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From YouTube: Day 4 - Collaborative CAD and Build
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A
A
So
today
we're
going
to
go
through
we're
continuing
design
design
work.
Last
week
we
we
began
an
actual,
build
work.
There's
some
of
those
videos
are
posted
up
to
follow
the
the
program.
The
wiki
page,
that's
relevant
for
for
us
right
now
is
120
design,
120
design.
Lessons
day,
four,
you
can
take
a
look
at
my
log,
I'll
paste
it
in
the
in
the
chat
but
we're
putting
the
working
doc.
A
A
A
Now,
as
far
as
organizing
things
that
we're
trying
to
use
templates
take
notes,
put
links
to
people's
videos
can
people
whoever
is
doing
that
shut
the
down
their
volume.
A
Yeah
outside
of
the
speaker,
mute
yourself
yeah,
so
where
to
start,
we
want
to
review
on
yes.
A
Last
week,
we
we
were
working
on
it's
a
lot
of
confusion
when
you
start
start
getting
into
it,
and
you
see
that
there's
the
details
on
how
we
build
the
wall
modules
for
the
cdca
home,
we're
going
to
continue
on
that
and
try
to
get
really
clear
on
on
the
design
of
each
module,
there's
48
for
the
exterior
walls
and
and
to
building
them,
because
once
you
start
building,
you
can't
just
say:
oh,
I
think
this
is
good
or
you
know
it's
a
half
inch
off
or
whatever
you
have
to
be
very
exact.
A
It's
it's
the
kind
of
stuff
where,
if
you
don't
get
it,
if
you
don't
do
it
properly
within
a
cad
or
if
you're
working
off
bad
blueprints,
you're
talking
about
wasting
a
lot
of
materials
because
hardware
now
gets
expensive
and
this
is
not
software-
we're
building
real
things.
So
when
we
do
this,
we
we
really
verify
and
make
sure
we're
doing.
We
know
what
we're
doing
in
terms
of
the
design,
and
we
went
through
some
some
details
of
of
discrepancies
between
the
notes
and
especially
if
you
work
as
a
large
group.
A
It's
it's
hard
to
keep
track
of
it.
So
the
best
proof
proof
point
is
that
every
person
understands
the
simple
principles
to
to
verify
to
self
to
have
the
whole
design
be
self-verifying
in
a
in
a
way.
So
today
I'll
go
through
the
the
wall
modules
again
to
the
point
that
in
the
morning
session,
once
again,
let's
do
let's
see
if
we
can
fill
the
the
whole
cad
cad
part
library,
as
with
the
intent
of
getting
clarity
on
the
actual
design
when
we're
building
in
a
workshop,
so
that
that
would
be
the
goal.
A
Not
only
are
we
generating
documentation
for
the
entire
house
as
a
product,
but
also
when
we
go
into
the
workshop.
All
of
us
want
to
have
have
practice
and
the
practice
you
can
get
is
actually
on
cat.
If
you
actually
build
the
things
from
from
scratch,
we
should
be
able
to
do
if
we
do
part
libraries
properly,
meaning
downloading
the
designs
of
common
parts
within
all
the
wall
modules,
because
the
idea
is
the
wall.
Modules
are
quite
similar,
all
of
them
right
now.
A
Certainly,
the
the
windows
and
doors
are
quite
different,
but
most
of
the
modules
are
are
the
same
or
similar,
and
therefore,
when
we
design
them
within
cad,
we
can
be
picking
from
libraries
where
we
say:
okay,
we
download
this
whole
thing,
that's
the
same,
and
then
we
maybe
make
some
modifications
and
with
that
kind
of
process,
if
we
have
a
number
of
people
here,
we
can
actually
effectively
divide
that
and
try
to
get
to
the
completion
of
the
cad,
because
the
cad,
if
we
go
to
share
my
screen,
go
to
the
cad
page
on
the
wiki
and
how
do
people
find
that?
