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Sunday, August 16, 2020

Episode 6 — Reduce, Reuse, Recluse



Here's some links from this episode:

More about epoxy grout

https://www.finehomebuilding.com/2007/10/05/two-projects-with-epoxy-grout

Sheet metal panel profile courtesy of

https://www.mbci.com/about-us/mbci-plus/houston/houston-panels/pbu/

Correcting my caulk mistake

http://www.spasmsofaccommodation.com/2017/03/regret-for-my-past-self-correcting-caulk.html


How I made a mini split line chase out of vinyl gutter

http://www.spasmsofaccommodation.com/2017/03/how-i-made-minisplit-line-chase-out-of.html


Fire resistance requirements over foam insulation

https://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/question/alternate-compliance-to-the-irc-thermal-barrier-requirement-for-foam-insulation

I want to try something. I'm going to paste in the whole subtitle file in the blog in case I ever need to find a particular part of this long-ass video. Or in case anybody else needs to find it. That seems unlikely. But still. Here it is. I shall not transcribe in vain!

One neat thing about having an .srt file is I can quickly have TextEdit count how many times I said "tiny house" in this video.

21 times. I said it 21 times. 

1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,934
Hi. My name is Barbara. I'm a blank builder and a blogger 
and I'm on a mission to rebuild and repurpose

2
00:00:05,934 --> 00:00:10,767
this 71 year old aircraft construction aluminum trailer 
home, Ally Mo

3
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But today I want to show you my tiny house

4
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I started building my tiny house in January of 2005

5
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I had a full time job as a scientist

6
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So every two weeks I'd take my paycheck and buy lumber

7
00:00:41,333 --> 00:00:44,333
And then on the weekends I would build my house

8
00:00:44,333 --> 00:00:48,734
 A lot of the materials are surplus and salvage

9
00:00:48,734 --> 00:00:51,233
Or materials I had leftover from other projects

10
00:00:51,233 --> 00:00:55,533
My house is so small it doesn't take a lot of material to 

11
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So what's leftover from a big job is enough to build an 
entire tiny house

12
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I'm going to talk about some construction details as well as
 maintenance that  I do on my house

13
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I'm doing an intensive spring cleaning where I move 
everything out so I can scrub underneath it

14
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So I thought it would be a good time to do a tour of the 
tiny house

15
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My house is clad with HardiePlank

16
00:01:19,667 --> 00:01:22,633
With HardiePlank trim boards

17
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 But the top part is done with HardieShingles

18
00:01:26,066 --> 00:01:35,066
and my soffits were too wide for my HardieSoffit so I did 
them in this sort of step fashion 

19
00:01:35,066 --> 00:01:41,900
And I have a bent sheet metal rake flashing

20
00:01:45,033 --> 00:01:51,166
And the vent stack for my bathroom comes out of the wall 
instead fo the roof

21
00:01:51,166 --> 00:01:56,233
When I put the siding on my house I used a Snapper Shear to 
cut the HardiePlank

22
00:01:56,266 --> 00:02:02,867
 I love this tool because it's quiet and feels relatively 
safe compared to a circular saw

23
00:02:02,867 --> 00:02:10,166
But a saw blade leaves sort of a burnished edge. The shear 
basically works by pulverizing the product

24
00:02:10,166 --> 00:02:16,834
It leaves the cut end very dusty. I didn't realize at the 
time just how problematic that would be

25
00:02:16,834 --> 00:02:20,767
but I should have. Caulk can't stick to dust.

26
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Where the factory ends butt up against the corner trim the 
caulked joints look perfect. 

27
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But the ends I cut, the caulk didn't stick. Little cracks 
appeared

28
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I should have washed the ends of the siding in a bucket of 
water with a brush and then let them dry before caulking.

29
00:02:36,633 --> 00:02:41,633
Since I didn't do that I had to redo the caulk 12 years into
 the 50 year warranty

30
00:02:41,633 --> 00:02:48,033
I cut the caulk where it was very strongly bonded to the 
corner boards and I got all the old caulk out of the joints

31
00:02:48,033 --> 00:02:54,133
I could make dust come billowing out of the crack with these
 little dental brushes I got at the grocery store   

32
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I washed the whole house down with a scrub brush and a hose 
after I opened up all the cracks

33
00:02:59,900 --> 00:03:06,266
Then I scrubbed out each little crack again with the tiny 
dental brush until no more dust came out

34
00:03:06,266 --> 00:03:13,800
At the end of the job I had about 115 grams of wasted caulk.
 This is a data point without a purpose 

35
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I was able to recaulk all these joints with less than one 
tube of caulk

36
00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:27,800
I bought one gallon of satin house paint and repainted the 
lap siding on three sides of the house. I still have over a 
quart of paint left

37
00:03:29,266 --> 00:03:33,633
The roof of my tiny house is industrial sheet metal

38
00:03:39,867 --> 00:03:43,266
My roofing metal was 8' cutoffs from a bigger job

39
00:03:43,266 --> 00:03:46,233
And it was enough to do my whole house

40
00:03:46,233 --> 00:03:49,667
And that's why my roof has this interesting profile

41
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Because the pieces weren't very long

42
00:03:53,333 --> 00:03:56,333
You can also see all the pine straw on my roof

43
00:03:56,333 --> 00:04:02,300
One of my regular maintenance tasks is several times a year 
I have to sweep the pine straw off the roof

44
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It's time to do it again now

45
00:04:04,266 --> 00:04:09,266
This little bump out is because I didn't trim my rafter 
tails, I just put siding over them

46
00:04:09,266 --> 00:04:13,967
Because if I had made that transition sharp 

47
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I wouldn't have been able to nail anything into the acute 
angle at the top 

48
00:04:19,100 --> 00:04:25,734
So by making this little... I don't even know what to call 
it... this thing

49
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this bump-out place, I was able to make my wall and roof 
work out

50
00:04:34,200 --> 00:04:42,066
My ceiling is made with HardieSoffit, 12 inch wide smooth 
Hardie material

51
00:04:42,066 --> 00:04:47,700
My cousin gave me some paint samples that she bought to try 
on her house 

52
00:04:47,700 --> 00:04:53,333
And I kind of liked them together and I had two quarts of 
this paint for free so I just made stripes

53
00:04:53,333 --> 00:04:58,300
In between my HardieSoffit is some PVC lattice

54
00:04:58,300 --> 00:05:03,333
Nailed up just to cover the joints

55
00:05:03,333 --> 00:05:07,900
When I first built my house I didn't have a porch, I had a 
patio

56
00:05:07,900 --> 00:05:14,333
And the steps came down to these three 4x4s

57
00:05:15,166 --> 00:05:18,834
And then I decided I wanted to turn my door around

58
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I had an inswing door and I decided to turn it around so it 
was an outswing door

59
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And build a porch

60
00:05:26,266 --> 00:05:29,266
So the patio is still underneath there

61
00:05:29,266 --> 00:05:35,300
And I totally reused the steps. There was nothing wrong with
 the stair treads or the risers 

62
00:05:35,300 --> 00:05:41,433
I have since replaced two of the treads. So these two treads
 are new. They split and wore out

63
00:05:41,433 --> 00:05:48,233
So I've been replacing these one at a time. I can get them 
at Home Depot. They're about $11 a piece. 

64
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So as they wear out I get new ones

65
00:05:51,734 --> 00:05:56,600
And it seems to be working good, as long as they don't 
discontinue these stair treads

66
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So this stair tread is 15 years old

67
00:06:00,633 --> 00:06:05,033
And this one is about 2 years old and this one is 1 year old

68
00:06:05,033 --> 00:06:13,433
My porch floor is screwed down, directly screwed down with 
Deckmate screws

69
00:06:13,433 --> 00:06:17,700
And then I puttied over it with that Minwax putty that 
smells like Bondo

70
00:06:17,700 --> 00:06:22,467
And then paint the whole thing. I didn't wait for it to cure
 or anything

71
00:06:22,467 --> 00:06:30,633
I primed it and painted it with Behr Porch Paint. And it's 
holding up really well. This is at least 10 years or 12 
years old.

72
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A few years ago my house started to sink

73
00:06:33,633 --> 00:06:37,000
And the way I knew was this conduit broke

74
00:06:38,300 --> 00:06:42,500
And my main drain to the septic tank broke

75
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What happened was my posts that I had I buried directly into
 the ground had started to rot

76
00:06:49,333 --> 00:06:54,066
They started to rot right at the interface to the ground

77
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So I bought some house jacks

78
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Some of which I have left here

79
00:06:59,967 --> 00:07:03,567
So I bought these house jacks and jacked the house back up 
about an inch

80
00:07:04,066 --> 00:07:07,800
And then I dug out around the posts

81
00:07:08,867 --> 00:07:12,600
And I formed up concrete footings

82
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With Simpson Strong Tie brackets

83
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Poured me some concrete

84
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And then I added these 2x6 braces

85
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Between the ribbon joist and the concrete footing

86
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And that stiffened up those 4x4s a lot

87
00:08:03,200 --> 00:08:08,033
One thing I found really fascinating when I was digging up 
these posts that had rotted

88
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The one that was the least rotted was the one right by the 
outdoor shower

89
00:08:12,800 --> 00:08:15,166
Because I have a shower pan 

90
00:08:15,166 --> 00:08:22,633
Underneath this gravel there's a layer of visqueen that's 
made into a shower pan

91
00:08:22,633 --> 00:08:25,633
And it drains into a dry well

92
00:08:25,633 --> 00:08:31,000
A gravel... a ditch full of gravel under the ground

93
00:08:31,000 --> 00:08:34,400
So the outdoor shower doesn't run out on the ground

94
00:08:34,867 --> 00:08:38,500
And the result of that design is that this post did not rot 
out

95
00:08:38,500 --> 00:08:42,100
when all of the other ones did

96
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Of course I redid the footing under it anyway. Then I 
completely rebuilt my shower

97
00:08:46,900 --> 00:08:52,300
My outdoor shower floor requires maintenance cleaning mostly

98
00:08:52,300 --> 00:08:58,266
And then from time to time I replace some of these things. 
See tis one is cracked and I might need to replace that one 
soon

99
00:08:58,266 --> 00:09:03,567
I've only replaced two of these in 15 years though

100
00:09:03,567 --> 00:09:07,800
And I reuse the screws every time. These stainless steel 
screws are gonna last forever 

101
00:09:11,667 --> 00:09:15,000
The rest of my outdoor shower in my rebuild project

102
00:09:15,000 --> 00:09:19,867
The walls of my outdoor shower are made with vinyl blinds

103
00:09:19,867 --> 00:09:23,433
You can get vinyl blinds cut at Home Depot

104
00:09:23,500 --> 00:09:31,533
So I had a package of vinyl blinds cut to this length and I 
screwed them on with stainless steel pan head screws 

105
00:09:31,567 --> 00:09:35,867
And this has held up for several years. 

