The Forestry Forum
General Forestry => Timber Framing/Log construction => Topic started by: wisdom on September 27, 2020, 07:03:05 PM
I have been reading the forum for several years, decided to join recently. Thanks to all that offer the great resources and insight, as well as the project posts. Its been a joy to follow many of the threads and use this forum as a reference tool for learning. The collective information on this forum is amazing and humbling. I plan on building a couple of Timber Frames in the future. As in the quote below, Im here to sharpen my axe.
"If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I'd spend six sharpening my axe."
Lincoln
Welcome! What are you going to build?
Im planning on building a wood shed, barn, partial timber frame house/barndominium (in that order). I have an ample supply of white oaks that I plan to use. We have paused most of the infrastructure (septic, well, roads, etc..) due to lumber and supplemental supplies being at a premium. Along with limited selections. Im also continuing to modify the design of our house.
A couple things you can do in the meantime.... since you have white oaks.. Start making pegs. If most of your members are going to be 8 inch thick or less, make 12 inch long pegs. But your logs and start splitting them. You don't need anything fancy- a chainsaw, splitting maul for your first whack, Then when I've go the pieces down to a manageable size and they split straight, I use a hatchet with a large enough poll to whack with a rough Osage mallet. You could make a white oak one, almost as heavy. If you need more info, ask. I'm sure I can dig up a past post I did with more detail.
another thing you could do is make braces. 3'x3' braces are common. Cut white aok stock -4x8 or 4x6 stock and use these as a way to practice layout and cutting joinery. You need a lot of braces for a frame and they are usually pretty interchangable.