A
You
go
into
that
document.
There
are.
There
are
a
few
links
on
on
the
first
page,
for
example,
click
on
long.
No,
that's
not
not
the
one
but
like,
for
example,
window
to
get
to
the
cad,
that's
cdc
home,
2
development,
template
and
then
you
so
do
a
bookmark
so
that
when
we
go
into
this
since
working
on
the
cad
very
actively,
that's
where
you're
uploading
put
a
bookmark
to
it.
A
Here,
I'm
going
to
the
development
template
go
to
to
the
cad
and
what
is
the
status
right
now?
I
still
see
a
bunch
of
let's
see
anything,
that's
once
again
in
red,
it's
still
not
filled
out,
it
needs
to
be
done
so
there's
a
bunch
and
a
free
cad
that
needs
to
be
done
and
we
were
working
off
now
build
cheat
sheet
orientation
for
for
role,
division,
the
build
cheat
sheets,
let's
put
a
link
to
those.
A
A
Page
two
you've
got
page,
one
is
one
through
twenty
three
page
two
is
one
through
twenty
three
also,
but
that
is
because
we're
dividing
cut
lists
and
and
build
instructionals
and
cad,
so
the
first
first
picture
is
actually
the
people
that
are
working
on
cad.
A
The
second
slide
is
people
who
are
working
on
actual
build
cheat
sheets,
which
means
the
next
step
after
cad,
which
is
your
cut
list
that
you
can
extract
all
your
parts
from
the
cut
lists,
and
then
we
go
into
the
second
floor,
25
to
48,
20
or
24
through
47
and
then
interior
panels,
but
for
the
orientation
of
what
is
what
these
are.
A
These
are
the
the
numbers
here
so
especially
at
the
very
end
of
the
cad.
I
believe,
there's
yeah,
there's
a
whole
bunch
at
the
end.
It's
all
blue.
It's
all
blue
okay,
so
we've
got
a
team
of
seven
right
people
right
here
and
within
that
we
can.
We
can
tackle
them,
and
if
you,
if
you
do
this
properly,
it
should
take
once
we
get
the
hang
of
it
like.
A
Maybe
if
you
start
completely
from
scratch
and
you're
just
drawing
up
here's
a
two
by
six
or
whatever
you've
got
like
10
or
20,
20
or
so
maybe
pieces,
you've
got
the
blocking
and
the
framing
and
so
forth
from
scratch.
It'll
take
you
about
an
hour.
If
you
go
from
from
part
libraries,
it
will
take
you
less,
maybe
15
minutes
down
to
as
little
as
15
minutes
say
you
take
the
entire
outside
frame
or
you
take
a
module.
That's
similar
or
you
download,
there's
different
ways
to
do
it.
A
You
can
download
modules
in
a
sense.
Okay,
I'm
going
to
take
down
download
the
entire
outer
frame,
which
you
know
is
the
same
for
everything.
If
it's
an
8-foot
module
everything
everything
except
the
one
of
the
corners,
the
short
corner
modules
they're
not
going
to
have
that
kind
of
a
frame,
but
you
know
that
that's
valid
for,
like
40
40
out
of
all
the
modules
you've
got
that
square
frame.
A
A
A
So
if
we
had
to
make
like
an
entire
village
made
of
these
houses
and
we
had
a
thousand
people,
you
know,
let's
take
a
look
at
the
limits
of
this.
If
a
thousand
people
in
a
stadium
or
ten
thousand
people
in
a
stadium,
it's
not
a
football
game.
It's
a
design
session
for
for
a
new
village
for
for
prosperity,
next
door
somewhere
on
a
chunk
of
land
that
we
just
got
to
say
that's
an
event
in
the
future.
10
000
people,
we've
got
a
village.
A
We
know
that
these
wall
modules
are
just
about
identical,
so
there's
a
lot
a
lot
of
repetition,
but
if
you
want
a
full
digital
model,
you
still
want
to
generate.