106
00:09:35,867 --> 00:09:41,633
It looks good, it's lightweight. I've been really pleased 
with this outdoor shower screen

107
00:09:41,633 --> 00:09:44,633
I mean, it's kinda wonky, but I don't care. It's fine

108
00:09:47,400 --> 00:09:51,367
I just took a shower and in the time it took me to get 
dressed and get out here with a camera

109
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 you can see that this wall is already dry

110
00:09:54,834 --> 00:09:59,367
This is porcelain tile with epoxy grout

111
00:09:59,367 --> 00:10:05,967
And it looks exactly the same as the day I finished it 15 
years ago

112
00:10:05,967 --> 00:10:09,734
And I imagine this will be the last thing remaining on my 
house

113
00:10:09,734 --> 00:10:16,800
I maybe scrub it with a stiff bristle brush maybe once a 
year if it gets a little algae on it

114
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But it's amazing

115
00:10:18,700 --> 00:10:25,633
After 15 years this showerhead, the chrome is flaking off. 
But it's brass underneath 

116
00:10:25,633 --> 00:10:28,633
I don't think anything bad's gonna happen

117
00:10:28,633 --> 00:10:34,700
It's getting gross with calcium buildup. I need to soak it 
in vinegar

118
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I took this part off and cleaned it with vinegar a year or 
two ago.

119
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Because it gets water spots on it

120
00:10:43,133 --> 00:10:47,667
But I just take it apart and soak it in vinegar and it's 
fine

121
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Let's take a moment to admire my North elevation. Pretty 
cute, huh?

122
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I got that round window at the surplus and salvage place. I 
think it makes my house look a little bit like a birdhouse

123
00:11:01,367 --> 00:11:09,533
The lines from the mini split are two copper lines, an in 
and an out and a control wire

124
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Plus a condensate line

125
00:11:13,100 --> 00:11:21,200
With some vinyl gutter and aluminum flashing I was able to 
make this enclosure for the lines

126
00:11:21,200 --> 00:11:25,467
for the air conditioner and it looks much nicer

127
00:11:27,266 --> 00:11:33,200
When I started building my house this little tree right here
 was only in the wiregrass stage

128
00:11:33,200 --> 00:11:36,433
Which means it was a little thing about this big.

129
00:11:36,433 --> 00:11:44,200
And I was real careful not to step on it or damage it. So 
this tree is fifteen years old, minimum

130
00:11:44,200 --> 00:11:50,867
So this is what longleaf does if it's kept in the shade and 
grows really slow

131
00:11:50,934 --> 00:11:55,400
Fifteen year old longleaf pine

132
00:11:55,400 --> 00:11:59,834
I'll have to cut it down when it starts to interfere with 
the house, 

133
00:12:00,900 --> 00:12:05,734
but I'm keeping it for now. It's like my pet.

134
00:12:05,734 --> 00:12:08,967
This aluminum table is basically my outdoor kitchen

135
00:12:08,967 --> 00:12:13,567
The back feet are secured to the floor with a bolt through 
the last deck board

136
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so it doesn't fall off

137
00:12:16,700 --> 00:12:20,066
In a previous life I was an interior designer

138
00:12:20,066 --> 00:12:29,367
And these porcelain tiles were samples I got for a floor for
a gymnasium at an Air Force Base

139
00:12:29,367 --> 00:12:32,367
I wonder if they ever built it?

140
00:12:32,367 --> 00:12:35,367
I liked the color combo

141
00:12:38,633 --> 00:12:43,800
I get my induction hotplate out of the house

142
00:12:47,767 --> 00:12:54,600
And I have this little skewer I use to prop open my cover 
for my outlet

143
00:12:54,600 --> 00:13:06,033
Because my old hotplate, it damaged the strain relief on the
cord from the tension of the spring in this lid

144
00:13:08,433 --> 00:13:14,400
Now if I want to cook something that makes a big mess, like 
fry something

145
00:13:14,400 --> 00:13:20,400
I'll get a piece of corrugated plastic, those big sheets 
they sell at Home Depot

146
00:13:20,400 --> 00:13:23,200
and lean that up against the wall

147
00:13:23,200 --> 00:13:26,233
And sometimes I'll put a drop cloth down if I'm making jelly
or something

148
00:13:26,233 --> 00:13:30,133
Because I can just slide it under the front feet of the 
table

149
00:13:30,133 --> 00:13:35,533
And then if I splash cranberries or something on the floor 
it doesn't get all sticky

150
00:13:35,567 --> 00:13:40,533
When I first built my house I bought this prehung fir door 
from the lumberyard

151
00:13:40,533 --> 00:13:46,400
I stained it with a Chinese Red Laquer color stain

152
00:13:46,400 --> 00:13:51,567
And finished it with water based polyurethane

153
00:13:51,567 --> 00:13:55,934
So originally this was the inside of my door

154
00:13:55,934 --> 00:14:00,200
But then I turned the whole thing around. I took the jamb 
out

155
00:14:00,200 --> 00:14:03,333
I took the jamb out and took the threshold off and reversed 
it

156
00:14:03,333 --> 00:14:06,333
So now it swings out

157
00:14:06,333 --> 00:14:11,734
My dad made me this oak threshold that I just love. This oak
threshold is the bomb

158
00:14:11,734 --> 00:14:14,734
And that's the only thing in my house that has an oil based 
finish. 

159
00:14:14,734 --> 00:14:17,734
That has spar varnish

160
00:14:17,734 --> 00:14:20,734
But all the rest of my clear finishes are water based 
polyurethane

161
00:14:20,734 --> 00:14:23,734
I just wore a respirator when I did that.

162
00:14:28,000 --> 00:14:32,400
You may be looking at these 2x4s thinking, "Barbara, what 
the hell are those?"

163
00:14:32,400 --> 00:14:35,400
Ya know? I don't know

164
00:14:36,166 --> 00:14:38,133
It seemed like a good idea at the time

165
00:14:38,133 --> 00:14:42,900
Part of my ongoing maintenance is to watch caulk joints like
this. I need to fix this

166
00:14:42,900 --> 00:14:47,166
It never gets wet. Even in hurricanes this doesn't really 
get wet up here, 

167
00:14:47,166 --> 00:14:52,433
But it does get wet when I wash it. So I need to fill this 
caulk gap

168
00:14:54,133 --> 00:14:59,567
Let's take a look at the inside. I'll spin the camera

169
00:15:29,867 --> 00:15:32,867
The reason my tiny house doesn't feel tiny

170
00:15:32,867 --> 00:15:37,367
Is because it has so much light from these giant windows

171
00:15:37,367 --> 00:15:40,100
And you can just see outside all the time

172
00:15:40,100 --> 00:15:45,633
So you don't feel closed in, you just feel part of the 
outdoors

173
00:15:45,633 --> 00:15:51,066
But without the bugs and with air conditioning

174
00:15:51,066 --> 00:15:55,867
Now the camera is set for the indoor lighting

175
00:15:56,333 --> 00:16:03,600
My grandparents enclosed a porch at their house with sliding
glass doors, maybe in the 70's or the '80s

176
00:16:03,633 --> 00:16:12,800
And in about 2004 a microburst tornado knocked a tree down 
on it

177
00:16:12,800 --> 00:16:18,033
And they tore it down and built an exact replica

178
00:16:18,033 --> 00:16:20,133
But with low-e glass

179
00:16:20,133 --> 00:16:23,767
So they gave me all the sliding glass doors that came out of
it

180
00:16:23,767 --> 00:16:26,767
And I used four of them in my house 

181
00:16:26,767 --> 00:16:33,500
I used all 3 foot ones. I still have some 4 foot ones in my 
shed, if I want to build a bigger tiny house?

182
00:16:36,066 --> 00:16:41,700
I moved into my house in November when I just had Tyvek over
the window holes

183
00:16:41,700 --> 00:16:46,533
So I was motivated to put the windows in

184
00:16:46,533 --> 00:16:49,266
I tried to do all of them in a weekend

185
00:16:49,266 --> 00:16:55,600
And I didn't really know how. I didn't have a very good plan
when I framed up the openings

186
00:16:55,600 --> 00:17:02,467
So I just sort of shoved them the hell in there and just 
caulked the fuck out of it   

187
00:17:02,467 --> 00:17:05,467
because I needed it to not be so cold

188
00:17:06,633 --> 00:17:13,433
So I don't really... one day I will take these out and buy 
some good low-e glass windows, 

189
00:17:13,433 --> 00:17:16,433
plate glass windows to put in here.

190
00:17:16,433 --> 00:17:20,567
And do it properly. But it's holding up. I mean it's not 
leaking or anything

191
00:17:20,567 --> 00:17:25,333
This thing is a plenum for the exhaust fan

192
00:17:25,333 --> 00:17:28,100
Right here I have a switch for my fan 

193
00:17:28,100 --> 00:17:31,100
And the light over my head

194
00:17:31,100 --> 00:17:34,100
And the light over the sink

195
00:17:34,100 --> 00:17:37,100
Let's see what the fan sounds like 

196
00:17:40,266 --> 00:17:43,266
So that's not bad. Just sort of a low rumble

197
00:17:45,900 --> 00:17:48,900
Wanna hear what it sounds like outside?

198
00:17:53,066 --> 00:17:59,166
There's an opening here where it sucks air to the outside

199
00:17:59,166 --> 00:18:03,333
And then there's another one in the house part, in the loft

200
00:18:03,333 --> 00:18:08,166
And this thing, this bump-out

201
00:18:08,166 --> 00:18:12,800
Is so the plumbing stack can go out the wall

202
00:18:16,867 --> 00:18:21,500
For lighting in my bathroom here in this little vestibule

203
00:18:21,500 --> 00:18:26,200
I have a ceramic schoolhouse light that I got on ebay.

