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From YouTube: Day 12 - Sill Plate + Foundation Finishing Build Plan
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A
A
A
Probably
I
can
start
here
so
well,
let's
take
a
look
at
the,
so
the
picture
of
the
foundation
looks
like
this.
So
we've
seen
this
briefly
before
it's
in
a
build,
build
directions,
section
of
seed
home
2.,
but
basically
what
we've
got
is
so
the
foundation
is
16
by
32,
and
that
means
the
soleplate
easiest
way
to
do
it.
Is
you
take
six
pieces
of
16
and
span
around
it?
There's
a
couple
of
points
to
keep
in
mind,
though.
A
So,
if
you
zoom
in
so
materials,
let's
talk
about
materials,
what
that
looks
like
and
the
quality
control
for
it
in
terms
of
materials.
So
so
this
is
what
we
gotta
round
up
and
we
can
gather
in
workshop
gather
all
this
stuff
around,
but
there's
a
bit
of
detail
there.
So
let
me
zoom
in
on
that.
A
Underneath
the
foundation,
the
sill
plate
is
the
sill
gasket,
so
you
have
the
foundation
on
that
is
lumber
for
any
unevenness
in
the
foundation
or
a
nice
tight
air
gap.
Air
seal
use
the
silply
sill
gasket.
It's
that
foam,
it's
just
that
foam
material
and
for
under
the
2x4.
You
need
the
3.5
inch
version.
All
that
stuff
is
in
a
pile
of
materials.
In
the
workshop,
there's
rolls
of
the
white
rolls
like
this
big
about
a
foot
round
of
the
silk
gasket.
A
That's
that's
what
it
looks
like
basically
rolls
like
this
ours,
I
think,
is
white.
This
here
is
5.5
inch.
We've
got
two
types,
there's
5.5,
which
is
for
the
two
by
sixes,
which
actually
goes
above
the
sill
plate,
because
that's
where
we
have
the
now
the
two
by
six
wall
modules
underneath
the
sill
plate,
you've
got
a
3.5
inch
stuff,
which
is
you've,
got
all
that
by
the
torch.
As
soon
as
you
walk
into
the
workshop,
that's
on
the
right-hand
side,
the
big
pile
there
got
to
dig
it
out.
A
Have
you
ever
seen
one
of
these,
so
you
put
stables
and
staples
inside
of
it,
and
then
you
whack,
whatever
you,
you
got
a
staple.
So
what
happens?
The
easiest
way
to
attach
the
sill
gasket
is
obviously
the
foundation
is
very
hard.
You
don't
want
to
screw
into
that.
You
attach
it
to
the
two
by
two
by
fours
that
we're
putting
on
so.
The
first
step
is
after
we
get
the
silk
gasket
out
there
to
the
to
the
side,
attach
it
with
the
hammer,
staplers
and
then
then
put
the
lumber
down
onto
the
foundation.
A
You
look
at
the
corner
what's
happening.
There
remember
how
the
panels
are
going,
the
long
way
that
the
4x4
forefoot
panel
lace
here
like
this.
It
goes
all
the
way
to
the
edge,
but.
A
The
sill
plate
does
not.
Why?
Because
the
panel
is
then
used
to
bind
the
two
together.
So
if
you
screw
into
like
right
there
and
right
there
you've
bound
these
two
two
sill
plates
together.
Does
that
make
sense?
That's
structurally
more
sound.
Otherwise,
if
you
had
it
here
well,
I
mean
other
way.
If
you
had
this
like.
A
A
A
The
panel
would
be
right
there,
so
it's
not
connected,
there's
a
gap
there,
so
you're
trying
to
get
away
from
that.
So
this
thing
on
the
corner.
Now,
what
are
we
looking
at
here?
This
is
the
top
top
view
like
normally
we
look
at
the
house
from
the
front,
so
the
lengthwise
goes
north
and
south.
So
if
you
see
that
direction
arrow
there,
w
that's
west
so
north
is
to
the
right
so
say
you
start
any
of
these.
B
A
In
terms
of
the
blue
and
red
okay,
so
remember
we
have
the
the
blue,
that's
the
sill
plate,
the
red
is
the
insulation,
that's
the
out.
There
we
have
the
white
insulation,
it's
not
pink,
it's
the
white
stuff,
but
the
insulation
goes
outside.
