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The Open Concept | Westerly Ranch House
10/17/19 | 23m 42s | Rating: TV-G
The crew places a center beam in the old ranch house to support the second story. A hole is cut in the original foundation for a new basement window. Kevin visits an engineered lumber factory in Canada. Back at the project, Tommy and Jeff raise the end gables.
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The Open Concept | Westerly Ranch House
Kevin
Today, on "This Old House"... With this 40-foot beam in place, we're ready to start building our second floor.
Jeff
Right there!
Kevin
We're gonna be building a deck off the back of the house, and that's gonna cut all the sunlight off, so Jeff has got a noisy solution for us. What happened to all this plumbing here?
Richard
I've never seen anything like this before.
Roger
There's already rot going on in that trunk.
Kevin
So what have you found up here?
Tom
Well, a bit of a surprise.
Richard
It's really the classic plumber's lament.
Kevin
Nice! How excited are you guys to see that?
Extremely. KEVIN
Right? You're gonna have to choke down some dust first, though, before you get to that part.
Laughter
Extremely. KEVIN
A long way.
Tom
The money's in the detail.
Kevin
That is beautiful. Hi, there. I'm Kevin O'Connor, and welcome back to "This Old House" here in Westerly, Rhode Island. For the past 70 years, our little ranch here stood just one story tall, but over the next couple days, it is going to sprout a second level. Now, over the past couple weeks, there's been a lot of demolition. The exterior walls were taken down on this side of the house, a 20-foot-tall brick chimney came down with the help of Mark McCullough. And now, Jeff, we have framed up the perimeter walls for the first story. Time to start thinking about the second story, and, man, you promised us a big beam. Looks like you delivered. What am I looking at here?
Jeff
You're looking at one single piece 7'x18' PSL.
Kevin
And a PSL being?
Jeff
Parallel strand lumber. So, you can see here all these strands of lumber that are in parallel, all pressed together in a resin, and it adds a considerable amount of strength.
Kevin
And so, last week you said, what, 40-feet long, is that right? And it's because this is just a big, wide-open floor plan.
Jeff
Pretty much. There's one post in the middle here, it goes into that wall pocket there, we got posts on the other end, and it's an open floor plan back and forth here.
Kevin
So this is gonna help carry our new second story. Any sense of how much weight that is?
Jeff
We got about 35,000 pounds of floor system loading onto either side of this beam.
Kevin
So we need a big beam. If weren't using a PSL, I presume, what, steel is your option?
Jeff
Steel, yeah.
Kevin
What do you think about that?
Jeff
Well, we would have to have a steel column, steel column, and then crane. And then we'd have to pack out that steel web so that we could --
Kevin
With wood?
Jeff
With wood so that we'd get our floor system attached to it.
Kevin
Whereas with this, you're just gonna put, what, the hangers right to it?
Jeff
Yep,
nail right into it. Kevin
So, how much of this is gonna be buried in our floor system?
Jeff
So, floor system's 14 inch. So, we've got four inches of exposed there, and that's gonna get buried in transition. So we've got an archway into this living room and then we've got a coffered ceiling design into the kitchen/dining room, and that disguises that.
Kevin
So, you said one post in the middle. How do you hang the ends?
Jeff
So, this end is gonna go into a wall post there. There'll be another post supporting it. And then we're just framing this wall up. It's gonna stand up, and we're gonna post onto that one.
Kevin
So, we got to put that up before we put this up?
Jeff
We're gonna put that little section of wall up, and then we're ready to go. Ready? Ready?
Nail gun popping
Drill whirring
Jeff
All right, that post is set. So the beam on wheels here, we're gonna slide it over, we'll come right up against that column, and we'll jack it up, and then once we get up to a certain height, we'll go into that pocket and then we'll swing onto the top of this.
Man
Let me catch up. All right, now lift your end. You got to come up. Jeff, you're there.
Jeff
Yep, good.
Cranking
Metal squeaking
Kevin
Got it? That is beautiful, Jeff, right?