204
00:18:26,200 --> 00:18:31,600
And I fixed it. I put a new socket in it. 

205
00:18:31,600 --> 00:18:35,266
I love me some ceramic fixtures from ebay

206
00:18:35,266 --> 00:18:38,266
They don't go bad. They're great 

207
00:18:38,967 --> 00:18:45,500
And I have a 60 Watt bulb with a reflective bottom in it 
right now

208
00:18:45,533 --> 00:18:49,800
Because I bought some on sale when I was buying lamp parts

209
00:18:50,033 --> 00:18:56,667
I haven't gone to all LEDs and stuff because that light's on
like, maybe 5 minutes a day

210
00:18:56,867 --> 00:19:05,900
The lights here at the sink are just the cheapest $15 light 
fixtures that Home Depot carries that I didn't hate

211
00:19:08,166 --> 00:19:12,100
I insist that lights be on either side of the mirror

212
00:19:12,100 --> 00:19:15,667
Overhead light is RIGHT OUT

213
00:19:16,600 --> 00:19:18,333
But these are fine

214
00:19:18,333 --> 00:19:21,333
And they're not on that much. I have so much light in here

215
00:19:21,600 --> 00:19:26,834
I mean, do I need light? No, I don't need light

216
00:19:27,667 --> 00:19:32,200
When all my clothes and stuff are in here I have a mirror 
right here in front of the window

217
00:19:32,200 --> 00:19:37,000
Where I can do makeup and stuff and the lighting is just 
perfect

218
00:19:37,000 --> 00:19:40,000
It's my favorite thing about this bathroom

219
00:19:40,066 --> 00:19:43,066
This window faces West

220
00:19:45,500 --> 00:19:51,300
So if I'm going out during the day I can use the mirror and 
do my face

221
00:19:53,467 --> 00:19:57,333
The ceiling in the bathroom is tongue and groove pine

222
00:19:57,333 --> 00:20:01,667
Which is not airtight because it's tongue and groove

223
00:20:01,667 --> 00:20:07,300
So acoustically this is a problem when it rains

224
00:20:07,300 --> 00:20:13,567
It is significantly louder in the bathroom than in the part 
of the house where I made the ceiling air tight

225
00:20:13,567 --> 00:20:18,734
I did that on purpose, for that very reason. So it wouldn't 
be so loud

226
00:20:18,734 --> 00:20:23,633
But for the bathroom it was just easier and I did it later

227
00:20:24,467 --> 00:20:28,133
My sink and bathtub are both old

228
00:20:28,133 --> 00:20:34,300
They both have the date printed on them. This is from the 
'30s and this is from the '50s

229
00:20:34,300 --> 00:20:38,500
My cousin gave me this bathtub

230
00:20:39,500 --> 00:20:46,066
She was using it as just a piece of furniture in her 
bedroom. She got it at an antique shop

231
00:20:46,066 --> 00:20:49,066
And had just filled it up with pillows and would read in it

232
00:20:49,066 --> 00:20:53,567
But I wanted it for a bathtub. So it was in really good 
shape.

233
00:20:53,567 --> 00:20:55,667
But it was painted on the outside.

234
00:20:55,667 --> 00:20:58,600
So I stripped the paint off with a wire brush

235
00:20:58,600 --> 00:21:01,500
Or actually I think it was a nylon brush on a drill

236
00:21:01,500 --> 00:21:03,967
So I cleaned all the paint off the outside

237
00:21:03,967 --> 00:21:06,934
And then I treated it with Penetrol

238
00:21:06,934 --> 00:21:10,967
Which is a linseed oil paint additive

239
00:21:10,967 --> 00:21:13,967
But it works great as a metal finish

240
00:21:14,133 --> 00:21:18,667
So this just has a Penetrol coating on it and it's held up 
really great

241
00:21:19,066 --> 00:21:22,066
It has a lovely patina

242
00:21:22,066 --> 00:21:25,066
Let's see if I can get a close-up

243
00:21:30,433 --> 00:21:33,433
I got this floor tile at the surplus and salvage place

244
00:21:33,867 --> 00:21:36,867
And they had a couple of boxes which was enough for my  
space

245
00:21:37,266 --> 00:21:40,867
This is a porcelain quarry tile made in Tennessee

246
00:21:40,867 --> 00:21:45,600
And it's very thick, and very heavy

247
00:21:50,233 --> 00:21:52,500
But it has a lot of thermal mass

248
00:21:52,500 --> 00:21:55,500
So I put heating elements under the floor

249
00:21:56,567 --> 00:22:01,734
so that it uses that thermal mass, heats it up, and then 
that's my heat for my house

250
00:22:22,266 --> 00:22:26,900
This panel is here because underneath is just normal floor

251
00:22:26,900 --> 00:22:31,033
So I could drill through it and run the wiring up into the 
panel box

252
00:22:31,033 --> 00:22:35,834
All the other walls are on top of beams and I couldn't drill
 into that

253
00:22:35,834 --> 00:22:39,867
So I needed one wall that was not over a beam

254
00:22:40,467 --> 00:22:45,233
You have to think about where your doors go in a tiny house 
because that amount of floor space is valuable

255
00:22:45,233 --> 00:22:48,767
So it's nice to have sort of a little parking place

256
00:22:48,767 --> 00:22:51,200
This bathroom door is just a two foot door

257
00:22:52,333 --> 00:22:55,333
And it's just big enough to get a clawfoot tub in 

258
00:22:55,333 --> 00:23:01,066
A clawfoot tub is 24" from top to bottom without the feet on
 it

259
00:23:01,233 --> 00:23:04,233
So you turn it sideways and carry it through the door

260
00:23:04,233 --> 00:23:08,300
And then you put the feet on it and it looks like a more 
substantial piece of furniture 

261
00:23:10,300 --> 00:23:13,300
So this is my panel box

262
00:23:13,333 --> 00:23:18,266
I have a 50 Amp breaker for my water heater

263
00:23:18,266 --> 00:23:25,033
20 Amps is just outlets and this is the air conditioner. 30 
Amps for the air conditioner

264
00:23:25,033 --> 00:23:29,633
It's my mini split — a 1 1/2 ton mini split for this house

265
00:23:29,734 --> 00:23:36,033
20 Amp breaker for the floor. It's no different than a hair 
dryer really

266
00:23:36,033 --> 00:23:40,567
And these 20 Amp breakers are just outlets 

267
00:23:40,567 --> 00:23:47,767
This 15 Amp breaker is just undersized. I have wiring for 20
 Amps, I just had a 15 Amp breaker

268
00:23:47,834 --> 00:23:51,633
This has always puzzled me. I have a 100 Amp breaker here

269
00:23:51,633 --> 00:23:56,333
But the breaker that feeds this? Is a 90 Amp breaker.

270
00:23:57,467 --> 00:23:59,300
I.... what?

271
00:24:02,333 --> 00:24:04,900
I have to tell you about this window

272
00:24:04,900 --> 00:24:08,333
So this is another one of the sliding glass doors from my 
grandparent's house

273
00:24:09,333 --> 00:24:13,333
And when I was framing this wall I had my book

274
00:24:13,533 --> 00:24:17,934
And I read about what to do and how to size the rough 
opening

275
00:24:18,633 --> 00:24:23,700
Originally I was planning to take the aluminum off the 
double paned glass 

276
00:24:24,000 --> 00:24:28,500
section and just mount the glass directly in the wall

277
00:24:28,700 --> 00:24:32,333
But I didn't really have the equipment

278
00:24:32,333 --> 00:24:36,834
To mill out the right parts

279
00:24:38,400 --> 00:24:43,033
Ehh, it just didn't work out. I ended up using the aluminum 
and I just sorta

280
00:24:43,934 --> 00:24:46,934
Built up the opening until it worked

281
00:24:46,934 --> 00:24:49,934
using HardiePlank

282
00:24:49,934 --> 00:24:54,300
So there's a piece of HardiePlank directly on my floor

283
00:24:54,300 --> 00:24:57,300
That goes all the way through the wall

284
00:24:59,367 --> 00:25:02,367
It rains right on that piece of HardiePlank

285
00:25:02,367 --> 00:25:10,867
So if my caulk fails water is going to run either above the 
HardiePlank or under the HardiePlank

286
00:25:10,867 --> 00:25:13,667
Onto my floor

287
00:25:13,667 --> 00:25:18,433
This is bad. And I feel much shame

288
00:25:19,567 --> 00:25:21,967
I want to take this apart 

289
00:25:22,066 --> 00:25:25,066
This wall has you know,  a minuscule amount of siding

290
00:25:25,066 --> 00:25:30,467
I would be a days work to take this whole wall apart

291
00:25:30,467 --> 00:25:33,900
Rebuild these two windows and put it all back together

292
00:25:35,033 --> 00:25:37,633
But I would have to buy the windows

293
00:25:39,567 --> 00:25:42,567
And this amount of low-e glass would be expensive 

294
00:25:43,100 --> 00:25:46,734
But if I ever come into money I'm gonna do this

295
00:25:48,433 --> 00:25:50,767
Now let's talk about my floor

296
00:25:50,767 --> 00:25:53,233
This is a maple floor

297
00:25:53,233 --> 00:25:56,233
It looks like this in cross section

298
00:25:56,266 --> 00:26:00,266
While I was living in Atlanta my cousin salvaged this maple

299
00:26:00,266 --> 00:26:03,266
from a basketball court at a nearby high school

300
00:26:03,266 --> 00:26:05,500
that had a plumbing disaster

301
00:26:05,500 --> 00:26:07,233
and flooded the basketball court

302
00:26:07,233 --> 00:26:08,934
And the floor buckled

303
00:26:08,934 --> 00:26:12,533
And it was almost time for school to start before they 
realized

304
00:26:12,533 --> 00:26:18,400
So they went in with forklifts and just scraped this off the
 floor and dumped it outside

305
00:26:18,400 --> 00:26:22,767
My cousin came along with his trailer and just loaded it up

306
00:26:22,767 --> 00:26:28,467
and made multiple trips. Then he stacked it properly in my 
shed to dry

307
00:26:28,467 --> 00:26:32,700
And there was a huge stack of it. It was taking up my whole 
shed