If
you
want
to
actually
a
technically
correct
model,
you
you
want
to
divide
those
roles,
and
then
you
pick
parts
from
part
libraries
like,
for
example,
you
don't
want
to
have
people
unless
they're
learning
from
scratch.
A
You
don't
want
to
have
them
draw
the
sketch
extruded
make
a
two
by
four
piece
of
lumber
or
a
two
by
six
piece
of
lumber,
get
that
out
of
a
part
library.
So
where
is
that
part
library?
We
already
have
thing
called
architecture,
part
library
and
that's
just
started,
but
there's
already
a
few
of
the
pieces.
There.
A
A
But
here
in
this
library
we
already
have
the
kind
of
stuff
we
use
two,
but
two
by
six
top
plates
two
by
six
top
plate,
two
by
four
blocking
for
split
two
by
four
blocking
eight
foot
stud
under
the
header:
nine
foot,
two
by
six
pre-cut
stud
pre-cut,
studs,
eight
foot
pre-cut
studs.
A
So
we
want
to
get
clear
on
okay.
What
are
what
are
the
component
members
of
all
the
modules
and
create
a
dedicated
part
library?
So
probably
right
on
the
architecture?
Part
library
page?
We
could
probably
do
something
useful
like
because
already
there's
other
things
like
the
roof
sections
or
the
angle
that
I
was
working
on
for,
for
example,
for
the
3d
printer
heated
chamber.
So
we
should
say
wall
module,
part
library
and
then
start
seating
it
there
so
so
that
we
can
pick
off
like.
A
We're
talking
about
creating
an
infrastructure
which
makes
it
very
easy
for
us
to
understand
and
build
a
module.
So
if
we,
if
we
make
that
the
most
transparent
possible,
we
can
do
it
so
so,
instead
of
so
in
that
wall
module
part
library,
we're
gonna
have
get
rid
of
all
this
stuff.
That's
the
roof
metal
hurricane
ties.
We
don't
need
at
this
point
so
so
we
can
start
prioritizing
this
library
how
we
go
go
about
selecting
parts
for
for
the
wall
modules,
so
this
is
going
to
be
our
assist
here.
A
If
you
have
existing
part,
libraries-
and
I
mentioned
that
it
would
be
useful
to
have
a
module
part
here-
that's
just
external
frame,
the
four
pieces
right
that
are
right
there,
that's
not
there!
So
someone
should
create
it
and
that
way,
you're
like
50,
towards
building
a
wall
module
in
five
seconds.
A
So
that's
how
we
can
modularize
and
make
this
process
fast
to
make
it
effective
for
a
large
team
to
do
this
quickly
so
that
we
can
fill
in
like
there's
a
whole
load
of
empty
files
right
now,
once
we
get
oriented
okay,
what
is
this
wall
module?
Is
it
a
window?
Is
it
a
door?
Is
it
a
plain
wall?
Is
it
a
corner,
so
you
have
to
get
oriented
using
the
the
icon
for
the
house,
with
the
modules
1
through
48
and
69.
A
A
Once
we
see
the
proper
library
save
the
frame
or
yeah
frame,
then
download
some
studs,
maybe
we
could
have.
A
A
So
after
we're
done
with
the
session
here,
let's
work
on
that
library
so
that
we
make
the
most
complete
parts
that
we
can
then
continue
to
modify,
and
we
can
even
even
have
complete
modules
like
this
is
the
plain
wall
module,
because
if
you
notice
that
oh
well
there's
plenty
of
those,
then
completing
one
of
these
reds
for
files
is
as
simple
as
uploading
the
identical
copy
of
that
and
just
to
explain.
Well,
why
do
you
want
to
do
that?
Why
do
you
want
to
repeat
it
yourself?
