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trapperjoe
01-27-2016, 04:10 PM
Ive read that with the butt and pass system the logs dont settle... are these fresh cut, green logs? Any particular type trees?

loghousenut
01-27-2016, 04:56 PM
I have done it with green Doug Fir. No settling. Search the archives for one of the many old threads on the matter.

rocklock
01-27-2016, 05:35 PM
Ive read that with the butt and pass system the logs don't settle... are these fresh cut, green logs? Any particular type trees?

A quick answer... We use Green Whole logs. Many trees will work. If they make lumber out of that tree, it will most likely work. Doug Fir, Hem-Fir, pines, popular, etc. Even oak was used in a resent log home.

Our system is tightly pinned log home... Butt and pass is a style of corner. I have over 900 pieces of 23 inch re-bar holding everything together. the green logs shrink in all directions. These logs grab onto the re-bars and don't move. Later I must go back and shoot some chinking material into where the gaps in the chinking. Because the way I used insinuation between the logs very little outside air comes in these gaps in the chinking.

Again, it's not the corner system, its the 900 steel pins holding everything together in my home. See my home below.

Finally, green logs shrink. They shrink about 10%. So if you build a log wall where the logs support each other and the log wall is 100 inches high, after the logs dry the wall will be approximately 90 inches. Some kit makers air dry their logs several years. These will still shrink, not as much but the log wall will shrink...

dgrover13
01-28-2016, 04:21 PM
A quick answer... We use Green Whole logs. Many trees will work. If they make lumber out of that tree, it will most likely work. Doug Fir, Hem-Fir, pines, popular, etc. Even oak was used in a resent log home.

Our system is tightly pinned log home... Butt and pass is a style of corner. I have over 900 pieces of 23 inch re-bar holding everything together. the green logs shrink in all directions. These logs grab onto the re-bars and don't move. Later I must go back and shoot some chinking material into where the gaps in the chinking. Because the way I used insinuation between the logs very little outside air comes in these gaps in the chinking.

Again, it's not the corner system, its the 900 steel pins holding everything together in my home. See my home below.

Finally, green logs shrink. They shrink about 10%. So if you build a log wall where the logs support each other and the log wall is 100 inches high, after the logs dry the wall will be approximately 90 inches. Some kit makers air dry their logs several years. These will still shrink, not as much but the log wall will shrink...

About the shrinking - 10% so a pinned Butt and Pass structured wall will still drop from 100 to 90?

Timber
01-28-2016, 04:37 PM
Butt and Pass, if done correctly does not settle. Most would not recommend using fresh cut logs...unless you had to. Very heavy and will shrink...but not settle. Logs shrink to the center of itself..but does not shrink length-wise. However a fitted or notched log home will settle more with green logs=PITA

Pinned butt and pass does not settle but after it shrinks you will need to most likely..using green logs... re-chink it..or touch it up. The class will teach you everything you need to know. Dry logs or settled logs are more desirable...you learn how to prepare..everything...so ..you need to take the class.
I assume they are still showing a movie clip of a family cutting trees and hauling them out via horses..if i remember right.Last part of the class

rocklock
01-28-2016, 06:11 PM
About the shrinking - 10% so a pinned Butt and Pass structured wall will still drop from 100 to 90?

NO!

So if you build a log wall where the logs support each other... My logs (tightly pinned) are supported by the 900 steel (re-bar). That's the difference...

Wood vs. Steel which do you think will shrink? Surely this is clear...

edkemper
01-29-2016, 12:43 PM
So the answer is?

If you, someone without attending our class, decided to build a log home by stacking green logs, yes it would shrink/shrivel/fall/decrease by let's say 10%. Meaning, amongst other things, your doors won't work. Your windows won't work and will likely all break. Probable plumbing problems at some point. You will have something only you will love. But you could stay warm and dry for a while.

Or, you take our 2 (long) days of class. The class doesn't tell you to just stack logs. After the class, you get all the nut and bolt details you need to successfully build your personal real log home "our way." Which, looking at the history of this family, we have "unskilled" and "under educated builders" building homes that will stand for generations, long after the professionally built homes (not including Wiley) have turned to decayed wood matter. Most of the people on the other side, are in the process or have already completed their own, personally built homes. Things are not written in stone. New and improved minor details in our building process are discussed as they are developed. But what you learned in class, pretty much all of that has remained basically the same since our founder started this whole vision numerous decades ago.

I realize this all seems a little secretive. It's not. The basics are taught over two long days. Not really something that is best not taught on a Q&A forum of volunteers. The "instructors" of the class? They are two of the craziest people you will ever meet. The day you walk in the door, they will tell you that you can build your own real log home. Now that IS crazy. However, by the end of the weekend class, you will see "everything" differently.

Then, after the class, you get to meet the real Psych Ward. The member side is full of crazy people at some point in the process of either building or living in what they already built. There will likely never be any new questions about building our way that hasn't been hashed and rehashed many times already. The best part is there are plenty of people that have done the work before that can and will hold your hand through your own build.

The only thing that won't shrink is the size of our family.

When it comes to building a real log home with your own hands, every single one of us have been told by friends and family that we are crazy to think we can build log homes ourselves. Making it worse for non-believers, many of us are doing it debt free, without a mortgage. Crazy only in today's way of thinking.

mudflap
01-29-2016, 01:29 PM
I'm going to trust you guys on this one. No other "log home builder" class is making this promise, which is why I'll be in Vegas on Feb 13-14: so I can join the rest of the nutcases. :)

edkemper
01-29-2016, 01:32 PM
Just bring the mudflaps. I think you'll fit right in.

panderson03
01-29-2016, 04:37 PM
\.

Then, after the class, you get to meet the real Psych Ward. The member side is full of crazy people

I live in the psych ward.

loghousenut
01-29-2016, 10:54 PM
I live in the psych ward.

Did somebody call my name?





I'm here...







Yes?... I'm waiting.




Just come on in mudflap... The Nutcases are waiting patiently.

loghousenut
01-29-2016, 10:57 PM
There was such an echo that it posted the same jiberish twice.






Normally, I am so reserved that things like this don't happen to me.










Welcome home mudflap.

trapperjoe
01-31-2016, 08:55 AM
Thanks for the replies. I was asking about settling and was thinking "shrinking". Must get my terminology correct. Not much pine here in central Mo. Mostly oak, hickory. Also a lot of sychamore, cottonwood and hackberry. I wonder how hackberry would work...? Im told they are mainly used for pallet lumber.

Mosseyme
02-01-2016, 07:10 PM
I don't know about logs but we milled a little hackberry and it tended to split up a lot as it dried. Oak will work but is a devil to pound rebar into I hear. Hickory? I think the Oak devil would have ten friends. We had a hickory tip over and even with it green it would destroy a bandsaw mill blade with 1 eight foot log.
Sychamore? Here again I don't really know but if you could pin it together I think it would last a long time. We cut one down in the edge of our road and probably 10 years later we dug the stump out, whole, no rot, hard as a stone, unbreakable roots going out everywhere. If you have yellow poplar it makes really nice logs.

allen84
02-01-2016, 07:54 PM
I've cut down a few shagbark hickory trees around here. Real quick way to dull a fresh chain.