Jeff
How 'bout that? One piece.
Kevin
40-feet clear span, that's awesome.
Jeff
We got a column going right here, then we're ready to set floor joists.
Kevin
All right, beauty. That's progress. These windows are the only source of natural light down here in the basement, but we're gonna be building a deck off the back of the house, and that's gonna cut all the sunlight off, so Jeff has got a noisy solution for us. So, Jeff, what have you got for us for a solution?
Jeff
So, the other side, obviously, we've got that deck, so that's getting darkened. So what we're gonna do is we're gonna saw cut an opening in the foundation on the front side. There'll be a walkway that'll go by it, and we'll create a window well so that we retain the earth. But we've lined up a window to match these two windows that are in that front mudroom.
Kevin
So, the grade that I'm seeing right here is basically the finished grade, is that roughly the height?
Jeff
Yeah. Yep, that'll carry right across here.
Hence the window well. Jeff
Yep.
Kevin
Is it necessary? Is this for code or aesthetics or what?
Jeff
You're supposed to have two operable basement windows per code, and obviously the other windows will remain there, but they really aren't gonna allow for much daylight, so it's really more of a daylight convenience than it
is anything else. Kevin
All right. Well, I'm dying to find out what Bill's gonna be doing for us. Let me check. Hey, Bill. How you doing?
Bill
Good morning.
Kevin
I'm coming into your hole, okay? So, good morning. What is your process for cutting this hole here?
Bill
Okay, so essentially we're gonna cut out the concrete with a giant skill saw, with a big blade cutting through. So the first step is to determine where the window is gonna be. You mark your lines, and you set anchors.
Kevin
Beautiful.
Bill
These anchors hold this type of plate that'll rotate on a can that'll give you an adjustment to where the track has to go. I've already done that here, right? This is all set to the cut line, which is right here.
Okay. Bill
Okay?
Kevin
And the track is gonna be holding what?
Bill
The track will hold this part of the saw, which is called the carriage. All right, this carriage mounts on here. It runs on rollers that run it back and forth and a cog gear that lets it move back and forth. I'll run the saw back and forth with a drill with the gear.
Kevin
And obviously, the blades are right here. What do you got for a blade?
Bill
Okay, so this is a diamond blade. Right? There's diamonds inside each one of these segments, right? The exposed diamonds, the rotation cuts the concrete.
Kevin
How many cuts do you get out of a blade like this?
Bill
A blade like this, you'll probably get 40 or 50 cuts, and what determines how long it lasts is the aggregate in the concrete and the amount of rebar in the concrete.
Kevin
Right. Okay. And in terms of safety for you, what are you doing to keep the dust down, to stop the chips coming out? What's your process?
Bill
To keep the dust down, everything we use is with water. We pump water from the truck. It goes through the saw. It serves a dual purpose. It cools the motor, lubricates the blade, and keeps the dust down.
Kevin
Got it. Okay.
Saw whirring
Bill
It runs through a conversion box that takes it from 60 hertz, which is typical electric, converts it to 400 hertz.
Kevin
Whoa!
Bill
So it essentially boosts the power seven times.
Kevin
Got to get me one of those.
Bill
Yeah.
Kevin
I didn't know they even existed.
Bill
We've got eight and a half inches here with this blade, which is a 24-inch blade. We're gonna switch this one out and go to a 30. It should get us through to the 10 1/2 we need.
Kevin
Okay. So the second blade did a trick, right? Went all the way through?
Bill
Yep.
Kevin
Now you got to go to vertical?
Bill
Right.
Kevin
So close. Oh, look at that.
Jeff
Hey,
Bill. Kevin
Bill, you're the man. That's awesome. So, what do you got next, Jeff?
Jeff
So, we've got a double pressure-treated frame going all the way around, one down the middle to line up with that mullion, and we got two new windows going in.
