GR

"G. Ross"

14/10/2016 12:23 PM

Home construction

They are building a new home two doors down from my house. It is
completely dried in with roof done, siding on, etc. Never have I seen
a nail gun there or heard one. Their only concession is a Skil saw.
They have a 5-7 man crew. When I had my last house built, the framing
crew was 2 men, one with a nail gun and the other on the saw. It went
up as fast as as this one. But it is good for the unemployment to
use more men.
--
GW Ross

Misfortune: The kind of fortune that
never misses.






This topic has 3 replies

Dt

DerbyDad03

in reply to "G. Ross" on 14/10/2016 12:23 PM

14/10/2016 10:16 AM

On Friday, October 14, 2016 at 12:22:42 PM UTC-4, G. Ross wrote:
> They are building a new home two doors down from my house. It is
> completely dried in with roof done, siding on, etc. Never have I seen
> a nail gun there or heard one. Their only concession is a Skil saw.
> They have a 5-7 man crew. When I had my last house built, the framing
> crew was 2 men, one with a nail gun and the other on the saw. It went
> up as fast as as this one. But it is good for the unemployment to
> use more men.

Amish?

Sk

Swingman

in reply to "G. Ross" on 14/10/2016 12:23 PM

14/10/2016 12:58 PM

On 10/14/2016 12:16 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> On Friday, October 14, 2016 at 12:22:42 PM UTC-4, G. Ross wrote:
>> They are building a new home two doors down from my house. It is
>> completely dried in with roof done, siding on, etc. Never have I seen
>> a nail gun there or heard one. Their only concession is a Skil saw.
>> They have a 5-7 man crew. When I had my last house built, the framing
>> crew was 2 men, one with a nail gun and the other on the saw. It went
>> up as fast as as this one. But it is good for the unemployment to
>> use more men.
>
> Amish?

Might have been a family enterprise. Ran across a family of about six
carpenters about 15 years ago that would build an entire house. They
were from Michigan, IIRC.

In any event, they did the kind of work you only see in houses built
before, and shortly after WWII/Korea, up through the 1960's ... before
the tract homes built for the returning GI's went to shit in the 70's.

Unfortunately, it was hard to justify the cost when I was building spec
homes. I got the same quality work in the end, but it took constant
supervision 18/6, and doing a lot of the trim and cabinet work myself.

--
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Martin Eastburn

in reply to "G. Ross" on 14/10/2016 12:23 PM

14/10/2016 10:01 PM

Don't forget the crane or large forklift to help. Man power or machine.
Build a wall square on the floor or a stick at a time in the air.

Martin

On 10/14/2016 11:23 AM, G. Ross wrote:
> They are building a new home two doors down from my house. It is
> completely dried in with roof done, siding on, etc. Never have I seen a
> nail gun there or heard one. Their only concession is a Skil saw. They
> have a 5-7 man crew. When I had my last house built, the framing crew
> was 2 men, one with a nail gun and the other on the saw. It went up as
> fast as as this one. But it is good for the unemployment to use more men.


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