308
00:26:32,700 --> 00:26:36,700
And he built a boat building workshop out of it

309
00:26:36,700 --> 00:26:39,900
And I built my house floor out of it

310
00:26:39,900 --> 00:26:44,367
And then I traded the rest of it to my dad for a lawn mower

311
00:26:44,367 --> 00:26:52,000
With wood this thick there's no reason to have joists every 
16" or even 24"

312
00:26:52,000 --> 00:26:56,200
So I did a plank and beam frame where there are two beams

313
00:26:56,200 --> 00:26:58,767
At 4 foot centers

314
00:26:58,767 --> 00:27:02,200
So I have a beam at 4 feet, another beam at 4 feet

315
00:27:02,200 --> 00:27:05,200
And the two ribbon joists around the edge

316
00:27:07,600 --> 00:27:12,100
Instead of doing staggered joints on a subfloor this is it, 
that's all there is

317
00:27:12,100 --> 00:27:16,066
So I ran the boards

318
00:27:16,066 --> 00:27:20,867
so that the joints fall on the beams

319
00:27:20,867 --> 00:27:24,500
So instead of being staggered there's this regular pattern

320
00:27:24,700 --> 00:27:27,700
Every now and then there's no gap because 

321
00:27:27,700 --> 00:27:32,867
I had some boards, I had like, five or six, that were twelve
feet long

322
00:27:32,867 --> 00:27:35,867
So those go the full width of the house

323
00:27:35,867 --> 00:27:38,867
I thought that would make it stiffer if I spaced them out

324
00:27:38,867 --> 00:27:41,867
So I spaced them out across the 12 foot square

325
00:27:41,867 --> 00:27:47,800
And there are these little holes that are for, I don't know,
some basketball purpose I don't understand

326
00:27:47,800 --> 00:27:50,567
I don't care

327
00:27:50,567 --> 00:27:54,700
I have some round dents in the floor that are from dropping 
the track ball out of my loft

328
00:27:55,767 --> 00:27:59,400
This big ol' dent is from where I knocked over my tripod

329
00:28:04,700 --> 00:28:07,700
There's a lot of noise in a tiny house

330
00:28:07,700 --> 00:28:10,233
My refrigerator is running almost all the time

331
00:28:10,233 --> 00:28:14,600
And when I turn my air conditioner on it gets even louder

332
00:28:15,734 --> 00:28:19,633
But it's kind of a pleasant white noise and it's not that 
bad

333
00:28:19,633 --> 00:28:24,000
But you would have to think about it. I mean, there's no way
I could have an aquarium in here

334
00:28:24,000 --> 00:28:27,000
or anything else that made noise constantly

335
00:28:27,000 --> 00:28:32,166
Besides an aquarium would be a disaster just from a moisture
perspective

336
00:28:32,166 --> 00:28:37,400
But you have to have the air conditioning in South Georgia

337
00:28:37,400 --> 00:28:42,700
The air conditioner here in the house is a lot louder than 
the one in my lab

338
00:28:45,400 --> 00:28:48,400
One day I'll upgrade it and it'll be quieter

339
00:28:49,767 --> 00:28:52,767
But it still works so I'm not getting rid of it as long as 
it's still working

340
00:28:54,100 --> 00:28:58,400
This is where I get make-up air for my exhaust fan

341
00:28:58,400 --> 00:29:02,834
I just cut one section of this board out

342
00:29:02,834 --> 00:29:06,700
And then I have some filter material in here

343
00:29:10,834 --> 00:29:16,967
I got this sink on clearance at Home Depot Expo in Fort 
Lauderdale when I was working on a hurricane

344
00:29:16,967 --> 00:29:19,967
And it was about 80% off. 

345
00:29:19,967 --> 00:29:24,166
It was a couple hundred bucks but it's usually thousands

346
00:29:24,166 --> 00:29:26,567
So I was vey excited to get this cast iron sink

347
00:29:26,567 --> 00:29:31,000
I had this green porcelain tile leftover from my house in 
Atlanta

348
00:29:31,000 --> 00:29:37,900
And I also had a section of Wedi shower curb left

349
00:29:37,900 --> 00:29:43,667
So I cut it in half and made this shelf

350
00:29:43,800 --> 00:29:47,633
Anyway, so this is a Wedi shower curb

351
00:29:47,633 --> 00:29:51,934
made into a backsplash because this Corian counter top 

352
00:29:51,934 --> 00:29:56,300
Is a surplus countertop I got at the surplus and salvage 
place 

353
00:29:56,300 --> 00:29:58,867
That was a bathroom counter

354
00:29:58,867 --> 00:30:01,867
which are not as wide as kitchen counters

355
00:30:02,033 --> 00:30:10,100
So the counter stops shy of the wall so my cabinet would 
work

356
00:30:10,400 --> 00:30:14,700
I already had this Subzero refrigerator when I started 
building this house

357
00:30:14,700 --> 00:30:18,266
It's a all refrigerator so this drawer is the crisper drawer

358
00:30:18,266 --> 00:30:25,300
And this drawer is the jelly drawer, in my case. This is 
where I keep all my jelly

359
00:30:25,300 --> 00:30:29,800
And this is the regular refrigerator 

360
00:30:33,934 --> 00:30:37,734
I covered the door with just more of the paneling

361
00:30:37,734 --> 00:30:46,133
I cut the tongue and groove off and glued up a panel of the 
same wood I was using on the walls

362
00:30:47,100 --> 00:30:51,767
This tile and this tile I had leftover from Atlanta

363
00:30:51,767 --> 00:30:57,266
And I bought the yellow tile and the border to finish out 
the design

364
00:30:57,266 --> 00:31:01,500
Cause it was just a couple squares I just bought it off the 
shelf at Home Depot

365
00:31:03,133 --> 00:31:05,734
I already had this cabinet when I started building the house

366
00:31:05,934 --> 00:31:08,934
I got it on clearance the same place I got the refrigerator

367
00:31:10,467 --> 00:31:12,834
So I liked the cabinet I wanted to use that

368
00:31:12,834 --> 00:31:15,834
And that's where I have basically my most important kitchen 
stuff

369
00:31:15,834 --> 00:31:18,834
I keep my dishes in a drawer

370
00:31:18,834 --> 00:31:23,266
I keep my toaster and my rice cooker in a drawer

371
00:31:23,266 --> 00:31:26,266
Subtitle

372
00:31:28,133 --> 00:31:31,133
And I didn't see any reason I needed a cabinet under the 
sink

373
00:31:31,467 --> 00:31:34,133
It just makes it hard to work on

374
00:31:34,133 --> 00:31:37,133
So I don't have a cabinet under the sink because I need to 
work on it

375
00:31:37,133 --> 00:31:39,633
Let me show you

376
00:31:42,133 --> 00:31:47,700
So under the sink I reinforced the side of the stock cabinet

377
00:31:47,700 --> 00:31:50,266
With some of my tongue and groove boards

378
00:31:50,266 --> 00:31:53,133
because these are just thin plywood walls

379
00:31:53,133 --> 00:31:59,000
So I reinforced the sides because it's gotta hold up this 
massive cast iron sink

380
00:31:59,000 --> 00:32:07,400
So what I did is I made a shelf with another piece of the 
tongue and groove to hold up the sink

381
00:32:07,400 --> 00:32:10,400
On the other side I think I used a 2x4

382
00:32:10,400 --> 00:32:14,033
But then I had to get the sink up there and I can't lift 
this sink by myself

383
00:32:14,033 --> 00:32:18,333
So I had to sort of lift it a little bit at a time

384
00:32:18,333 --> 00:32:21,767
And put books under one side and then lift the other side 
and  put books under that

385
00:32:21,767 --> 00:32:26,500
Until I got it high enough to lift it and slide it into the 
space

386
00:32:26,500 --> 00:32:31,233
So the way the edge came out is not ideal

387
00:32:31,233 --> 00:32:33,600
but damn, I was... I almost killed myself so

388
00:32:33,600 --> 00:32:35,867
I'm lucky it's in there at all

389
00:32:38,000 --> 00:32:44,066
 Now under here I have had a really hard time with the drain
 on this sink

390
00:32:44,066 --> 00:32:50,133
It always wants to leak and you can see by the corrosion 
what a mess it is

391
00:32:51,066 --> 00:32:56,200
So the gasket thing around the drain basket 

392
00:32:56,200 --> 00:33:00,000
Those things, whatever rubber they make plumbing parts out 
of

393
00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:02,800
I HATE it. I hate the way it smells so much

394
00:33:02,800 --> 00:33:08,834
I've painted this with water based polyurethane just so I 
can't smell it

395
00:33:08,834 --> 00:33:13,100
It kept dripping just really very slow drip

396
00:33:13,100 --> 00:33:15,567
and built up all this corrosion 

397
00:33:15,567 --> 00:33:19,000
But finally the corrosion has stopped the dripping

398
00:33:19,700 --> 00:33:24,834
So I'm not gonna touch it. If I take it apart I'm gonna have
to replace all of it to get it to stop

399
00:33:29,333 --> 00:33:32,900
When I first built this house I had a different water heater
 

400
00:33:32,900 --> 00:33:35,900
I had the cheapest water heater I could get

401
00:33:36,000 --> 00:33:39,000
which was made by Eemax

402
00:33:39,266 --> 00:33:43,266
And it was garbage. It was about $150

403
00:33:43,266 --> 00:33:46,166
Total piece of shit

404
00:33:46,166 --> 00:33:51,000
So I saved up my money and bought this one that cost twice 
as much

405
00:33:51,000 --> 00:33:56,934
But twice as much in instant water heaters is only like, 
it's still less than $300

406
00:33:57,433 --> 00:34:02,600
I did the vent stack wrong. I didn't vent this sink properly

407
00:34:02,600 --> 00:34:04,967
So it doesn't drain as fast as it ought to

408
00:34:04,967 --> 00:34:06,266
I didn't know what I was doing

409
00:34:06,266 --> 00:34:09,266
I still don't. If I had figurd it out I would redo it

410
00:34:09,266 --> 00:34:12,266
But I still don't know how to do it

411
00:34:12,266 --> 00:34:17,367
I wrote a littel note and put it there in case something 
happens to me