Kevin
Love it. That's awesome. Jeff and his team are big fans of the laminated strand lumber they're using for the framing. They like it for its strength and consistency, so we decided to see how it's made. To find out, we traveled about 100 miles north of the U.S. border to Ontario, Canada. This is Canora, a small town that makes a lot of strand lumber. Bill,
nice to see you. Bill
Nice to see you.
Kevin
I can tell from what I'm looking at here this is already a very big operation. You're the plant manager?
Bill
That's correct.
Kevin
You got a big deal going on here.
Bill
Yeah. So, this is where it all starts, Kevin. This is poplar logs arriving, about eight-feet long. About 50 of these trucks a day arrive on site to keep us going.
Kevin
Unbelievable.
Bill
It gets down piled in the yard over there, and we've got about four or five weeks' supply, but this is where it all starts coming from the bush.
Kevin
And the whole purpose of everything going on here is to make some LSL -- laminated strand lumber, right?
Bill
That's correct. That's what we make here.
Kevin
All right. Well, are you ready to show me the whole process?
You bet I am. Kevin
All right, thank you.
Bill
So, Kevin, this is the start of our process here. So these are the eight-foot poplar logs that are being loaded into the process. We call those magazines. So we've got this high-lift loader that takes the logs either from a logging truck or actually from our yard and loads them into those magazines. So then it's really the weight of the logs in those magazines that push down into the conditioning ponds. So this is really the start of our whole LSL process. So, this is the conditioning ponds and jack ladders. So the logs spend about eight hours in the conditioning ponds. The ponds are heated up very hot, like 130 degrees during the winter, and it's really critical to thaw out the wood.
Kevin
So, primarily to thaw the wood and make it a little softer?
Bill
That's correct. During the winter, even during the summer, we'll have a little bit of heat on the pond just to soften it up a little bit.
Kevin
A big giant pond full of water, a machine brings them up here, and where's it dropping it?
Bill
It's dropping it into a jack ladder out feed conveyer, and that conveyer's gonna feed the logs into the debarker. It's a little bit down the stream. The logs also go through a metal-detect conveyor. It's a great thing right there. So we really want to prevent any metal getting into our debarker or into our strander. Kevin, we need to remove the bark from the log, so we have each of the logs go through the debarker singularly. We've got five knives that rotate around the log and cut the bark off. Then the barks are ready for the next part of the process, which is stranding. So we've created a pocket of wood here, and that's gonna get pushed forward into the strander ring. The strander ring is about eight feet in diameter or so. It's got 48 knives around the interior of the ring, and it'll travel through the wood and cut the strand.
Kevin
So, that big ring there, that's the actual strander, and it's going sideways across the wood?
Bill
That's correct. It's driven by 1,100 horsepower motor, and then it'll get indexed ahead for another cut. We're producing strands that drop off the bottom of that strander and go up the inclined conveyor tubes to some storage bins. This is one of four dryers that we have. The strands travel through here. They're being tumbled around like in a clothes dryer. And so they travel through to the end of the dryer. Takes about 15 minutes or so at about 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit to get down to the 2% to 3% moisture content that we need.
Kevin
And what's the heat source for your dryer?
Bill
This is really the heart of the plant, Kevin. This is one of our two fluidized bed combustors. Contains about eight tons of sand, and we start it up with natural gas, get it all heated up, and then we add fuel made up of our bark that we pick off the logs and off of sander dust or sawdust that we generate in the plant. So all the residuals that we generate essentially get burnt in our combustor.
Kevin
Right.
Bill
We're producing flue gas off our combustor to dry our strands down to 2% to 3% moisture content, and then we're also using the flue gas to heat up thermal oil. When the plant was built, it was one of the largest thermal oil systems in North America with 80,000 gallons of thermal oil, and we use that thermal oil to really move heat around the plant. We use it to heat up the ponds, the conditioning ponds, we use it to keep the plant warm during the winter, and we use it to generate steam for our steam-injection press.
Kevin
Wow. So, very efficient.
No waste. Bill
No waste at all.
Kevin
And this is the control room?