A
It
might
have
some
electrical
in
there,
that's
different
or
it
might
have
some
plumbing
or
it
might
have
some
aperture
for
a
wall
outlet
or
a
vent
or
something
so
we
leave
it
at
this
level
right
now,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
it'll
probably
probably
be
different
or
maybe
not,
but
likely
so
so.
The
thing
we
need
to
do
is
understand.
How
are
you
designing
these
wall
modules?
So
let's
talk
about
let's
just
kind
of
review.
Some
of
this
about
the
walls
we
mentioned
about
first
floor
is
nine
foot
tall
modules.
A
Second
floor
is
eight
foot
tall
modules
and
what
are
the
components
in
each
components
are
once
we
get
to
the
details.
What
we're
worried
about
right
now
is
the
framing
and
blocking
the
sheathing
exterior
and
the
one
detail
about
so
to
understand
the
module
parts,
the
sheathing
that
we
built
for
the
exterior
is
actually
not
exactly
what
we
get
from
the
store.
Those
are
overlapping
panels
and
because
we're
building
individual
panels.
A
We
are
going
to
save
a
few
of
those
because
in
the
garage
which
doesn't
have
interior
wall
structure,
we're
actually
overlapping
the
panels
as
they
should
be,
but
in
the
main
part
of
the
house,
we're
not
because
we're
doing
a
parallel
build
workflow
that
allows
us
to
do
the
rapid
build
and
if,
if
we
wanted
to
overlap,
we
would
have
to
leave
the
sheathing
off
the
front
of
the
panel.
But
then
you
couldn't
build
much
of
the
panel,
so
so
that
defeats
the
purpose.
So
we're
doubly
cutting
off
the
little
lip
now.
A
You
could
also
use
plywood
or
other
materials,
but
we're
using
this
particular
kind
of
plywood.
That's
that
allows
it
to
overlap.
It's
got
the
nice
texture
of
the
vertical
lines.
So
so
we
cut
the
edge
off
except
for
12
panels
which
are
for
the
for
the
carport.
A
A
We're
also
gonna
put
sil
seal,
which
is
a
rubber,
not
rubber,
but
a
foam
foam
gasket.
That's
the
width
of
the
the
panels.
Five
and
a
half
inches
we're
gonna,
put
that
around
the
side
so
that,
when
panels
butt
up
to
each
other,
you
close
off
air
gaps.
So
we're
going
to
put
that
on
the
side
now
on
the
bottom
plate
and
on
the
top
plate,
we're
going
to
put
more
of
that
later
on.
But
don't
worry
about
that
right
now,
but
the
sill
seal
is
part
of
the
actual
module
component
of
each
wall.
A
Now
the
batten
is
when
we
have
two
panels
next
to
each
other.
We
use
a
1x4
batten
screw
that
screw
the
edges
together
and
and
under
that
batten.
So,
basically
a
long
piece
of
bonding
wood,
there's
butyl
tape,
which
is
which
seals
against
water,
because
you
want
to
be
watertight
airtight
between
panels,
so
we're
using
build
tape,
which
is
just
this
rubber
rubbery
tape.
If
you
screw
through
it,
it
actually
self
seals
around
the
nails.
A
So
it's
a
water
air
barrier
and
use
this.
The
batten
on
that
the
house
wrap
goes
right
under
like
right
over
the
panel
and
under
the
exterior
siding
we
use
staples
to
do
the
house
wrap
and
we
put
in
the
insulation
and
then,
if
there's
electrical
and
plumbing,
but
the
insulation
point
so
up
to
eight
and
nine
and
ten
is
how
we're
going
to
carry
the
panels
up
to
the
site.
A
Now,
so
that's
the
module
components
each,
while
the
picture
actually
on
the
next
page
shows
some
of
that
there's
the
frame
the
insulation,
weather
resistive
barrier,
which
is
the
house,
wrap
just
very
thin,
breathable
thing
that
it
lets
water
wick
down
it
and
it
lets
let's:
let's
vapor
go
in
and
out
of
it,
so
you
don't
get
condensation
as
bad
if
it
condenses
it's
supposed
to
run
out
down
it
down
to
the
down
the
panels.