So
this
sill
plate
goes
inside
the
insulation.
Just
on
the
concrete
got
it.
A
If
you
understand
that
the
sill
plate
is
like
that,
now
you'll
see
that
this
little
chunk
right
here
is
missing
right
now,
because
we
don't
have
it
in
there
when
we
built
the
foundation,
we
built
it
like
this,
because
otherwise
you
couldn't
really
smooth
out
the
concrete.
So
we
have
to
cut
a
little
sliver.
A
So
one
of
the
tools
is
a
razor
knife.
If
I
have
it
here,
razor
knives,
so
we
gotta
cut
long
slivers
or
we
can
table
saw,
would
do
too,
maybe
just
take
it
on
the
table
saw,
but
we
need
long
straight
slivers
that
we
can
do
it
with
with
knives.
If
you
take
one
straight
edge,
if
you
cut
against
yeah,
so
you
always
have
a
factory
edge
of
of
the
material
that
we
work
with
there's
pieces
of
the
styrofoam
insulation
at
the
side.
A
So
what
we
can
do
there
is
take
the
factory
edge
and
just
use
the
razor
knife
to
cut
that.
So
we
put
the,
I
don't
know
the
bad
edge
one.
Okay,
one
edge
is
going
to
be
factory
cut,
the
other
one
is
going
to
be
razor
cut
or
we
can
put
on
the
table
saw
to
get
a
straight
cut.
We
can
do
fine
with
the
razor
just
use
it
use
a
long
ruler
or
board
against.
A
Then
you
just
cut
against
them
and
break
it
razor
or
actually
more
than
that
knife,
because
the
razor
does
not
go
all
the
way
through
the
insulation,
so
a
knife
would
actually
be
better.
We've
got
some
knives
in
a
tool
chest
there,
but
what
would
make
sense
too
is
so:
we've
got
the
seal
gasket.
You
see
right
there.
It's
a
two
by
four
seal
gasket
I'd
like
to
make
the
top
seal
gasket
yeah
extend
this
sill
gasket.
Can
I
zoom
in
make
that
the
2x6
version
do
that?
A
A
The
foundation
is
flat,
so
when
we
were
traveling
it
you
had
to
have
that
you
couldn't
have
that
there,
because
it
would
get
in
the
way
of
your
corners.
So
we
built
it
like
this
flat.
The
forms
used
to
be
there
like
the
wooden
forms,
so
you
didn't
have
anything
on
edge
to
block
your
smoothing
operation.
A
So
that's
what
we
built
and
that's
you
know,
that's
that's,
maybe
disadvantage
of
doing
doing
this
technique
of
how
he
did
it
with
the
insulation
on
the
outside,
because
typically
people
do
it
differently
like
what
they
would
do.
Is
they
wouldn't
put
the
insulation
at
the
foundation
step,
which
means
they
would
have
to
add
it
like
right
now.
You'd
have
to
be
adding
all
this,
but
because
this
insulation
goes
underground,
we
had
to
add
it.
A
We
had
to
do
it
before
we're
using
the
shallow
insulated,
but
otherwise
we'd
have
to
dig
a
big
trench
here
which
we're
just
saying:
okay,
let's
avoid
that
the
heavy
equipment-
let's
do
it
when
we
did
the
foundation
when
we
put
the
forms
around
that
we
already
did
the
insulation
at
that
point,
so
the
insulation
is
already
there.
Now
that
little
little
sliver
is
we
got
to
cut
off
the
existing
insulation.
A
Now
another
detail
is
this:
the
the
shallow
insulated
footer
calls
for-
and
this
is
not
shown
here-
it
calls
for
more
insulation
going
out
here.
So
that's
what
we're
going
to
do!
We've
got
all
that
insulation
that
is
still
out
there.
If
you
guys
remember
that
was
the
pile
of
white
insulation
we're
going
to
do
this
whatever's
left
over,
because
we
already
cut
a
lot
of
these
slivers
for
all
around
the
foundation
from
the
existing
material.
A
A
No
digging
because
we
basically
like
we're
at
this
level
right
now
effectively
like
around
the
foundation,
is
about
there
at
the
end.
So
what
we'll
do
is
this?
It's
going
to
look
like
this.
