Podcast Episode 71 — Spray-Foam Adhesive, Drywall, and Housewrap
Sheathing, wet OSB, and how you never get to do your own work when you are managing staff on site.
Fine Homebuilding editor Justin Fink joins design editor Brian Pontolilo and FHB editorial director Rob Yagid in this episode. The guys talk about spray-foam adhesive for ceiling drywall and the role of the architect in meeting a house construction budget. Justin digs up an article from Issue #1 on putting up a timber-frame building by yourself, with a tractor. A listener talking about residential concrete inspires some timely discussion of building in hurricane and earthquake zones.
Loyal listener Troy writes again to comment on housewrap, studs, and sheathing; especially what happens when OSB gets wet. Check out his photos below. Plus, pony walls, hip walls, and concrete home construction.
We hope you will please pay attention to these two great offers for our podcast listeners:
A special discounted rate to subscribe to the Fine Homebuilding print magazine.
A special offer to buy John Carroll’s Working Alone.
We are looking for as many podcast listeners as possible to come out to meet the Fine Homebuilding team at the Remodeling and Deck Show this October in Nashville! We’ll be at Booth 424 on Oct. 26, 2017, at the Nashville Music City Center. We’re running an Emerging Professionals Event and recording an episode of this podcast from the show floor.
We also have our continuing request for listeners: We need all our fans to take our podcast feedback survey by clicking here. There’s a chance to win one of ten Amazon Echoes. October 2017 Update: Okay, we’re not giving away Amazon Echoes any more. That reward expired. But there’s a chance that we’ll have SOME kind of reward for those who take the poll. Well, honestly, a CHANCE to win a reward. Can’t say exactly what the reward will be, because you may be reading this in 2018 or 2024 or 2109 after the zombie apocalypse and climate change means we all have to build new net-zero fortress-houses on the seaside islands of Kentucky. But if this text is still here, we still really want your opinions, so please take the poll and we’ll enter you for a chance to win something good, like a $100 gift card or a couple cases of ammo or the antique Snapple bottle caps we’ll use for currency in 2109. Or at the very least, for our deep thanks and the knowledge that your feedback is helping us make the podcast a little better. That’s something everyone who takes the poll gets!
Today’s episode of the Fine Homebuilding podcast is brought to you by MaxUSA.
MaxUSA, a leading manufacturer of innovative professional grade construction tools and the exclusive tool sponsor of the 2017 FineHomebuilding ProHOME build. MaxUSA’s product mix includes a line of 100-psi as well as 500-psi high-pressure tools, battery-operated concrete tools and cordless gas-powered fastening tools. Max employs over 200 R&D engineers who constantly conduct field studies to improve on existing products and design and launch new products for the construction tool industry. Before being brought to market, all new tools are thoroughly tested for quality and durability. For more information, visit the MaxUSA website at maxusacorp.com.
The show is driven by our listeners, so please subscribe and rate us on iTunes or Google Play, and if you have any questions you would like us to dig into for a future show, shoot an email our way: [email protected]. Also, be sure to follow Justin Fink, Rob Yagid, and Fine Homebuilding on Instagram — and “like” the magazine on Facebook. Note that you can watch the show above, or on YouTube at the Fine Homebuilding YouTube Channel.
The Fine Homebuilding Podcast embodies Fine Homebuilding magazine’s commitment to the preservation of craftsmanship and the advancement of home performance in residential construction. The show is an informal but vigorous conversation about the techniques and principles that allow listeners to master their design and building challenges.
Resources and links on Working Alone:
- Justin’s post and video on Working as a Solo Carpenter
- More tips for working solo, from Issue 1 of FineHomebuilding.
- Replacing a Helper’s Hands.
- A special offer to buy John Carroll’s Working Alone book.
Other links related to this issue:
- Episode 61, an interview with Jeremy Martin.
- A [Concrete] House to Last For 500 Years.
- A research paper about a hockey arena with a thin concrete roof.
- Chuck Miller’s 1992 article on why some Florida houses survived Hurricane Andrew while others did not.
- Inswing Doors and Outswing Doors
- Sliding Barn Doors.
- Articles by finishing specialist Peter Gedrys.
- October’s Remodeling and Deck Show in Nashville.
- All FHB podcast show notes: FineHomebuilding.com/podcast.
- Buy a shirt at KeepCraftAlive.org.
Sorry, can’t put up the photo mentioned in the podcast of Justin working on his own house with his mom and dad. Mom said no.
We do have a photo of Craig’s cedar pergola. He has questions about sealing it and moisture.
Click the gallery button below to see Troy’s photos of his re-siding project for his seaside home.
View Comments
Had the same issue with Tytan Drywall Adhesive. The key is to have a very sensitive trigger finger. Just the slightest push will dispense the correct amount almost all the time but it is painfully easy to overspray a big glob that will fall to the floor, instantly!