A
Exterior
sheathing
and
the
missing
details
are
the
sill
gasket.
This
is
actually
what
we
did
before.
We
didn't
use
the
sill
gasket
and
what
else
are
other
changes
in
this
one?
Actually
we're
using
one
stud
in
the
middle?
That's
not
how
we're
doing
it
right
now,
and
actually
I
don't
think
that's
how
we
built
the
seed
ecohome
one,
that's
just
representative
of
the
frame
to
show
you
the
detail
on
slide
five.
A
A
A
The
outside
is
the
treated
texture,
plywood
and
then
there's
the
lag
bolt
mechanism
which
bonds
three
of
them,
that
bond
one
panel
to
the
next.
So,
with
three
impact
tool
ratcheted
lag
bolts,
we
connect
them
together
in
a
few
seconds
now
and
then
the
house
wrap
is
stapled
on
the
inside
and
there's
little
bit
of
house
wrap
tape
put
put
on
the
inside,
so
you
put
in
another
layer.
It's
not
like
the
heavy
tape.
It's
not.
A
If
you
puncture
it
it
doesn't,
it
will
get
punctured,
unlike
the
self-adhering
waterproof
barrier
itself,
healing
self-sealing
we're
showing
the
nails
going
into
the
the
studs
here
from
the
exterior
plywood
they'll
be
screws
for
us
and
probably
some
nails
at
the
end
when
we
nail
it
all
off
at
the
very
end,
we
probably
want
to
do
like
a
minimum
number
of
screws
because
they
take
much
longer
than
the
nail
gun,
but
at
the
very
end,
once
we
know
everything
is
correct.
We
can
probably
nail
it
off
at
the
end
of
the
day.
A
A
How
much
volume
do
they
take
well
they're
going
to
take
about
a
half
a
foot
each
so
for
60
of
them?
You
have
about
a
a
stack
of
about
30
feet
of
them
and
they're
four
feet
wide.
Now,
just
for
practical
considerations,
I
mean
that
that
gets
pretty
hairy
in
terms
of
material
management.
You
can
put
this
outside
a
bunch
of
piles,
but
if
you're,
if
you
get
caught
in
a
rain,
that's
not
great,
and
you
want
to
have
like
right
now
as
we're
building
them
since
we're
not
finishing
them
all.
A
Yet
I
think
it
will
be
a
let's
check
out
the
workflow.
Let's,
let's
make
a
rack
effectively,
because
in
our
workshop
we
have
posts
there
every
16
feet.
Let's
make
a
rack
that
spans
between
the
two
maybe
have
like
little
dividers,
like
maybe
the
blocking
that
are
cut
offs
but
jeff.
Maybe
you
can
do
that
because,
like
right
now
we
have
two
piles
on
two
tables,
but
that's
only
12
panels
that
we've
built
so
far
and
those
piles
are
already
as
high
as
you
can
stack
them.
A
So,
let's
do,
I
would
say
within
what
princess
table
is
maybe
set
up
like
one
one
side
and
the
other,
so
you
have
an
aisle,
I'm
thinking
about
a
nile
where
you
have
a
rack
on
one
side.
We
can
basically
slip
in
the
panels
understanding
vertically
and
you
can
pull
any
one
of
them.
We
can
number
them
so
we
actually
know
which
one
is
which
so
that,
for
example,
when
we're
doing
the
electrical
at
the
end,
we
can
do
that
very
effectively.
And
maybe
you
know
if
we
had
the
process
more
worked
out.
A
Possibly
we
can
say
okay
from
instructions
we
can
like.
If
we
had
the
complete
instructions
set
right
now,
which
we
don't
we
can
probably
say.
Oh,
we
just
do
that
once
and
then
possibly
even
store
it
outside.