Bill
This is where we manage and operate our energy system and our dryers in this area here. And over here, we operate our blending, where we're blending strands with resin and wax. We're forming a mat through orienters to line up the strands in the machine direction, and that's outside here. And then we have a mat. Today we're pressing 1 1/2" wall-framing products.
Kevin
So, essentially 2x4s that we use.
Bill
That's correct, yeah. The mat of strands is about a foot thick coming down the line. The forming process is a continuous one, so we have to cut that mat at some point. And we have a flying cutoff saw that starts to travel with the mat and cuts across, then we accelerate the mat into the single-opening steam-injection press, which is very unique.
Kevin
And how long is the mat, the one that you cut?
Bill
The mat's about 64-feet long, 8-feet wide, and, again, about 12-inches thick for this product.
Kevin
Mm-hmm.
Bill
It goes through the pressing process and a very unique steam-injection press, which softens the mat with steam and helps cure the resin. After the mat then becomes -- we call it a billet, and it'll actually go through a splitter saw that'll split the billet in half, 4'x4' for example. And goes down a roll case into a billet cooler. We need to cool it off for a couple hours so that it stops off-gassing.
Kevin
Can you cut 'em once they're cooled?
Bill
That's correct. Then we go to our products area, which is really just a saw mill that cuts the billet down to size. We make something like 500 different products out of TimberStrand, out of LSL. This represents the kind of range, from a 2x4 or wall-framing material...
Kevin
Yeah.
Bill
...all the way to this 3-1/2x11-7/8 header that's used above garage doors and above walls and windows.
Kevin
And everything in-between?
Bill
And everything in-between, yes.
Dan
Hi, Kevin. Welcome to our QA lab.
Kevin
Thank you. What are we testing?
Bill
So today, we're gonna be determining the strength-and-stiffness performance of this 155 3-1/2-inch beam. So, basically, what we're gonna do is we're gonna take this beam, and we're gonna put it on this test frame. We're gonna load it to a certain deflection. From that data we receive back from this test frame, we'll be able to determine its stiffness-and-strength performance and whether or not it met the required performance for this grade of product.
Kevin
All right. That was a full-on explosion.
Dan
Yeah. That was a good test.
Kevin
So it -- it broke. What'd you learn?
Dan
So what we learned was it took over 4,000 pounds of force to break it, and the data is also telling me that it met its stiffness requirements or its MOE requirements. So we got a good test. Typically, in the lab, we'll do four more of those samples on the flexure machine, and then over there, we're gonna actually rip some boards in half on our tension tester.
Let's do that. Dan
Okay.
Dan
Okay, Kevin. What we're gonna do here is we're gonna determine tensile strength of this product. We'll turn the machine on, and it will basically just rip it in half.
Kevin
So what am I looking at here? What are the different metrics?
Dan
So what this is telling us is basically the amount of load or pounds force it has on that tension.
Climbing fast. Dan
Climbing fast, and it should break approximately over 30,000 pounds to actually bring it to failure.
Kevin
30,000.
Dan
That's it!
Laughs
Kevin
That's unbelievable.
Dan
So that broke at over 35,000 pounds.
Kevin
Wow, and so, what would be a passing number? What's the threshold?
Dan
For this one, for this particular product, if you're above 20,000, you're in good shape.
So you're well above -- Dan
Oh, yeah. We're well above.
Kevin
Passed with flying colors.
Dan
Yep, we're well above. That was a good test.
Congrats. Dan
Okay.
Bill
So this is our automatic strapper where we're applying vinyl straps around the stack, you know, every four or five feet or so
to hold the stack together. Kevin
Right.
Bill
And then it gets transferred over to our bundle cut-saw over here, which is really a horizontal band saw. And that's what we use to finally cut the 64-foot stacks to lengths the customer needs.
Kevin
So you've actually banded it while it's still 64-feet long?
Bill
That's correct, and we automatically know where the cuts are going to take place, so we can position with that.
