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From YouTube: Day 5 - House Build Overview
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A
A
Okay,
quick
overview,
so
so
you
see
the
big
picture
of
the
there's.
Another
document
called
seed
home
two-part
library.
I
just
pasted
it
into
the
table
of
contents
of
the
working
doc
for
this
this
day,
which
is
day
five,
so
part
library
walls.
Now
you
know
that's
not
our
current
model.
We
explored
this
one.
It's
that's
not
the
one.
We
have
a
double
door
like
that,
but
the
windows
are
at
the
front.
This
was
from
another
model.
We
were
developing,
so
you
can
see
how
that
goes.
A
Nothing,
let's
see
what
what's
to
be
mentioned
about
here,
you
see
the
plywood
is
on
exterior
plywood
is
on
the.
Let
me
go
into
present
mode.
Exterior
plywood
is
on
the
bottom
so
like
when
we're
starting
to
build
this.
This
is
like,
what's
going
to
look
like
first,
we
have
the
first
floor
entirely.
A
The
tops
are
going
to
be
open
like
it
is
here.
You
see
some
of
the
headers
above
the
windows.
You
see
some
of
the
headers
above
the
the
the
door
here
double
door,
so
these
are
the
modules
you've
seen
that
there's
house
wrap
that
goes
around
that
window
detail.
This
is
what
the
actual
names
are:
there's
top
plate
header
cripples
jack
studs
king
studs
studs
bottom.
Now,
if
you
notice
what
we
did
now
this
and
why
this
is
old,
can
you
tell
why
this
is
old?
A
How
different
is
this?
We
subtracted
about
two
big
studs
and
probably
something
else,
but
if
you
notice
there's
three
of
the
tall
vertical
ones,
what
we
did
in
the
next
iteration
is
just
to
this
is
the
sum
of
the
design
evolution.
We
just
split
spread
the
header
all
the
way
across
that
allows
you
to
save
one
of
the
big
vertical
studs.
A
Well,
that's
12
bucks
right
there
well
more
than
12
those
those
big
two
by
sixes
right
now
are
more
like
10
bucks,
so
each
so
we
saved
two
of
those
and
we
saved
another
one
that
goes
under
the
window.
If
you
just
take
a
look
at
this
and
examine
how
many
parts
we
took
out,
we
took
like
three
or
four
parts
out
and
still
made
it
well.
It
makes
it
easier
to
build.
Actually.
So
that's
that's
good
on
all
accounts.
A
You
can
look
at
the
parts
there.
Next
is
the
door.
That's
kind
of
how
it
looks
easy
double
door.
Once
again,
we
took
out
in
order
to
look
at
how
many
of
those
vertical
studs
there
are
out
on
the
sides.
There
there's
four
like
one,
two,
three,
four
on
each
side,
we
took
a
bunch
of
those
out
by
extending
the
header
all
the
way
across,
and
that
allowed
us
to
do
some
modifications
which
are
not
shown
here.
There's
upper
sheeting,
that's
the
band
that
goes
above
the
first
floor.
That's
that's
what
the
lower
roof!
Now!
A
A
Instead,
we
use
these
little
metal
clips
little
clips
that
allow
you,
because
this
blocking
here
so
that
you
uphold
the
edge
of
the
plywood
next
to
each
other.
You
can
do
that
or
you
can
do
these
clips,
that
bond
two
two
one
piece
of
plywood
here
and
one
there
and
it
holds
them
together.
You'll
see
the
details
there,
but
once
again,
this
is
another
example
of
simplification.
A
It
allowed
us
to
get
a
rid
of
a
hundred
feet
of
two
by
twelve.
That's
significant
upper
roof
and
the
upper
roof
is
kind
of
this.
Well,
we
actually
went
simpler
than
this,
so
we
took
instead
of
doing
all
these
tapered
studs,
because
the
roof
there's
no
such
thing
as
a
flat
roof.
A
flat
roof
has
a
slope.
Our
flat
roof
has
a
slope
of
four
inches
over
16
feet,
which
looks
flat,
but
it's
not
flat
because
you
want
water
to
drain
off
it.
Here
you
see
the
tapered
studs.
A
What
we're
actually
doing
right
now
is
we
took
the
whole
roof
and
just
shifted
it
at
an
angle
with
using
a
two
by
four
on
the
other
side,
so
it
avoids
this
extensive
cutting
of
all
these
ones.