For
now,
as
we've
got
a
few
more
steps
to
go
and
we're
learning
about
this
I'd
say:
let's
do
that
rack.
So
take
like
a
long
two
by
sixes
or
two
by
twelves
together,
we
gotta
span
sixteen.
But
basically,
if
you
walk
in
an
aisle
on
two
sides,
one
bay
of
sixteen
feet
is
gonna.
A
C
A
A
A
A
You
got
a
second
column
in
the
workshop
and
you've
got
this.
Is
these
four
corners
are
a
space
of
16
by
16
feet?
That's
the
column
spacing,
so
what
I'm
suggesting
is
take
a
piece
of
wood
or
or
screw
together
a
couple
of
pieces
of
wood
and
make
make
a
long
piece
of
wood
like
that
and
then
in
order
to
make
the
panel
stand
against
that,
I
think
it
would
be
sufficient.
A
It
sounds
like
it
if
you
just
put
a
bunch
of
blocks
like
little
projections
here
I
mean
short
blocks
that
if
you
put
it
in
there
it
can't
it
can
only
fall
side
to
side
right
right.
So
as
long
as
you
have
a
short
block,
every
six
inches,
you
know
give
it
a
little
bit
space,
six
or
seven
inches.
A
You
got
this
basically
this
this
rack,
where
you
can
slip
in
your
panels,
that's
kind
of
what
I'm
thinking.
That's
a
real
concern
like,
for
example,
if
people
are
building
this
say
on
their
own.
How
do
you
do
this?
If
you
don't
have
a
lot
of
space?
Well,
you
have
to
have
some
place
like
you
can
probably
leave
it
outside.
A
A
A
Now,
there's
40,
you
only
need
46
47,
because
one
is
a
double
door.
So
that's
definitely
not
we're
not
going
to
rack
it
in
here,
so
you
need
47,
plus
21,
so
it's
68,
but
the
21
last
ones,
therefore
just
two
by
four
wall
panel.
So
it
can
be
a
little
more
narrow
or
you
can
just
keep
it
the
same.
C
A
C
A
A
C
A
A
Well,
yeah
yeah
you're
right,
so
that's
that's
an
issue
there.
So
so
we
don't
have
those
posts
here.
Can
you
attach
it
to
the
tool
rack?
Some
somehow
or
I
don't
know
we
know
we
can
do
this.
One
start
on
this
one
then
we'll
figure
out.
Okay,
maybe
we
do
just
one
on
the
other
side
of
these
ones,
but
then
there's
this
thing
here,
this
router
on
that
side.
Unless
we
can,
we
move
that
router
out
of
there.
A
So
yeah,
but
definitely
we
need
some
storage
space
like
that.
So
if
you
can
make
these
boards
okay,
then
we
can
hang
them
more.
Maybe.
C
A
All
right,
you
just
need
like
a
half
an
inch
of
space,
so
not
that
much
if,
if
the
panels
are
going
to
end
up
being
after
you
put
the
plywood
on
them,
they're
five
and
a
half
plus
five
eight,
so
it's
gonna
be
just
a
little
bit
over
six.
So
I
wouldn't
make
it
more
than
like
an
inch
inch
larger,
so
yeah
so
make
them
seven
inches.
A
So
what
else,
what
else
on
a
on
a
build
cheat
sheet?
So,
let's
talk
about,
can
I
can
I
interrupt
real
quickly,
yeah.
B
Go
ahead
so
then
am
I,
I
think
that
it
sounds
like
we
would
want
to
build
this
sort
of
like
structure
that
could
hold
these
things.
They
could
be
kind
of
built
on
site
at
different
sites,
and
that
would
be
kind
of
critical
to
have
that
on
hand.
Some
covered
thing
like
this
is
that
correct,
or
am
I
hotter.