412
00:34:17,367 --> 00:34:22,133
And my brother inherits this house and he starts cussing me 
because he doesn't know what the hell is going on 

413
00:34:22,133 --> 00:34:25,133
He can see that I was sorry

414
00:34:25,767 --> 00:34:28,767
Because I had to move in before I finished

415
00:34:28,767 --> 00:34:31,767
The way I did the water is I just hooked it up 

416
00:34:31,767 --> 00:34:34,767
so that it would get me through what I needed to do 

417
00:34:34,834 --> 00:34:41,300
And then as I was ready to add more things I would just cut 
the pipe and add a Tee

418
00:34:41,300 --> 00:34:43,166
And put in another thing

419
00:34:43,166 --> 00:34:49,767
The first water I had was going to that shower valve on the 
outside wall

420
00:34:49,767 --> 00:34:53,166
And then the next thing I had was the bathroom sink

421
00:34:53,467 --> 00:34:59,567
And then I added the outside shower and then I added the 
kitchen sink last

422
00:34:59,567 --> 00:35:02,567
In this corner you can see the basis of my construction 
technique

423
00:35:02,567 --> 00:35:06,900
So this is a pressure treated 4x4 that goes all the way into
the ground

424
00:35:06,900 --> 00:35:11,567
And all the way up to the roof. So the house is tied 
together really well

425
00:35:11,567 --> 00:35:14,567
And it allowed me to build it by myself

426
00:35:18,700 --> 00:35:21,633
There wasn't anything to tip over or fall on me

427
00:35:21,633 --> 00:35:24,633
And I could just add pieces one member at at time

428
00:35:24,633 --> 00:35:32,033
I just got the four posts stuck up there and then I just 
started adding pieces until it got housey 

429
00:35:34,200 --> 00:35:38,667
So here where the wall boards don't go all the way to the 
post

430
00:35:38,667 --> 00:35:41,066
you can see the spray foam

431
00:35:41,066 --> 00:35:44,066
This is icynene open cell spray foam

432
00:35:53,734 --> 00:35:58,600
When I built this house manifolds were really expensive

433
00:35:59,333 --> 00:36:03,033
But when I did my lab the price on manifolds had come down a
lot

434
00:36:03,033 --> 00:36:06,667
And I enjoyed using that. It's a much tidier solution

435
00:36:08,800 --> 00:36:13,333
I've got this emptied out for spring cleaning, but typically
there's a bunch of shit shoved under here

436
00:36:17,700 --> 00:36:21,500
That's the typical collection of stuff under there

437
00:36:21,500 --> 00:36:24,000
Then you can't really see it when you're standing up

438
00:36:24,734 --> 00:36:26,900
This aluminum rail is from Ikea

439
00:36:26,900 --> 00:36:30,533
And it holds these accessories: this dish drainer

440
00:36:36,033 --> 00:36:39,033
And this one for cutlery

441
00:36:41,834 --> 00:36:44,300
And it's nice because you can take them down to clean them

442
00:36:44,300 --> 00:36:49,000
Or take them down so it's more decorative when you have a 
lot of company over for a wedding

443
00:36:51,200 --> 00:36:57,533
This also fold up so I guess you could just fold it up for 
whatever reason

444
00:36:57,533 --> 00:37:01,700
But I hardly ever fold it up. If I was gonna fold it up I'd 
just take it all the way down

445
00:37:01,700 --> 00:37:04,700
One thing that I had to do to modify this

446
00:37:07,367 --> 00:37:10,667
I used this for years and it just sort of dripped all over 

447
00:37:10,667 --> 00:37:15,567
And it started making calcium buildup on my faucet

448
00:37:15,567 --> 00:37:19,467
So I got a plastic cutting board

449
00:37:19,467 --> 00:37:22,667
Which just miraculously was exactly the right size

450
00:37:23,000 --> 00:37:26,000
I punched some holes in the corners with a hole punch

451
00:37:26,000 --> 00:37:29,133
Then I got some aluminum armature wire

452
00:37:34,166 --> 00:37:41,133
Just hook it on there. And now all the water just runs out 
the front and doesn't get all over my faucet and stuff

453
00:37:41,600 --> 00:37:46,233
I swapped out my rug while I'm washing the other one

454
00:37:46,233 --> 00:37:51,166
And the longer rug covered up this extra piece of floor

455
00:37:51,166 --> 00:37:58,333
Look at how much lighter the maple is where the sun hit it

456
00:37:58,333 --> 00:38:00,600
Compared to where it was covered up by the rug

457
00:38:01,700 --> 00:38:04,700
So maple lightens in the sun

458
00:38:04,834 --> 00:38:07,834
but check this out 

459
00:38:07,834 --> 00:38:11,767
Pine darkens in the sun

460
00:38:11,767 --> 00:38:16,700
So where it's been covered up by that cutting board it's 
lighter

461
00:38:16,700 --> 00:38:21,133
My whole house is getting darker and darker with years 

462
00:38:25,800 --> 00:38:28,800
See this outlet up here?

463
00:38:28,800 --> 00:38:34,166
Originally I had a light fixture screwed right here with a 
cord

464
00:38:34,367 --> 00:38:38,667
But I decided I didn't like it and I took it down

465
00:38:38,867 --> 00:38:45,000
This hole is where I had my computer mounted on a pole for a
 while

466
00:39:07,467 --> 00:39:15,133
But when I built my lab I could take my computer out of the 
house and this freed up all this space

467
00:39:15,133 --> 00:39:20,100
So now if I need extra lighting I just have a lamp. And I 
use this maybe once a month

468
00:39:20,100 --> 00:39:24,467
My counter is not usually this empty of course

469
00:39:24,467 --> 00:39:27,967
This is the Corian I cut out of the sink hole

470
00:39:28,567 --> 00:39:34,900
I put this here if I'm processing a lot of fruit, like 
peeling calamondins or peaches to make jam

471
00:39:39,567 --> 00:39:42,567
But usually it lives here

472
00:39:44,166 --> 00:39:47,166
I have this glass cutting board

473
00:39:47,166 --> 00:39:51,667
that I keep here with my hotplate on it

474
00:39:54,934 --> 00:39:57,934
So this is where my hotplate lives

475
00:39:57,934 --> 00:40:00,934
My other cooking utensils are a toaster and a rice cooker

476
00:40:03,900 --> 00:40:06,567
So these typically live up here

477
00:40:06,567 --> 00:40:09,567
Unless I need the space for something else

478
00:40:12,233 --> 00:40:15,233
This fuzzy logic rice cooker, toaster, 

479
00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:21,166
Microwave oven and induction hotplate are the only cooking 
appliances I keep in the house

480
00:40:33,834 --> 00:40:36,834
I love my Panasonic fuzzy logic rice cooker. It's so cute. 
Look at it

481
00:40:36,834 --> 00:40:39,834
Look at it!

482
00:40:39,834 --> 00:40:42,834
This is the cabinetry of desperation 

483
00:40:43,367 --> 00:40:46,367
But you know what? It's worked for 15 years

484
00:40:46,367 --> 00:40:51,300
And it hasn't even bothered me that I didn't put any shoe 
mold or anything on it

485
00:40:51,300 --> 00:40:53,567
It's just open

486
00:40:53,567 --> 00:40:56,567
So I just screwed 2x4s to the floor

487
00:40:56,567 --> 00:41:00,667
And then just nailed tongue and groove planks on it

488
00:41:00,667 --> 00:41:03,667
It's kind of fine

489
00:41:04,533 --> 00:41:08,000
This bar top used to be my coffee table

490
00:41:08,000 --> 00:41:14,333
See how it had 4 legs that were set into it like this?

491
00:41:14,333 --> 00:41:19,734
My uncle made it from one piece of virgin longleaf pine

492
00:41:19,734 --> 00:41:23,867
So this is the center of the tree

493
00:41:23,934 --> 00:41:27,667
Whenever I watch sawmill videos they say you don't want the 
center of the tree

494
00:41:27,667 --> 00:41:30,066
But, I don't, this is fine

495
00:41:30,066 --> 00:41:35,667
I guess if it's virgin and this right here constitutes about
 100 years

496
00:41:35,667 --> 00:41:38,667
from there to there its fine

497
00:41:38,667 --> 00:41:42,233
but faster growing stuff maybe it would be a problem

498
00:41:42,500 --> 00:41:48,233
It's epoxy coated. I haven't done anything to this. It's 
been my coffee table for 30 years

499
00:41:48,233 --> 00:41:51,233
This other countertop

500
00:41:51,433 --> 00:41:55,266
is shortleaf pine and you can see the difference

501
00:41:55,266 --> 00:42:02,100
This countertop my father made to sort of match this one? He
 matched the thickness

502
00:42:02,133 --> 00:42:06,834
This is the shortleaf pine tree that fell on my grandparents
 house

503
00:42:07,233 --> 00:42:11,934
which yielded me these sliding glass doors to use for 
windows

504
00:42:12,033 --> 00:42:14,600
Now this window used to be a sliding glass door

505
00:42:14,600 --> 00:42:20,967
In about 2011 I replaced it with plate glass from the glass 
supplier

506
00:42:20,967 --> 00:42:24,633
I'm not real happy  that I can see the sealant through the 
glass

507
00:42:24,633 --> 00:42:30,934
And right down here you can see where they sprayed it with 
Windex and you've got that blue color in there

508
00:42:30,934 --> 00:42:33,300
It kind of bothers me

509
00:42:35,166 --> 00:42:38,934
Next to my refrigerator I have one closet

510
00:42:38,934 --> 00:42:41,500
It's the only closet in my whole house

511
00:42:41,500 --> 00:42:44,500
And here's a hint as to what's in it

512
00:42:45,333 --> 00:42:51,266
I moved into my house before it was finished because my aunt
 wanted the bedroom where I was staying

513
00:42:52,400 --> 00:42:55,400
to be her bedroom so that she could turn her bedroom into 
the kitchen

514
00:42:56,100 --> 00:42:59,100
And in the process of that remodeling project 

515
00:42:59,100 --> 00:43:02,033
This door got displaced

516
00:43:02,033 --> 00:43:04,967
So it's now my closet door

517
00:43:04,967 --> 00:43:07,967
I turned it over. This was the bottom of the door

518
00:43:09,133 --> 00:43:13,400
And a mouse chewed the door up

519
00:43:13,400 --> 00:43:21,100
So I just thought it would be less obvious at the top than 
at the bottom so I turned the whole door over

520
00:43:21,100 --> 00:43:24,467
Also the doorknob was way too low for me

521
00:43:24,467 --> 00:43:29,734
Inside my minuscule closet I keep a few essentials

522
00:43:29,734 --> 00:43:35,967
Including my Electrolux vacuum cleaner that I bought in 
about 1996

523
00:43:35,967 --> 00:43:41,000
I think it was made for cleaning hotels

524
00:43:41,000 --> 00:43:43,333
It has a 75 foot cord

525
00:43:43,333 --> 00:43:46,333
My house is 18' x 12'

526
00:43:48,066 --> 00:43:51,900
The back of the door is where I keep my hammock chair

527
00:43:54,500 --> 00:43:57,834
Typically after hurricanes when my power is out for several 
days

528
00:43:57,834 --> 00:44:04,233
my habit is to get out the  hammock chair and read all of my
 books

529
00:44:07,066 --> 00:44:10,934
You know how some people have little platitudes on plaques 
in their house?