Actually,
it's
actually
not
there,
because
that
goes
a
little
deeper.
When
we
do
this,
then
we
still
just
try
to
slope
it
and
you'll
see
it
on
the
foundation
kind
of
tries
to
slope
down
a
little
bit
slope
it
down
a
little
bit,
so
we
we
could
add
levels
to
our
materials
levels.
A
Knife
we
mentioned
the
knife.
The
insulation
is
at
the
field
there
already
it's
going
to
get
buried
by
like
six
inches
of
soil,
or
so
so.
This
is
not
exposed,
but
above
that
you
also
need
polyethylene
or
tar
paper,
because
mice
could
chew
that
insulation
up.
So
you
kind
of
prevent
that
a
little
bit
by
putting
on
some
polyethylene
or
tar
paper
above
this
also
for
roots
that
roots,
don't
poke
through
it
over
time.
A
A
So
I
put
that
down
there,
as
is
that
nice
have.
Where
is
that
polyethylene
or
tar
paper
right
there?
A
So
there
we
go,
that's
what
we'll
do
so
still
gasket
underneath
still
gasket
above
I
guess
when
we
do
the
yeah
actually
it'll
be
convenient
right
now,
when
you
do
the
sill
gasket
just
do
it
where
we
get
both
the
bottom
and
top
attached
to
your
board,
because
I
mean
why
not,
let's
start
with
the
bottom
of
it
and
then
after
we've
got
so
now.
What
we're
doing
is
those
those
anchors
remember
the
mud
cell
anchors
they're
in
the
concrete
they're
laying
flat
out
to
the
outside.
A
A
This
is
all
like
industry
standard
stuff.
It's
it's
not
like,
not
a
gun,
but
a
ram
set
hammer.
A
A
We
talked
a
little
bit
and
so
let's
go
back
to
the
seat
home
to
build
instructions.
We
talked
about
how
the
cutouts
for
the
doors-
this
is
where
it
gets
now
like
how
the
module's
gonna
remember
how
we
did
the
first
floor
modules.
They
had
the
bottom
part
for
the
placeholder
for
the
door,
for
example,
it
has
that
bottom
part,
which
is
actually
what
sits
on
the
foundation.
So
that's
cutouts.
We
have
to
make
in
the
foundation
according
to
the
plan
in
there,
but
build
instructions,
no
build
instructions
here.
A
For
the
foundation
or
sill
plate,
let's
see.
A
Not
shown
here,
but
we
can
go
into
our
dock
here
when
we
have
this
here,
wherever
we
make
that
oh
yeah,
there
is
the
detail
in
there
already
look
at
this
look
what's
happening
there.
We
mentioned
that
the
cut
out
that
we
take
of
this
2x4
we
ram
set
now
to
the
side,
so
the
door
can
sit
on
it,
the
door
module
because
remember
the
at
the
end
of
the
day.
Your
panels
are
sitting
like
this.
A
Like
this
over
the
pink
they're,
not
load
bearing
on
a
pink
they're
low
bearing
on
the
silgat
sill
plate,
now
here
the
door.
Actually,
this
is
the
placeholder
holder
door
that
actually
does
sit
on
the
foundation
itself,
for
which
reason
you
need
that
plate
that
you
cut
out
of
the
foundation
and
put
on
the
side,
so
it
has
more
so
like
that
would
be
the
foundations
laying
there,
but
that
plate
that
you
cut
out
from
here.
You
put
here
and
ram
set
it
in,
so
that
when
you
step
on
it,
it
doesn't
fall
down.
B
B
A
Yeah,
you
can
also
they
do
make
nails
that
you
actually
ram
with
a
hammer
too
they're
they're
hard
to
get
in
the
ramp
set
is
very
convenient.
You
tap
it
once
and
the
bullet
does
the
work
for
you.
But
that's
that's
what
it
looks
like
there's
a
few
like
you
know,
every
foot
or
every
six
put
it
in
like
schedule
for
that
would
be
like
put
in
two
and
the
ends
like
six
inches
like
that.
A
Do
that
maybe,
like
two
more,
maybe
maybe
one
more
in
the
middle-
that's
only
four
feet
there.
So
like
five
nails
in
there
that
should
hold
it,
or
maybe
even
six,
we'll
see
once
we
get
these
ones
on
the
side.
You
see
how
solid
it
is.