A
A
A
I
I
don't
see
us
actually
using
that
unless
we're
in
a
learning
situation
like
this,
where
we're
we're
going
step
by
step
and
maybe
going
through
a
whole
batch
batch
of
process,
we'll
kind
of
batch
it
like
here
we're
trying
to
batch
it
like
okay,
we're
gonna,
do
all
the
framing,
because
we
can
really
learn
that
and
get
good
at
it
and
get
quick
at
it
so
trying
to
to
get
the
efficiencies
on
that
in
the
particular
work
situation
that
we're
at
right
now.
A
The
part
that
that's
useful
about
a
rack
system
like
that
is
that
it's
just
keeping
order
of
the
panels,
because,
if
you
put
put
the
panels
in
a
particular
like
when
you're
building
them,
the
challenge
you
have
is
okay,
where
you're
putting
the
panels
and
you
put
them
on
a
pile,
you
got
to
put
them
in
a
certain
order
because
they
get
put
up
into
the
building
in
a
certain
order.
A
So
if
you
have
the
first
panel
that
needs
to
go
in
a
house
on
the
bottom
of
a
pile,
you're
moving
that
and
you're
shuffling
things
around,
it
just
adds
that
work.
In
our
case
here
when
we
did
the
build,
it
happened
that
the
the
first
panel
that
we
needed
was
like
the
last
panel
down
at
the
workshop,
and
we
were
pretty
much
like
waiting
for
like
an
hour
or
two
before
we
could
start
assembling
the
house.
A
So
you
know
things
like
that
of
workflow
are
important
when
you
consider
bottlenecks,
of
which
panel
goes
in
first,
because
the
corner
wants
to
go
in
first,
you
start
at
the
corners.
You
don't
put
a
panel
in
the
middle.
You
start
at
the
corner
because
you
know
that's
a
that's
a
finish
point
and
a
good
place
to
start.
A
So
so
we've
got
module
components,
design
rationale
for
the
two-story
wall
wall
heights.
We
said
that
nine
feet
to
make
the
house
comfortable
eight
feet
to
make
it
easier,
because
then
we're
starting
to
work
at
height
and
the
finish
point
prior
to
installation
is
everything
up
to
the
electrical
and
plumbing.
A
Yeah
take
a
picture
and
put
it
in
put
in
a
dock.
If
you
can
so
jeff's
just
come
up
with
yeah,
you
do
jeff
just
came
up
with
okay.
Here's
two
posts,
if
you
just
gotta,
have
have
this
temporary
structure
on
the
work
side,
just
put
two
posts
in
the
ground
and
some
support
stakes,
and
that
would
be
good
enough.
So
yeah
this
could
be
done
in
the
field
or
in
a
workshop.
A
What
are
the
absolute
critical
points
that
we
need
to
know
about
them,
because
we
we
really
have
to
cover,
there's
six
module
types
outside
the
windows
and
doors
which
we'll
say
for
later,
so
maybe
let's
just
review
the
the
checklist
for
each
one.
So
as
we
get
onto
cad
today.
Hopefully
we
do
that
rapidly.
We
create
the
part
library
and
then
rapidly
by
knowing
all
the
components
that
go
into
the
wall.
You
can
rapidly
assemble
them
through
cad
to
get
that
that
part
out
of
the
way.
So
we
get
cad
practice
and
actual
real
build.
A
We
can
extract
the
real
build
procedures,
verifying
everything,
because,
as
we
do
that,
so
I'm
going
to
start
a
few
slides
here.
What
yep
all.
B
Right
when
someone
I'm.
A
Let's
do
it
in
real
time,
so
why
does?
Why
do
why?
Don't
we
have
tell
you
what
to
practice
the
cad
collaborative
cad
and
concept
work?
Let's
have
have
you
do
this,
I'm
going
to
do
the
dock?
Yes,
so
this
is
good
practice
and
then
good
point.