Machinery whirring
Bill
We now have bundles of LSL that are cut to length, and they're approaching our wrap station here. So, at our wrap station, we're applying an end seal, a waterproofing end seal. We're applying waterproof wrap to our bundles, stapling it on, and then we're applying SAP logos and product information onto the bundle. And this is where the bulk of the people in the plant work is actually at the wrap station.
Kevin
Everything else is automated?
Bill
That's correct. Haven't automated this yet. We're working on it. This is our rail-car loading bay here. We'll load out up to 25 rail car a week and about another 75 trucks, and that's going to locations all across North America. In fact, we also ship some off to Japan.
Kevin
Well, that is a lot of product. Bill, I really appreciate the tour, and I know we've got more of this coming to our house. So thank you in advance for that delivery, as well.
Thanks very much. Kevin
Appreciate it.
Tom
So, Jeff, you're making good progress here. You got the second gable being framed right here.
Yeah. Tom
Looking good. That one over there's already ensheathed and ready to go up.
You bet. Tom
I see these studs are gonna run right from the plate all the way up, so it's almost like a balloon-framed wall.
Jeff
Right. And the nice thing about the engineered studs, to your point, we can balloon frame. We got a 20-footer here right to the peak, so that thing's straight as an arrow.
It really works out well. Tom
It's good when you balloon frame because you don't have any of that hinge effect where the two plates meet.
Jeff
Exactly. Exactly.
Tom
So it's actually a pretty strong wall, but these suckers are heavy.
Jeff
They are heavy. They are.
Tom
All right. So let me give you a hand.
We'll sheathe this down. Jeff
All right. Okay.
Tom
That is perfectly flush.
Jeff
All right, so we have to blow off this deck to put our weather membrane down.
Tom
Right. Now, this is a self-sealing membrane that's gonna skim right over the deck and stick to it. So you're right. We want to make sure it's clear. And this is designed to keep water and air from penetrating the siding. This actually allows it to help to breathe. We're using a hard-rubber roller to push the product tight against the sheathing to make a good connection.
Jeff
All right. All ready to go. Now we're ready to stand it. We're gonna need some help.
Tom
Yeah, we definitely need some help.
Jeff
All right. I'll get the guys up here.
Tom
All right. Good.
Jeff
All right. So, uh, I need 24-inch rips of OST.
Tom
All right. So when you're building a wall that you're gonna stand up on the floor, the first thing you want to do is stand this plate up in the position that it belongs. So there's a line snapped on the deck right back here, and the edge of it is on that line. You then attach all your studs to make sure, when you stand this wall up, that the wall doesn't slide off. You apply this piece of metal strap right here, and there's about four of them on this wall. One here, nailed in the side, goes down underneath, and comes out the other side and nailed to the deck. What that is, it actually is a hinge, so when you stand the wall up, the plate won't move.
Jeff
Ready? One, two, three, up.
Man
Come on, baby. Come on.
Tom
All right. Keep on going. Keep on going. There we go. There you go. All right.
Jeff
Okay, good. That's good. Nail it. Coming in,
just a little bit. Man
All right.
Jeff
Right there, right there, right there. Love it. Up. Okay. Push. Keep going. Keep going. Keep going.
Tom
You guys have it?
Jeff
Back a little, back a little, back a little. Right there! Nail it.
Tom
All right, Jeff. Those gable ends go up, and a lot of progress is made today.
Jeff
Next time, we'll be standing those dormer walls.
Tom
That's right. So until then, I'm Tom Silver.
Jeff
And I'm Jeff Sweenor.
Tom
For "This Old House." Yeah. It's really looking good.
Kevin
Next time on "This Old House"...
Jeff
Go!
Man
I would want to learn how to put up the right, proper siding. I want to learn how to put the plumbing in correctly -- everything from the beginning to the end.
Woman
This is what I know I want to do with my life.
Kevin
You ready to get to work?
Man
Most definitely. When do we get started?
Jeff
Well, that is some nice progress today.
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