't imagine it.
Regardless you still have to deal with the ends that the saw won't reach.
I'd say unless the beams are on the ground this is a very difficult project,
and I work with post&beam every day.
"Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:oNkef.4744$%o1.577@trndny09...
> Thanks for all the replies.
>
> The 16" circular saw sounds very scary, using it 8' above the floor on
> scaffolding? Battleax, do you have personal experience with this?
>
> The Alaskan Mill for chainsaws seems less intimidating, but I have never
> used either type of saw.
> Regards,
> Wolfgang
>
> "Battleax" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > "Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:JYbef.915$Rb.317@trndny04...
> >> Hi,
> >> We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral
> > ceiling
> >> room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
> >> again with 4x8 beams, with resulting cost and aggravation for our
> >> contractors who lifted the 6x8's in place...
> >> I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend
for
> >> one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams
that
> > are
> >> in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in length.
> >> Any opinions are appreciated.
> >> Regards, Wolfgang in VT
> >>
> >>
> >
> > Not for that much, best to rent the makita 16" timber circular saw, most
> > rental places have this.
> >
> >
>
>
"Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend for
> one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams that
> are in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in
> length.
> Any opinions are appreciated.
> Regards, Wolfgang in VT
I can visualize the entire room being filled with shavings from such a
project. I think you'd have a huge mess and crappy beam when all is done.
On Tue, 15 Nov 2005 02:44:57 GMT, "Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral ceiling
>room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
>again with 4x8 beams,
2:1 proportion is going to look pretty odd too. If you can't change the
8" dimension, then I'd leave them be.
If at all possible, then I'd lift them down and work at ground level. if
I had to work at height, then I'd want _good_ staging in place to work
on. I'd trim them down by hand sawing a notch out at each end to give
saw-space, then running a large circular saw along them. With a big
framer's saw you can rip both sides and almost through, then take the
central web out by hand (or by splitting it).
Thanks for all the replies.
The 16" circular saw sounds very scary, using it 8' above the floor on
scaffolding? Battleax, do you have personal experience with this?
The Alaskan Mill for chainsaws seems less intimidating, but I have never
used either type of saw.
Regards,
Wolfgang
"Battleax" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:JYbef.915$Rb.317@trndny04...
>> Hi,
>> We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral
> ceiling
>> room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
>> again with 4x8 beams, with resulting cost and aggravation for our
>> contractors who lifted the 6x8's in place...
>> I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend for
>> one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams that
> are
>> in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in length.
>> Any opinions are appreciated.
>> Regards, Wolfgang in VT
>>
>>
>
> Not for that much, best to rent the makita 16" timber circular saw, most
> rental places have this.
>
>
Not reasonable at all IMO.
It would take too long and leave a smooth surface.
Depending on how rough sawn the surface is you may
be able to use a chainsaw with guide like one of these
http://www.loghelp.com/tools/chainsaw.html
Art
"Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:JYbef.915$Rb.317@trndny04...
> Hi,
> We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral ceiling
> room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
> again with 4x8 beams, with resulting cost and aggravation for our
> contractors who lifted the 6x8's in place...
> I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend for
> one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams that are
> in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in length.
> Any opinions are appreciated.
> Regards, Wolfgang in VT
>
>
"Wolfgang Hokenmaier" <[email protected]> writes:
> Hi,
> We had 6x8" rough sawn beams installed as collar ties of a cathedral ceiling
> room. The beams look too hefty, so we are debating having them replaced
> again with 4x8 beams, with resulting cost and aggravation for our
> contractors who lifted the 6x8's in place...
> I am wondering if it would be reasonably possible (say over a weekend for
> one person) to use a 3-4" hand power plane to "thin down" the beams that are
> in place now (by 1.5-2"). There are four beams in total, 14' in length.
I have read about beams in old buildings that have been hewn thinner
while in place, but taking a broad axe to your ceiling beams is
something that needs practice before and a good cure of muscle cramps
afterward.
--
Dr. Juergen Hannappel http://lisa2.physik.uni-bonn.de/~hannappe
mailto:[email protected] Phone: +49 228 73 2447 FAX ... 7869
Physikalisches Institut der Uni Bonn Nussallee 12, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
CERN: Phone: +412276 76461 Fax: ..77930 Bat. 892-R-A13 CH-1211 Geneve 23