A
new
slide,
not
new
slide
copy,
slide,
slide
duplicate
slide,
we're
going
to
go
very
simply
through
here's,
a
wall
module
and
you
guys
cat
it
up
or
you
don't
have
to
cut
it
up.
A
It's
already
at
the
at
the
wall,
architecture,
part
library,
if
it's
not
added
to
it,
but
in
the
wall
module
part
library,
we
have
2x6
short
top
plate.
What
does
that
mean?
There's
a
corner
module,
that's
42.5!
So
let's
make
that.
A
A
So
that's
the
one
we're
talking
about
right
there.
Second
one
is
the
usual
top
plate
top
plate
bottom
plate.
Every
single
panel
has
it
outside
of
the
two,
the
corners
that
we
mentioned,
the
corners
that
don't
have
it
total
eight
in
number,
because
four,
on
the
first
floor,
four
on
the
second
floor,
then
this
the
short
blocking
2x4
8.5
will
notice
that
one
of
the
corner
panels
has
the
short
blocking
and
what
is
this
14.5?
A
It
should
be
14.
the
normal
blocking
we
use
to
attach
the
plywood
to
should
be
14.
Why
is
that
so
someone
someone
download
it
and
fix
it?
It
shouldn't
be
14.5,
it's
it's
14.
wants
to
download
and
fix
it.
So
this
is
the
part
library
we'll
be
working
from.
So
let's
fix
it
now,
eight
foot
under
header
stud.
A
What
are
we?
I
want
to
take
a
look
at
just
so,
for
example,
you
download
it.
A
A
Your
cat
app
image
under
header
stud,
so
there's
a.
A
I
don't
think
we
have
to
worry
about
this.
One.
That's
headers
are
under
windows
and
doors
headers,
because
the
door
spans
a
certain
amount,
there's
a
lot
of
force
on
it.
So
you
need
a
header
to
to
carry
that
weight.
That's
supported
on
the
frame!
So
actually
I'm
not
gonna.
Let's
see
open
it
under
header
stud.
A
If
you
look
at
my
picture,
that's
gonna
be
like
the
headers.
We
use
are
two
by
twelve,
so
this
is
gonna,
be
like
a
foot
or
so
lower
than
whatever
we
got.
If
this
is
for
the
eight
foot
modules
that
this
thing
is
going
to
be
around
seven
feet
around
84.,
let's
just
measure
that
so
this
is
kind
of
verifications.
You
could
do
you
kind
of
know
what
you're
looking
for
here.
Yeah
it's
like
81
inches,
that's
under
seven
feet!
Now,
don't
worry
about
this
one
under
header
stud.
A
We
should
deprecate
for
like
we
can
arrange
this
under
header
stud.
Let's
put
it
towards
the
end
here,
so
we're
just
shifting
order.
So
you
have
easy
access
to
see
what
what's
that?
What's
where
now
the
pre-cut
studs
yeah,
those
we
use
everywhere:
nine
foot,
two
by
six
pre-cut,
eight
foot,
two
by
six
pre-cut,
eight
foot
under
header
stud-
don't
worry
about
that!
We
have
blocking.
Did
anyone
download
the.
A
Which
blocking
are
you
talking
about
so
blocking
wall,
module,
part
library,
sure
split,
2x4
blocking
14.5?
I
don't
like
the
14.5.
Didn't
we
say
it's
14
right.
A
How
do
you
know
it's
14,
there's
three
cavities
3
times.
Fourteen
is
forty.
Two
four
vertical
members
at
one
point
five
add
up
to
a
six
inch
mort
for
a
48
inch
panel.
42
plus
six
is
48.
So
you
got
to
do
this
in
your
head,
real
quick
once
you
get
get
that
these
are
all
48
inch
panels,
so
the
14.5
you
can
immediately
flag.
Okay,
that's
not
right!
A
Oh,
you
can
still
hear
well,
I
lost
control
over
my
desktop,
though
it's
not
it's
not
going
back
to.