530
00:44:10,934 --> 00:44:13,934
I keep all mine inside this closet

531
00:44:17,834 --> 00:44:23,300
My dad made this live oak beam for me. It's in two pieces so
 there's a beam shelf

532
00:44:23,300 --> 00:44:27,734
So the bottom piece is screwed and glued to the top piece

533
00:44:27,734 --> 00:44:30,734
And then the screw heads are covered

534
00:44:30,734 --> 00:44:32,734
My dad made it in his shop and then I went and got it in my 
car

535
00:44:32,734 --> 00:44:37,900
We tested it. We put the ends up on five gallon buckets and 
then we both stood on it 

536
00:44:37,900 --> 00:44:40,000
And measured how much it flexed

537
00:44:40,000 --> 00:44:43,333
And it flexed less than an inch over the whole 12' length

538
00:44:43,333 --> 00:44:49,433
And it's really good for traction

539
00:44:49,433 --> 00:44:54,333
to traction  your back. I can't stop swinging

540
00:44:56,367 --> 00:45:01,500
Bedrooms have special rules, like you have to have a special
 kind of outlet and special egress windows

541
00:45:01,500 --> 00:45:05,266
But if you have a removable ladder technically it's not a 
bedroom

542
00:45:11,433 --> 00:45:15,166
So the ladder is removable. It just lifts up

543
00:45:22,633 --> 00:45:27,700
I cut the 2x6 side pieces of this ladder to fit

544
00:45:27,700 --> 00:45:31,500
I cut the notches and everything and I marked for the steps

545
00:45:31,500 --> 00:45:35,700
And then I took the whole thing to my dad's shop and he 
built it for me

546
00:45:35,700 --> 00:45:40,200
And then I brought it home in my car and put it into place

547
00:45:40,200 --> 00:45:43,633
He has really nice woodworking equipment. I do not

548
00:45:44,066 --> 00:45:47,066
He routered out that little handle. That was all his idea

549
00:45:47,066 --> 00:45:49,467
It was brilliant. That's the best part

550
00:45:49,467 --> 00:45:54,266
I put the floor of my loft down with the v-groove side down

551
00:45:54,266 --> 00:45:57,934
And I prefinished it with water based polyurethane

552
00:45:57,934 --> 00:46:02,967
Because the kitchen side seemed like the part that needed to
 be sealed

553
00:46:05,166 --> 00:46:09,734
I put my 2x4s on 12" centers because they're shit

554
00:46:09,734 --> 00:46:13,200
look, see how I sanded all the rough spots off of them

555
00:46:13,200 --> 00:46:16,700
and pre-stained them

556
00:46:17,934 --> 00:46:22,834
The quality of lumber at the big box stores is just garbage

557
00:46:22,834 --> 00:46:25,834
So I just put em a lot closer together

558
00:46:27,200 --> 00:46:29,767
This is where I keep my outdoor kitchen skewer

559
00:46:29,767 --> 00:46:36,300
One of my favorite features of my tiny house is these hand 
rails that I built into the window frame

560
00:46:36,300 --> 00:46:40,900
I saw this idea in a Fine Homebuilding article

561
00:46:40,900 --> 00:46:44,433
And it's just really great. I love em

562
00:46:44,433 --> 00:46:48,033
I had a vertigo attack a few years ago

563
00:46:48,033 --> 00:46:53,367
And I had to hold onto something every step I took and these
 were invaluable

564
00:46:53,367 --> 00:46:59,500
The steps to my loft start out with this sort of alternating
 tread design

565
00:46:59,500 --> 00:47:03,300
I did the most basic thing. It's just a bracket on the wall

566
00:47:03,300 --> 00:47:05,800
The little ends get a chunk of wood

567
00:47:05,800 --> 00:47:07,667
and the big ends get a bracket

568
00:47:08,867 --> 00:47:11,867
This platform is a seat

569
00:47:11,867 --> 00:47:14,867
and that's why there's this yoga mat up here

570
00:47:14,867 --> 00:47:20,367
So I bought this yoga mat to put on my hard metal stools

571
00:47:20,367 --> 00:47:23,367
and this is what was left over. That's why it doesn't go the
 whole distance

572
00:47:23,367 --> 00:47:26,367
but I sort of like it

573
00:47:26,367 --> 00:47:29,367
because when I come down the stairs

574
00:47:29,367 --> 00:47:34,934
If I'm coming down the stairs from my loft when I step down 
and I hit the yoga mat I know I'm at the bottom

575
00:47:42,433 --> 00:47:45,433
This is the loft of my tiny house

576
00:47:46,800 --> 00:47:48,667
This is my escape window

577
00:47:53,066 --> 00:47:55,233
so in a serious emergency 

578
00:47:56,033 --> 00:47:59,567
I can open this window and kick out the screen 

579
00:47:59,567 --> 00:48:04,433
And climb down onto the outdoor shower surround

580
00:48:04,433 --> 00:48:06,967
and make my escape

581
00:48:06,967 --> 00:48:12,867
It's not technically an egress window but it is for me 
because I'm small and I can totally fit through that 

582
00:48:14,333 --> 00:48:17,333
This is a fire prone place

583
00:48:17,333 --> 00:48:20,300
But I designed my house to be fireproof, so hopefully 

584
00:48:20,300 --> 00:48:23,300
if I'm surrounded by fire

585
00:48:23,300 --> 00:48:29,700
I will smell the smoke and I will skedaddle out the front 
door and get a hose and start trying to put it out

586
00:48:29,700 --> 00:48:35,900
Or I could open it and use it as an arrow slot

587
00:48:35,900 --> 00:48:40,166
For the zombie apocalypse. I can fire down upon the hoards

588
00:48:40,166 --> 00:48:44,567
that are trying to overtake my highly defensible position

589
00:48:44,567 --> 00:48:47,567
I was already living here before I put up the ceiling

590
00:48:47,567 --> 00:48:49,600
There was no loft here yet

591
00:48:49,600 --> 00:48:53,467
Every Saturday morning I would move by bed outside and all 
my stuff

592
00:48:53,467 --> 00:48:56,467
and put it up under one of those 10x10 pop-up tents

593
00:48:56,467 --> 00:49:00,200
And then I'd work on the house. So before the loft was even 
here

594
00:49:00,200 --> 00:49:04,467
I had a man come on a Saturday and screw the sheetrock to 
the ceiling 

595
00:49:04,467 --> 00:49:07,467
It's greenboard. It's the moisture resistant kind 

596
00:49:07,734 --> 00:49:11,633
It's important to me that this be air tight for sound 
proofing

597
00:49:11,633 --> 00:49:16,567
This is my only operable window. Everything in here is 
sealed tight

598
00:49:16,567 --> 00:49:19,567
Because I want it to be soundproof

599
00:49:19,567 --> 00:49:28,066
So I caulked the joints because I didn't have time for 
taping and mudding and sanding

600
00:49:28,066 --> 00:49:30,500
I had to get this all done in two days

601
00:49:30,500 --> 00:49:33,767
So I caulked the joints and then I painted

602
00:49:33,767 --> 00:49:40,433
And the reason this is two colors is not just for this 
delightful sunrise/sunset look

603
00:49:40,433 --> 00:49:43,433
It's just all the paint I had

604
00:49:43,433 --> 00:49:47,934
I bought a gallon of this kind of peach color as oops paint

605
00:49:47,934 --> 00:49:51,133
And I painted the ceiling with that and it was just too dark

606
00:49:51,133 --> 00:49:53,633
It was kind of gross it looked like an esophagus

607
00:49:53,633 --> 00:49:56,633
And I had some of this yellow paint

608
00:49:56,633 --> 00:50:00,266
So I painted until I ran out

609
00:50:00,266 --> 00:50:06,900
And I was almost out here so I added some glaze and sort of 
blended it in just to make it look like I did it on purpose

610
00:50:06,900 --> 00:50:12,266
But ultimately I would like to take all of this down

611
00:50:12,266 --> 00:50:15,467
Cut my caulk, take the sheetrock down

612
00:50:15,467 --> 00:50:19,033
And add some rockwool insulation

613
00:50:19,033 --> 00:50:22,900
I don't have enough insulation in my roof. Only maybe R-12?