You
need
maybe
need
one
or
two
there.
That's
what
the
detail
there
looks
like.
A
A
We
got
to
slip
the
insulation
in
because
the
insulation
is
all
over
right
now
everywhere,
so
we
got
to
just
cut
it
with
a
razor
and
take
out
the
insulation,
but
only
enough
for
the
board
you're
not
cutting
out
down
all
the
way
you're,
only
just
cutting
out
three
and
a
half
inches
vertically,
because
that's
what
the
board
is
going
to
replace
that
insulation
with
the
ram
set.
Does
that
make
sense?
Can
you
picture
that
or
no.
A
A
A
We
put
the
board
there
on
the
side
of
the
foundation,
so
the
foundation
is
actually
you
know
going
out
to
like
right.
There
garage
door
sits
on
top.
It
sits
on
top
of
the
of
the
board.
We
sit,
we
just
put
there.
So
basically,
when
you
step
on
the
edge
of
the
garage
door,
you
don't
bend
it,
you
don't
bend
it
stepping
over
the
foundation.
A
That's
the
idea.
There
same
applies
to
here
front
double
door.
So
what's
critical
here,
this
is
a
cheat
sheet,
so
you
have
real
dimensions,
58
and
so
forth.
This
is
all
accurate.
This
is
48
50.
Sorry,
48
is
the
ones
in
blue.
Are
ram
set
things,
because
when
we
did
this
we
might
we
modified
it.
Since
we
built
a
foundation,
so
the
critical
dimension
there
is
50.5
through
the
door.
This
is
where
you're
cutting
you
take.
A
A
skill
saw
so
we'll
do
a
little
lesson
on
skill
saw
or
then
there's
a
39
inch
cut
out
for
the
door,
the
door
module
we
built.
Remember
it
has
the
two
legs:
the
legs
sit
on
top
of
the
sill
plate
and
the
door
actually
hangs
down
from
that
module
just
a
little
bit.
So
you
close
up
the
gap
that
one
and
a
half
inch
gap
there.
A
Yeah
then,
the
sill
plates
yeah
yeah,
then
the
pillars
yeah
there's
the
door
actually
hangs
down
from
the
door
modules
that
we
pre-framed
it
goes
down
below
the
frame
so
that
it
can
close
the
gap.
That's
below
the
door
here.
B
A
Yeah,
but
right
now
we've
got
the
pink
and
blue.
We
don't
have
the
blue.
The
blue
is
what
we're
gonna
put
on
yeah,
the
pink
is
there
if
you're
see
if
you
remove
the.
A
Blue,
no
that's
drawn
inaccurate
because
that's
the
foundation
next
to
that
the
foundation
stretches
all
the
way
to
where
the
blue
ends
here,
yeah,
but
the
cheat
sheet
so
that
on
the
cheat
sheet,
you
kind
of
see
the
whole
picture
of
dimensions
like
when
we
cut
out
the
critical
dimensions
are
146
from
the
edge.
50.5
is
58
from
the
edge
oh
yeah,
but
edge
where
we
have
to
look
at
where,
where
we're
measuring
from-
and
I
think
we're
measuring.
A
A
A
Now,
when
we're
working
out
there,
it's
we
can
have
people
split
into
we
can
people
can
be
doing
the
top
plate,
but
first
what
we
got
to
do
is
it's
kind
of
messy
around
it.
So
let's
bring
the
weed
whacker
there
and
shovels
and
tools,
because
jeff
kind
of
did
the
smooth
smoothed
out
like
these
three
sides,
more
or
less.
I
saw
there's
still
materials
there
and
stuff
there.
So
I
want
to
smooth
that
out
on
the
north
side.
A
A
A
A
So
we've
got
the
critical
locations
so
in
terms
of
the
build
order,
there's
bring
so
bring
your
cameras.
Clean
up
debris
and
smooth
around
the
foundation
then
place
your
your
sill
plates,
but
before
you
place
the
sill
plates
staple
the
the
gasket
on
because
idea,
there
is
now
we're
talking
about
rigor
on
mouse
holes
and
air
holes,
because
if
you
have
those
two
that
makes
a
bad
house,
mice
are
getting
in
like
in
this
hab
lab.
That's
before
we
ever
paid
attention
to
any
of
that
now
you
can
never
get
rid
of
mice.
