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#1
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I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch.
It would be added on to the house. He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Comments on other areas welcome too. Thanks, Andy |
#2
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On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 06:03:01 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote: I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch. Check It would be added on to the house. Check He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) He can follow the local hurricane building codes, double that, and hope for the best. I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Have good insurance or savings and replace it after the storm? Point is, check the local codes for a better answer... |
#3
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On Thursday, August 22, 2013 1:10:06 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote:
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 06:03:01 -0700 (PDT), Andy wrote: I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch. Check It would be added on to the house. Check He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) He can follow the local hurricane building codes, double that, and hope for the best. I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Have good insurance or savings and replace it after the storm? Point is, check the local codes for a better answer... Local codes don't give any information to my questions. But thanks for answering. Andy |
#4
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On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 20:42:28 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote: On Thursday, August 22, 2013 1:10:06 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 06:03:01 -0700 (PDT), Andy wrote: I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch. Check It would be added on to the house. Check He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) He can follow the local hurricane building codes, double that, and hope for the best. I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Have good insurance or savings and replace it after the storm? Point is, check the local codes for a better answer... Local codes don't give any information to my questions. But thanks for answering. Andy I did not see a specific question, but if you give some details about the house construction, siding, size of the roof cover and such, folks may have solutions for you. On mine I wanted a match for stucco. Three columns, 22' beam, Spanish type tile, stucco ceiling and columns, Simpson strong ties, stucco on the house was cut back to the framing and the ledger board was lag bolted in, flashing, etc., etc... Two of us built it, but I hired out the stucco. After 8+ years there is not a single crack. My neighbor has the Alumawood patio cover. |
#5
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On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 06:03:01 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote: I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch. It would be added on to the house. He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Comments on other areas welcome too. Wait a minute. You're contracting to do something you don't know how to do? And asking here? Talk to tradesmen who know about the engineering/construction methods. Then decide whether you want to squeeze your customer for the most money, or give him the best recommendation. Canopies/awnings/small roofs made of metal/fiberglass/plastic materials will always be lighter and easier to maintain. Esthetics is another issue. |
#6
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On Fri, 23 Aug 2013 12:57:43 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote: Wait a minute. You're contracting to do something you don't know how to do? And asking here? (I though the same thing earlier) OP seems to think building codes are not informative. For my patio cover, the drawing and measurements was on a piece of yellow legal paper. The PERMIT office gave me all the information needed to build it. CAD drawings for the column footers, calculations based on the roofing material, bean size, etc. I also had a permit for the electrical work - two fans and additional outdoor GFCI receptacles. "Contracting" in my state (NV) without a license is a felony. A home owner can act as a contractor for their own home improvements. |
#7
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On Friday, August 23, 2013 8:24:49 AM UTC-5, Oren wrote:
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 20:42:28 -0700 (PDT), Andy wrote: On Thursday, August 22, 2013 1:10:06 PM UTC-5, Oren wrote: On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 06:03:01 -0700 (PDT), Andy wrote: I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch. Check It would be added on to the house. Check He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) He can follow the local hurricane building codes, double that, and hope for the best. I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Have good insurance or savings and replace it after the storm? Point is, check the local codes for a better answer... Local codes don't give any information to my questions. But thanks for answering. Andy I did not see a specific question, but if you give some details about the house construction, siding, size of the roof cover and such, folks may have solutions for you. On mine I wanted a match for stucco. Three columns, 22' beam, Spanish type tile, stucco ceiling and columns, Simpson strong ties, stucco on the house was cut back to the framing and the ledger board was lag bolted in, flashing, etc., etc... Two of us built it, but I hired out the stucco. After 8+ years there is not a single crack. My neighbor has the Alumawood patio cover. Thanks for the questions. My customer decided on wood. The cover will go over a 10' X 20' slab. I will use 6 x 6 treated lumber beams and the cover will be attached to the house which has vinyl siding. Shingled roof. He has a whole house generator that can be hooked up upon a power loss. He once lost power for a week. Andy |