614
00:50:22,900 --> 00:50:26,600
My air conditioner would work a lot better in the summer if 
I had more insulation

615
00:50:26,600 --> 00:50:28,166
And it wouldn't get as cold in the winter

616
00:50:28,166 --> 00:50:31,133
This is a pretty mild climate, so it's not a huge deal

617
00:50:31,133 --> 00:50:35,667
But it's sort of in my wanna-do list

618
00:50:35,667 --> 00:50:38,233
There's nothing wrong with the sheetrock so I could take it 
down

619
00:50:38,233 --> 00:50:41,233
Put in insulation and then put the same sheetrock back up

620
00:50:41,233 --> 00:50:47,066
And then take the time to tape it and mud it and then paint 
it all a nice color

621
00:50:47,066 --> 00:50:50,367
White? Maybe? I dunno

622
00:50:50,367 --> 00:50:54,467
But I'd like a better paint finish because I can touch it 
and 

623
00:50:54,467 --> 00:50:58,467
And everywhere there's a little imperfection in the paint it
 bugs me

624
00:50:58,467 --> 00:51:00,767
I don't have any sheet goods in my house

625
00:51:00,767 --> 00:51:03,667
Because I can't lift it by myself

626
00:51:03,667 --> 00:51:07,500
So the roof? The metal is screwed directly to the purlins

627
00:51:07,500 --> 00:51:10,500
But before I put the metal on the purlins

628
00:51:10,500 --> 00:51:13,500
I put sill seal down on the purlins

629
00:51:13,500 --> 00:51:15,467
As a vibration barrier

630
00:51:15,467 --> 00:51:21,166
So that the vibration of raindrops on the metal roof don't 
transfer directly to the wood members

631
00:51:21,166 --> 00:51:27,033
And then I also put spray foam directly on the bottom side 
of the metal

632
00:51:27,033 --> 00:51:31,967
And that dulls... that dampens the vibration a lot

633
00:51:31,967 --> 00:51:35,500
But making it airtight

634
00:51:35,500 --> 00:51:38,500
And dampening the vibrations

635
00:51:38,500 --> 00:51:41,500
made it a lot quieter than it would be without

636
00:51:41,500 --> 00:51:43,700
I can compare by going on the porch

637
00:51:43,700 --> 00:51:47,367
in a rainstorm and it's way louder

638
00:51:47,367 --> 00:51:51,367
without any of the insulation on it and the airtight ceiling

639
00:51:51,367 --> 00:51:54,367
So this is what it souds like inside the shed

640
00:52:04,967 --> 00:52:09,433
Here's the sound of a nice hard rain from my front porch

641
00:52:14,900 --> 00:52:19,667
Gotta get enough light on the meter. There we go

642
00:52:21,867 --> 00:52:24,867
Less loud than the shed

643
00:52:40,400 --> 00:52:43,400
Now we'll try inside

644
00:52:49,934 --> 00:52:52,934
And immediately it gets quieter

645
00:52:55,100 --> 00:52:58,100
Let me get light on the meter

646
00:53:00,033 --> 00:53:02,166
50 dB

647
00:53:02,166 --> 00:53:08,400
So that's about... so that's 50 dB or less

648
00:53:18,800 --> 00:53:22,533
Now let's compare the main part of the house to the bathroom

649
00:53:24,734 --> 00:53:27,166
It's not really raining that hard right now

650
00:53:27,800 --> 00:53:34,166
The metal roof on the house is way quieter than the shed or 
the Spartan

651
00:53:34,166 --> 00:53:41,433
Because of the sill seal. Because of the closed cell foam I 
put on top of the purlins

652
00:53:41,467 --> 00:53:47,834
The metal just can't conduct as much sound energy into the 
structure

653
00:53:49,734 --> 00:53:52,734
So whatever is coming through is coming through the air

654
00:53:55,767 --> 00:54:00,734
This isn't bad, but sometimes when it rains really hard? 
Whuf

655
00:54:03,000 --> 00:54:07,033
It's still loud though

656
00:54:07,033 --> 00:54:08,567
What are you going to do

657
00:54:08,934 --> 00:54:13,233
People that say they love the sound of rain on a metal roof

658
00:54:13,500 --> 00:54:16,500
Yeah, how far is your head from the ceiling 

659
00:54:17,033 --> 00:54:20,834
So the problem with my scheme to add insulation to the 
ceiling

660
00:54:20,834 --> 00:54:24,633
I only need 20 pieces. 20 physical pieces of insulation

661
00:54:24,633 --> 00:54:26,800
which is 4 packages of 5

662
00:54:26,800 --> 00:54:30,800
But they only sell it in sets of 12

663
00:54:30,800 --> 00:54:33,133
I found out after I built this house

664
00:54:33,133 --> 00:54:37,800
that you're supposed to put sheetrock behind tongue and 
groove boards

665
00:54:37,800 --> 00:54:40,800
For fire resistance. I had no idea

666
00:54:40,900 --> 00:54:44,500
And how ridiculous is that?

667
00:54:44,500 --> 00:54:45,900
I'm not doing that!

668
00:54:45,900 --> 00:54:48,900
This house is so tiny if there was a fire in here

669
00:54:48,900 --> 00:54:53,467
I would just be dead from the smoke before it even started a
wall on fire

670
00:54:53,467 --> 00:54:58,200
Just the smoke right out of the appliance that started the 
fire would kill me

671
00:54:58,200 --> 00:55:01,200
So who cares if the walls burn the hell up?

672
00:55:01,200 --> 00:55:03,834
I had better just get the hell out

673
00:55:03,834 --> 00:55:07,967
I have a smoke detector. So as soon as the smoke detector 
goes off I go out the door

674
00:55:07,967 --> 00:55:13,667
When it's time to actually go to sleep I have to do some 
modifications to my bed

675
00:55:13,667 --> 00:55:19,000
On the wall right there I have some magnets that hold this 
meat tray

676
00:55:19,000 --> 00:55:23,800
that I got at a flea market. And I have to take this tray

677
00:55:23,800 --> 00:55:28,266
And slide it under my mattress like this

678
00:55:28,266 --> 00:55:33,400
Lift it up and put this mallet under there

679
00:55:33,400 --> 00:55:37,433
And that raises my bed up 6 inches

680
00:55:37,433 --> 00:55:40,433
So that I can  

681
00:55:44,767 --> 00:55:58,200
So then when it's sleeping time I sleep this way because I 
have acid reflux and I have to have my head elevated

682
00:55:58,200 --> 00:56:02,867
This is my live oak persuader that just happens to work 
perfectly for this

683
00:56:07,700 --> 00:56:10,700
So here's a million dollar idea

684
00:56:10,700 --> 00:56:15,567
So it's like a Murphy bed, but instead of folding up against
the wall, the foot drops down

685
00:56:15,567 --> 00:56:18,567
So that your head is elevated 6 inches

686
00:56:20,333 --> 00:56:25,700
It would need to be like a regular bed, a convenient height 
for changing the sheets

687
00:56:25,700 --> 00:56:31,233
and getting in and out. But then you can change the foot 
height

688
00:56:31,233 --> 00:56:35,033
Not like an expensive motorized hospital bed

689
00:56:35,033 --> 00:56:40,567
But something like a Ikea bed but that lets you drop the 
foot down

690
00:56:41,800 --> 00:56:47,800
I've been editing this video and I realized its over 50 
minutes long

691
00:56:47,800 --> 00:56:51,333
But I never recorded an ending

692
00:56:52,000 --> 00:56:56,233
At the end of every tiny house tour they always ask how much
it cost

693
00:56:56,233 --> 00:57:01,967
I saved all my receipts for this house, but I haven't gone 
back and added them up

694
00:57:01,967 --> 00:57:04,967
I kept meaning to make a spreadsheet but I just haven't done
it

695
00:57:05,000 --> 00:57:08,900
It cost under $25,000

696
00:57:09,300 --> 00:57:12,700
I had to spend most of my money on infrastructure

697
00:57:12,700 --> 00:57:17,633
The septic tank and getting the well repaired

698
00:57:17,900 --> 00:57:22,800
And I already had a well dug, all I had to do was put a new 
pump in it

699
00:57:22,800 --> 00:57:28,934
So getting a well from scratch and getting a power line run 
would be very expensive

700
00:57:28,934 --> 00:57:34,734
But because I used an old house site that already had some 
existing infrastructure I saved some money there

701
00:57:34,967 --> 00:57:39,700
I moved out of Atlanta and built my tiny house because of a 
giant technology recession

702
00:57:39,700 --> 00:57:44,700
And I built this tiny house to sort of recession-proof 
myself

703
00:57:45,300 --> 00:57:49,100
When I finished my tiny house in 2006

704
00:57:49,100 --> 00:57:52,467
I started graduate school... (thunder) ominous...

705
00:57:52,600 --> 00:57:57,567
because I wanted to further my second career in 
environmental engineering

706
00:57:57,567 --> 00:58:02,533
And sure enough in 2008 when there was another giant 
recession

707
00:58:02,667 --> 00:58:06,266
I lost my job in my second career

708
00:58:06,266 --> 00:58:12,333
And thanks to my tiny house I've been able to continue not 
having a job

709
00:58:12,333 --> 00:58:16,867
I worked briefly in 2010

710
00:58:16,867 --> 00:58:21,867
in Austin, and I was able to just close up my tiny house

711
00:58:21,867 --> 00:58:24,567
I blocked the drain traps

712
00:58:24,567 --> 00:58:28,066
I turned off all the circuit breakers except the 
refrigerator

713
00:58:28,066 --> 00:58:31,633
And the refrigerator provided a little bit of dehumidifying

714
00:58:31,633 --> 00:58:37,066
And my house was able to just be vacant for a year and it 
was fine

715
00:58:37,066 --> 00:58:42,066
And it didn't cost anything. I put my internet on vacation 
mode 

716
00:58:42,233 --> 00:58:47,000
And my power bill was $10 a month just for having a meter

717
00:58:47,000 --> 00:58:54,533
And it was great to have the mobility to go take a job 
somewhere else

718
00:58:56,166 --> 00:58:59,633
And now I'm doing fine in a pandemic because 

719
00:58:59,767 --> 00:59:05,066
I already never left the house and only bought groceries 
every two weeks

720
00:59:05,066 --> 00:59:10,867
My expenses are so low I can make a living making things and
 selling them on Etsy

721
00:59:11,066 --> 00:59:16,300
I can get obsessed about a board game and spend two years in
research and development

722
00:59:16,300 --> 00:59:20,233
After an estuaries class in graduate school

723
00:59:20,233 --> 00:59:26,867
I went up to the professor and I asked him how development 
was compatible with preserving the ecology

724
00:59:27,166 --> 00:59:30,300
and he just looked at me like I was ignorant and said

725
00:59:30,300 --> 00:59:32,100
"It's not"

726
00:59:32,100 --> 00:59:36,467
"As long as there's economic growth the ecology is de facto 
going to decline"

727
00:59:36,467 --> 00:59:39,967
like everybody knew that

728
00:59:39,967 --> 00:59:41,900
and everybody accepted it

729
00:59:41,900 --> 00:59:45,333
But I don't accept it. I don't think that

730
00:59:45,333 --> 00:59:49,300
growing the economy is worth destroying nature

731
00:59:49,300 --> 00:59:52,300
What's the point of growing the economy?