A
They're
always
gonna
find
a
way
in,
but
you
can
make
it
hard
and
therefore
it's
not
a
persistent
problem.
It's
a
you
know
it's
a
temper
like
here
and
there
you
get
mice,
but
if
you
don't
pay
attention
to
that,
you'll
have
mice
all
the
time,
especially
like
in
the
country
out
here,
so
the
sole
gaskets
are
sealing
the
air
holes.
A
This
is
about
like
high
performance
housing,
so
you
I
mean
still
gas
gaskets
are
in
industry
standard,
that's
basics,
we're
gonna,
put
one
below
the
sill
plate
and
one
above
one
below
is
a
two
by
four
one.
Above
is
a
two
by
six
version
and
we'll
get
those
rolls
out
there
put
on
the
treated
lumber
place
sill
plates,
that's
six
of
them
six
times.
16
we've
got
about
a
hundred
foot
perimeter.
It's
96
foot
perimeter
around
that.
A
So
we
need
six
of
those
sticks
of
the
long
long
ones
that
are
sitting
they're
out
there
in
the
piles.
A
A
This
should
be
the
hammer
stapler's
arm
and
materials.
We
gotta
dig
through
the
materials
the
osce
receiving
area
gotta,
get
those
we'll
grab
a
little
bit
of
house
wrap.
What
I
wanted
to
do
is
today
when
we
work
on
our
it's.
I
think
it's
parts
of
it
gonna
be
muddy.
So
what
we
wanna
do
is
lay
down
some
like
on
the
foundation.
As
we
walk
there,
I
think
it's
still
kind
of
muddy.
We
can
put
down
some
house
wrap
or
polyethylene
plastic,
so
we're
not
getting
the
foundation
all
dirty.
A
A
A
I
think
it's
a
single
or
double
one,
but
there's
a
lot
of
power
out
there
there's
a
heavy
power
line
out
there
that
we
ran
to
it.
So
when
you're
working
around
it
don't
like
rammy
or
that
power
line
there
is
live.
So
don't
like.
Take
your
shovel
and
step
on
it
and
cut
it
in
half
so
power
cord.
We
could
use
like
one
or
two
power
cords.
A
The
power
is
there,
but
we're
going
to
need
to
reach
that
the
places
we're
going
to
be
cutting
out
the
notches.
So
let's
get
a
couple
of
power
cords:
let's
get
like
the
trip
power
cord
multiplier,
one
of
those
multiple
outlet
things,
so
we
can
plug
into
power
cords
make
sure
we
have
that
razor
knife,
yeah
razor
knife
or
knife
more
like
knife,
they're
in
the
red
drawers,
there's
a
few
a
few
knives
in
there
or
a
pocket
knife
cement.
So
I
think
I
haven't
mentioned:
is
the
detail
of
cement
board?
A
A
Let's
do
that
right.
There.
That's
the
stuff,
protecting
the
insulation
from
getting
chewed
up
by
critters
and
by
people
kicking
it
or
going
into
it
with
a
lawnmower
or
whatever
you're.
Protecting
the
soft
insulation
with
cement
board.
We've
got
those
boards
sitting
in
material
areas.
We
they're
already
cut
they're
cut
to
12
inches
tall.
So
what
we
do
is
place
it
about
even
with
the
foundation
level
and
stick
it
down
into
the
ground
a
little
bit,
so
we
might
have
to
just
dig
like
a
little
the
foundation.
A
There
is
kind
of
like
all
uneven,
so
it's
somewhat
exposed,
but
we
might
have
to
dig
like
a
couple
of
inches
or
just
poke
the
in
the
cement
board
down,
possibly
dig
a
little
bit
with
a
heavy
hole.
We
just
gotta
access,
so
we
can
just
slip
it.
Next
to
the
foundation.
A
The
pieces
are
12
inches,
so
we
gotta
in
places
go
down
as
deep
as
six
inches
more.
We
gotta
like
dig
out
a
little
bit
just
easiest
way.
We
can
like
with
a
shovel.
I
guess,
go,
take
a
shovel
next
to
it
and
just
dig
out
without
destroying
the
insulation
there.
A
So
that's
the
detail
there.