It
simplifies
some
some
issues,
so
that's
that's
kind
of
all.
I
just
wanted
to
show
you
what's
what's
coming,
there's
the
second
story
floor
and
then
there's
the
roof
and
that's
your
house,
and
then
you
got
the
the
carport.
A
So
it's
a
brief
overview
of
the
whole
whole
thing,
but
you
can
see
how
you
kind
of
get
the
picture
of
how
it
all
fits
together.
Any
questions
on
that
is
there
there's
osb
cheating
on
the
outside
of
the
wall.
Modules
right,
yes,
always
be
shooting
on
the
outside
and
that's
what
provides
the
sheer
stability,
those
after
you
bond
the
two
panels
together
with
lag
bolts.
The
shears
like
this
shear,
that's
what
what
the
exterior
plywood
does.
That's?
A
Why
like,
when
we're
talking
about
the
studs,
don't
worry
if
they
kind
of
like
don't
exactly
fit,
because
the
ply
the
plywood
on
the
front
is
what
gives
it
a
lot
of
the
structure
like
if
you
have
the
remember,
we've
got
like
two
or
three
screws
at
the
bottom
yeah
on
the
bottom
studs.
Well,
the
sheathing
also
goes
over
that
to
the
to
the
what's
called
the
sill
plate,
and
then
you
screw
the
that's.
A
That's
what
gets
you
the
uplift
prevention,
because
you
can
put
like
every
six
inches
of
screw
and
that
that
exterior
plywood
is
quite
strong,
it's
five
eighths
and
with
a
good,
solid,
screw
schedule,
it's
pretty
solid.
So
if
you
think
about
it,
four
feet
of
it.
If
it's
half
an
inch,
it's
five
eighths,
but
if
it
were
half
inch
over
four
feet,
that's
like
having
you
know
like
a
two
inch.
Another
two
inch
bar
over
one
foot
equivalent
well
just
with,
like
eight
screws,
think
about
eight
screws.
A
Two
two
foot
two
inch
thick
piece
of
plywood
stuck
into
the
equivalent.
I'm
compressing
that
that
length
into
what
would
it
shrink
down
to
just
kind
of
think
about
what
it,
what
how
much
it
can
hold
but
yeah
like
all
those
screws
at
the
bottom
screw
into
it?
That's
that
gives
it
a
lot
of
strength.
A
Interior
plywood
gives
it
a
little
strength
more
because
that's
also
screwed
in,
but
that's
more
like
trim
screws.
So
it
doesn't
do
a
lot.
It
does
some,
so
we
won't
put
those
on
until
we
stand
up
the
wall
modules
on
the
foundation,
we're
going
to
put
the
exterior
on
now.
Okay
and
we're
gonna
do
the
interior.
A
No
not
yet.
Let's
do
some,
let's
do
more
framing
sure,
let's
get
to
the
windows.
Let's
start
the
windows,
and
after
that
we'll
go
through
the
layer
of
now
we
got
the
the
house
wrap
for
the
windows.
You
also
have
to
do
this
weather
protective
tape
around
the
corners
and
like
this
corner
flashing
details,
water
details,
so
there's
a
whole
bunch
there
now
now,
let's
just
kind
of
like
do
the
framing,
since,
since
we
master
that
and
kind
of
move
to
the
next
phase
and
building
up
the
module
to
a
full
build.
A
So
let's
do
the
windows
there's
six
six
windows
all
together,
so
it's
and
those
are
more
complicated.
I
mean,
after
you've
done
the
regular
modules,
nothing
but
just
different
length
members,
and
if
you
have
them
all
cut,
and
you
look
at
the
picture
you
see-
oh,
they
can
only
fit
one
way.
So
as
long
as
we
get
them
cut
right,
it
should
be
straightforward.
A
The
blocking
could
use
the
spacers
too.
We
can
use
the
same
spacers
as
before,
because
once
again
the
utility
channel
is
the
same
height
that
remains
all
the
spacing
remains
similar
to
before,
except
on
top
the
header.
No,
there
is
no
that's
where
the
plywood
actually
is
going
to
end
up
at
the
headers,
so
we
don't
have
the
upper
blocking
on
the
outside
because
the
header
is
going
to
be
there.
That's
that's
what
the
plywood
would
go
into
at
the
end.
A
So
let's
do
that
after
lunch.