732
00:59:52,600 --> 00:59:58,900
I decided to do an experiment in not having economic growth

733
00:59:58,900 --> 01:00:01,900
How small could I make my life

734
01:00:02,934 --> 01:00:06,533
So I've been running this experiment for a while now

735
01:00:06,533 --> 01:00:09,200
You can make it pretty small

736
01:00:11,266 --> 01:00:15,200
But I think that it would work a lot better if we had 
universal healthcare

737
01:00:16,266 --> 01:00:21,767
I enjoy building science. I like learning about the new 
products and seeing how people are using  different 
materials

738
01:00:21,834 --> 01:00:24,800
Maybe I watch too much sci-fi

739
01:00:24,800 --> 01:00:31,100
but I keep waiting for them to stop talking about HVAC and 
just refer to the life support system of a house

740
01:00:31,367 --> 01:00:35,467
My main challenge here in south Georgia is humidity control

741
01:00:35,500 --> 01:00:40,166
But it's only a matter of time before we need CO2 scrubbers 
in our houses

742
01:00:40,166 --> 01:00:45,633
While building science is important, it's not more important
 than the whole point of a house which is shelter

743
01:00:46,100 --> 01:00:50,900
If you've got to get out of the rain and out of the cold you
gotta do what you gotta do

744
01:00:50,900 --> 01:00:55,834
If you only end up with R-12 insulation in your ceiling....

745
01:00:55,967 --> 01:01:00,100
One thing you learn as a scientist is you can't change all 
your variables at once

746
01:01:00,100 --> 01:01:05,066
When I'm thinking of solutions to problems I can think of a 
whole lot of things to try

747
01:01:05,066 --> 01:01:08,066
But I have to force myself to only try one at a time

748
01:01:08,066 --> 01:01:10,000
Or I won't know which one worked

749
01:01:10,000 --> 01:01:15,033
I feel like a house this small is a good opportunity to try 
some stuff

750
01:01:15,033 --> 01:01:21,400
So I sorta did some stuff on my tiny house knowing that it 
could fail

751
01:01:22,300 --> 01:01:25,300
I barely did any of the stuff you're supposed to do to make 
a house tight

752
01:01:25,300 --> 01:01:27,834
I didn't use any expensive tape

753
01:01:27,834 --> 01:01:30,700
I didn't use OSB sheathing

754
01:01:30,700 --> 01:01:32,967
I didn't use sheetrock

755
01:01:32,967 --> 01:01:37,367
All I did was use open cell spray foam

756
01:01:37,367 --> 01:01:41,700
And yet my house is so tight it behaves like a loudspeaker 
enclosure

757
01:01:41,700 --> 01:01:45,967
My tiny house contains about 900 cubic feet of air

758
01:01:45,967 --> 01:01:50,300
And the front door is basically like a port on a loudspeaker

759
01:01:50,300 --> 01:01:55,734
And you can calculate the spring constant of the volume of 
air inside that doorway

760
01:01:56,834 --> 01:02:02,133
And trying to close the door is like pushing against a 
spring. It wants to come open again

761
01:02:02,133 --> 01:02:04,967
And that's how I can tell my house is air tight

762
01:02:04,967 --> 01:02:07,500
The same thing is true of my Spartan

763
01:02:07,500 --> 01:02:12,166
It's so tight that if I have a window open it's much easier 
to close the door

764
01:02:14,900 --> 01:02:17,900
I did some things on my house that I was pretty sure weren't
 going to work

765
01:02:17,900 --> 01:02:20,900
Like putting the posts all the way down into a hole in the 
ground

766
01:02:20,900 --> 01:02:23,900
but, did I really have a choice?

767
01:02:23,900 --> 01:02:26,400
It was the safest way to build it by myself

768
01:02:26,400 --> 01:02:29,400
And the way I fixed it later

769
01:02:30,333 --> 01:02:32,567
Was pretty good. I might do it again.

770
01:02:32,567 --> 01:02:35,033
Build a house with the posts all the way into the ground 

771
01:02:35,033 --> 01:02:37,567
And then later cut em off and put the concrete under them

772
01:02:37,567 --> 01:02:41,200
It seems like a ridiculous order to do it in

773
01:02:41,200 --> 01:02:45,000
But I honestly haven't been able to think of a better way

774
01:02:45,600 --> 01:02:48,600
Because at the time I just needed to get started

775
01:02:48,600 --> 01:02:51,600
I needed to make progress 

776
01:02:51,600 --> 01:02:54,600
And the investment and the labor

777
01:02:54,600 --> 01:02:58,600
of the concrete, I just wasn't in a place to do that then

778
01:02:59,100 --> 01:03:01,700
And honestly I don't feel bad about that

779
01:03:01,700 --> 01:03:03,367
I think it worked

780
01:03:03,433 --> 01:03:04,633
I got 10 years out of those posts

781
01:03:04,633 --> 01:03:06,100
Maybe that's all I needed

782
01:03:06,100 --> 01:03:07,266
Maybe in 10 years

783
01:03:07,266 --> 01:03:10,033
I would've been able to afford to build a bigger house

784
01:03:10,033 --> 01:03:11,800
And I could've had a house mover come

785
01:03:11,800 --> 01:03:14,467
Saw off all these posts and pull this house outta here

786
01:03:14,467 --> 01:03:17,467
Sell it to somebody else who could put it on concrete

787
01:03:18,300 --> 01:03:20,200
And I think flexibility's important

788
01:03:20,200 --> 01:03:21,667
You can't be too hard on yourself

789
01:03:22,066 --> 01:03:24,800
thinking you're going to do something once and not ever 
touch it again. 

790
01:03:24,800 --> 01:03:26,967
There's nothing wrong with touching it again

791
01:03:26,967 --> 01:03:29,033
I took that shitty water heater out of here

792
01:03:29,033 --> 01:03:31,100
I stuck it in my warehouse for a few years

793
01:03:31,100 --> 01:03:35,233
And then I built my lab and I needed a water heater for my 
laundry room and I used it again

794
01:03:35,233 --> 01:03:37,266
It's fine

795
01:03:38,233 --> 01:03:43,133
There were some parts of my house that I really couldn't 
figure out and I had to go and ask my dad for help

796
01:03:43,233 --> 01:03:46,233
and he was really pretty short with me

797
01:03:46,233 --> 01:03:52,367
He does not approve of starting a project where you can't 
visualize every detail

798
01:03:52,500 --> 01:03:57,467
all the way through and know ahead of time what you're going
 to do all the way to the end

799
01:03:57,467 --> 01:04:02,734
But I didn't have the mental capacity to do that

800
01:04:02,734 --> 01:04:07,133
I had to just start and I had to just trust  myself that I 
would figure it out

801
01:04:07,133 --> 01:04:10,133
I had to trust that my dad would tell me how to do it

802
01:04:10,166 --> 01:04:14,900
And he did. He didn't want to. And he didn't really like how
I did it

803
01:04:14,900 --> 01:04:19,533
While I would love to be able to picture every detail all 
the way through to the end of the job

804
01:04:19,533 --> 01:04:21,767
That's just not practical

805
01:04:21,767 --> 01:04:24,100
I know myself a little bit better than that

806
01:04:24,100 --> 01:04:26,700
I have confidence that it will work out

807
01:04:26,867 --> 01:04:31,633
And I have confidence that once I'm standing back looking at
it I'll know what to do next

808
01:04:31,633 --> 01:04:37,967
But sometimes I just have to see it full scale and in 3D 
before I can really picture what's going to happen next

809
01:04:38,467 --> 01:04:42,100
And I could feel bad that I'm not doing it right

810
01:04:42,100 --> 01:04:43,633
But I don't

811
01:04:44,233 --> 01:04:47,967
I have a house to live in and it shelters me from 
thunderstorms

812
01:04:47,967 --> 01:04:51,567
I have been through lots of hurricanes in this house

813
01:04:51,567 --> 01:04:55,867
And every time there's a hurricane I start thinking about my 
windows and I wonder if they're going to get

814
01:04:55,867 --> 01:05:00,567
Sucked out of the hole because there's nothing really 
holding them in there but finish nails and caulk

815
01:05:00,567 --> 01:05:05,100
But they never get sucked out and they are tempered glass, 
so I've got that going for me

816
01:05:05,600 --> 01:05:09,667
I wonder if I would be crushed to death if a tree fell on my
tiny house

817
01:05:09,667 --> 01:05:12,667
But honestly I think I built it better than most people's 
houses

818
01:05:12,667 --> 01:05:15,667
Because of that rigid frame I'm probably better off

819
01:05:16,100 --> 01:05:19,834
I have double 2x6 beams across the tops of my walls

820
01:05:19,834 --> 01:05:24,500
Instead of just 2x4 double top plates

821
01:05:30,767 --> 01:05:33,767
It's pretty common for trees to fall on houses

822
01:05:33,767 --> 01:05:38,967
If you're in a big house the chance that the tree will fall 
on the part of the house you're in

823
01:05:38,967 --> 01:05:41,400
I guess, is reduced

824
01:05:41,400 --> 01:05:45,734
And in my tiny house if a tree fell on it and crushed it it 
would get me for sure

825
01:05:46,066 --> 01:05:49,066
But what I've decided about trees falling on the house

826
01:05:49,133 --> 01:05:51,533
Is it depends on how far away the tree is

827
01:05:51,533 --> 01:05:55,200
If it's really close to the house it just sort of leans 
against the house

828
01:05:55,200 --> 01:05:58,500
But if it's far away and it's all the way up to speed

829
01:05:58,500 --> 01:06:01,834
It's gonna smash the shit out of your house and there's 
nothing you can do about it

830
01:06:01,834 --> 01:06:04,667
Whenever there's a hurricane, and there's a lot

831
01:06:04,667 --> 01:06:08,300
they say to get to an inside room away from windows

832
01:06:08,300 --> 01:06:13,400
and I don't have an inside room away from windows

833
01:06:13,400 --> 01:06:20,633
So I channel my cousin Annie and I fill the bathtub with 
pillows and I get in there and read

834
01:06:20,633 --> 01:06:25,900
That's all for the Beachton Buck Rivet Report. Go buck 
yourself

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