This
goes
all
around
the
foundation
and
then
we
can
put
the
sideways
going
insulation
put
the
tar
paper
or
polyethylene
on
top
of
that
and
bury
that
with
soil.
So
we
can
walk
so
take
the
shovels
out
there
we'll
also
take
the
micro
track
out
there.
We,
which
we
can
use
for
that
role
like
of
burning
this
down
a
little
bit
and
also
smoothing
some
of
the
area
out
there
too,
but
this
needs
to
get
covered
so
that
you
know
it's
not
exposed
even
right.
A
So
that's
the
detail.
There
completing
the
materials
list
there
there's
a
cement
board.
Number
nine.
So
take
everything
like
all
the
stuff.
We
are
used
to
move
soul
around
shovels.
Pickaxe
heavy
hoes
rakes
like
grab
all
that
there's
some,
I
guess
I
see-
saw
some
around
the
house
there's
some
around
jeff's
house.
A
B
B
A
A
It's
a
roll
like
this.
It
looks
exactly
like
this.
This
is
what
we
got
10
by
50
feet,
so
we
need
to
grab
two
of
those
rolls
since
we
got
about
a
hundred
feet
of
perimeter,
so
it's
just
the
ten
inches
that
goes
once
we
have
the
sill
gasket
on
this
is
flexible
stuff,
so
we
just
wrap
it
around,
but
we
don't
want
to
puncture
this.
A
So
what
we
do
is
just
wrap
it
around,
because
this
is
your
water
seal
like
if
there's
condensation
ever
that
gets
on
the
back
side
of
your
wall
like
this.
Well,
this
basically
prevents
anything
that
would
slip
under
under
the
the
wall
makes
it
go
out
back
outside
because
it's
like
bent
around.
As
you
see
in
the
picture,
it's
bent
around
the
back.
A
If
you
look
at
the
detail
there,
so
there's
a
little
sliver,
we
cut,
but
but
the
vinyl
flashing
goes
up,
so
it
goes
above
the
the
cement
board
and
then
it's
going
to
get
pinched
down
once
we
have
our
wall
panels,
but
for
now
I
guess
probably
the
only
thing
we
could
do
right
now
is
split
it
like
just
no,
maybe
don't
don't
put
on
it,
because
once
we
get
the
walls
it's
gonna
like
we
have
to
weigh
it
down
or
hold
it
down.
A
Somehow.
So
maybe
maybe
don't
worry
about
that
yet,
but
the
useful
thing
about
it
is
just
to
make
sure
it
performs
like.
We
think
we
think
we
can
bend
it
around.
It's
just
flexible
plastic,
it's
like
thick
plastic,
but
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
can
bend
it
and
then
bend
it
around
the
back.
A
Then
an
interior
panel
around
the
back
and
the
interior
panel
is
going
to
pinch
that
down
at
the
end,
so
the
interior
panel
is
going
to
go
all
the
way
down
to
the
floor,
like
upon
house
finishing
towards
the
end.
This
is
the
interior
paneling
we're
going
to
cover
this
so
where'd
that
go
we're
gonna,
that's
gonna
be
the
interior
paneling.
So
you
hide
all
that
detail
there
and
it's
a
neat
finished
surface.
A
A
A
1.5
inch
these
want
to
be
exterior
screws
because
we're
screwing
into
treated
lumber
which
would
eat
other
kinds
of
screws
chemicals
in
treated
lumber.
They
make
metals
corrode.
So
you
have
to
have
exterior
grade
fasteners,
so
we
should
have
a
box
of
1.5
inch
deck
screws.
Once
again,
the
same
star
drive
like
we're
using
right
now,
they're
only
1.5,
because
that's
the
depth
of
the
sill
plate.
Then
you
go
into
concrete.
So
you
can't
go
more
than
1.5.
A
Sill
gasket
is
there's
the
two
by
four
and
two
by
six
versions
of
it.
We
bring
both
polyethylene
tar
paper,
there's
levels,
there's
knife
I
already
mentioned
the
knives
ramson
got
gun
plus
nail,
so
maybe
like
put
this
on
your
cell
phone
or
something
like
that.
Take
a
picture
and
you
can
go
down
there.
So
at
the
same
time,
there's
we're
finishing
up
all
modules.
I
did
want
to
put
up
another
rack,
so
we
can
put
in
all
the
wall
modules
that
we
have.
A
A
But
basically
what
you
got
to
do
is
put
in
junction
boxes
into
your
wall,
where
you're
going
to
put
your
outlets
or
wall
switches,
so
onto
the
framing,
we're
going
to
attach
these
outlet
boxes
and
then,
when
we
attach
the
outlet
boxes,
we're
going
to
run
wires
to
them,
we're
not
going
to
connect
them
because
they're
not
they're,
going
to
run
to
they're
going
to
be
connected
from
there's.
A
Let's,
let's
just
describe
that
here
so
inside
the
utility
channel
you'll,
have
this
junction
box,
all
the
wires
from
the
breaker
panel
go
to
those
junction
boxes.
Whatever
happens
after
that
within
any
panel
is
included
in
the
panel.
So,
for
example,
if
you've
got
a
light
on
a
module
or
an
outlet
or
a
switch,
that
junction
box
has
wires
that
go
to
that
and
give
power
to
it,
and
then
we
run
typically
like
one
wire,
possibly
two
to
each
of
these
junk
these
junction
boxes
within
the
utility
channel.
A
So
we're
going
to
add
that
still
that's
the
work
remaining
on
the
panels,
that's
why
we're
not
closing
them
up
yet
before
we
do
this,
we
actually
have
to
have
everything
well
organized.
We
have
to
know,
according
to
the
so
the
plan
electrical
plan.
So
the
concept
I
described
in
these
few
pages
electrical
101.
A
A
And
here
is
this
super
rudimentary
electrical
plan,
so
this
module
right
here?
That's
module
number
one
ends
up
having
the
breaker
panel.
We
can
actually
that's
inside
the
carport,
it's
still
exterior
plywood,
but
what
we
do
is
we
we
can.
Oh,
we
can
probably
attach
it
on
the
side,
but
we
have
to
have
a
hole
where,
where
the
wires
go
through
the
wall,
so
the
first
panel
needs
a
hole.
That's
that's
actually
defined
already,
but
from
there.
Okay,
so
you're
running
all
these
wires.
Just
like
this,
so
you
see
like
every
outlet.
A
A
No,
so
we
should
probably
quit,
but
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
there
is
like
a
basic
basic
deal,
so
yeah
maybe
quit
quit
on
that.
But
basically
that's
the
concept.
Now,
that's
that's
the
stuff.
That's
outstanding!
It's
just
kind
of
repeating,
okay,
but
on
the
foundation
here.
This
is
this.
Is
our
master
plan
so
take
a
copy
of
this?
Make
sure
you
have
this
and
then
we
go
by
these
dimensions
like
say
the
58
inches
and
stuff
like
that.
A
58
and
72
72
is
what
72
that's
six
feet,
so
the
wall
modules
that
we
built
they
have
one
foot
sitting
on
a
sill
plate
and
the
rest
is
the
door
things
like
that.
Yeah
yeah.
This
should
be
pretty
accurate
here,
so
we
can
lay
the
yeah,
let's
see
how
far
we
get
today,
but
we
want
to
probably
get
to
lay
down
all
the
insulation
cover
that
put
on
the
sill
plate.
That's
probably
what
we
could
do
any
questions
on
this
process.
A
Yeah
we
do.
We.
A
Yeah
we
could
do
that.
One
there's
another
one.
I
think
it's
actually
at
the
side,
if
not
katarina's
got
another
one.
There
so
grab
tools
from
all
over
any
questions
on
the
overall
process,
so
clean
clean
up
around
the
foundation
and
bring
all
the
lumber,
we
can
stick
the
lumber
in
the
back
of
the
car
I'll
pick
up
16
foot,
so
it
kind
of
has
to
ride
on
the
yeah.
A
A
Should
be
okay,
event
should
be
working,
so
you
should
pack
it
in
the
back
of
the
van
pack,
the
lumber
in
the
back
of
the
van
there's
only
six
pieces,
so
we
can
carry
it
over
we'll
just
walk
then.
Basically,
here
it's
north
go
up
the
road
to
jeff's
house
and
then
turn
left
through
the
forest
and
then
keep
going,
but
yeah
we'll
be
walking
all
up
there.
So,
let's
gather
up
everything,
maybe
take
a
picture
of
slide
two
and
four
or
two
and
three.
I
moved
it.