#8
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On Friday, August 23, 2013 12:57:43 PM UTC-5, Vic Smith wrote:
On Thu, 22 Aug 2013 06:03:01 -0700 (PDT), Andy wrote: I am working on 2 bids for a customer who would prefer a wood as opposed to a metal cover for the porch. It would be added on to the house. He is concerned about the strength issue because of living in a hurricane prone area. (20 miles from Galveston, Texas) I am interested in your thoughts on construction technique especially if he goes with a metal roof. Comments on other areas welcome too. Wait a minute. You're contracting to do something you don't know how to do? And asking here? Talk to tradesmen who know about the engineering/construction methods. Then decide whether you want to squeeze your customer for the most money, or give him the best recommendation. Canopies/awnings/small roofs made of metal/fiberglass/plastic materials will always be lighter and easier to maintain. Esthetics is another issue. Concerning your belief that I don't know what I am doing. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, even if it's wrong. Take care. Andy |
#9
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On Fri, 23 Aug 2013 15:03:49 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote: Thanks for the questions. Sorry. I never asked a question. My customer decided on wood. The cover will go over a 10' X 20' slab. Now we are getting there. Same size as mine. I will use 6 x 6 treated lumber beams and the cover will be attached to the house which has vinyl siding. Do yourself a favor and attach the cover to the house AND not the siding. I think you mean that. I used a lam-beam (laminated wood) to span 22' (4" X10" X 22 ft.). Ledger board on the house framing was a 2X 10. Shingled roof. That will change the roof pitch and be easier. He has a whole house generator that can be hooked up upon a power loss. Okay. He once lost power for a week. Okay. What happens when a hurricane hits Galveston and rips the cover off the house? Did you check for permit requirements? Follow the local building codes that you resist. |
#10
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Andy wrote:
....Snip... Thanks for the questions. My customer decided on wood. The cover will go over a 10' X 20' slab. I will use 6 x 6 treated lumber beams and the cover will be attached to the house which has vinyl siding. Shingled roof. He has a whole house generator that can be hooked up upon a power loss. He once lost power for a week. Andy What does a generator have to do with what type of roof will be used for the patio cover? |
#11
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On Sunday, August 25, 2013 3:34:48 AM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
Andy ...Snip... Thanks for the questions. My customer decided on wood. The cover will go over a 10' X 20' slab. I will use 6 x 6 treated lumber beams and the cover will be attached to the house which has vinyl siding. Shingled roof. He has a whole house generator that can be hooked up upon a power loss. He once lost power for a week. Andy What does a generator have to do with what type of roof will be used for the patio cover? The generator may be hooked up for a week. I thought that would be a consideration in the design of the cover. Those things are very noisy and maybe a cover for it by itself with some sound insulation. I have seen plans for adding a car muffler to a generator. I heard that 3 8x8x10' would be sufficient for the 20 ft. run. Andy |
#12
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My Dad had a Honda that was fairly quiet. The muffler
was half inch pipe thread, so he used galvanized pipe to extend the muffler out about a foot, which helped in that application. Still noisy enough. I think a vented noise box is a good idea, with a bathroom exhaust fan to pull cool air in the bottom. Me, when the power is out I run my generator an hour in the Am, and an hour before bedtime. No reason to have it sucking gasoline all day. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/25/2013 7:51 PM, Andy wrote: What does a generator have to do with what type of roof will be used for the patio cover? The generator may be hooked up for a week. I thought that would be a consideration in the design of the cover. Those things are very noisy and maybe a cover for it by itself with some sound insulation. I have seen plans for adding a car muffler to a generator. I heard that 3 8x8x10' would be sufficient for the 20 ft. run. Andy |
#13
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On 8/25/2013 6:51 PM, Andy wrote:
The generator may be hooked up for a week. I thought that would be a consideration in the design of the cover. Those things are very noisy and maybe a cover for it by itself with some sound insulation. I have seen plans for adding a car muffler to a generator. I heard that 3 8x8x10' would be sufficient for the 20 ft. run. Andy I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD |
#14
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On Sunday, August 25, 2013 9:33:56 PM UTC-4, The Daring Dufas wrote:
On 8/25/2013 6:51 PM, Andy wrote: The generator may be hooked up for a week. I thought that would be a consideration in the design of the cover. Those things are very noisy and maybe a cover for it by itself with some sound insulation. I have seen plans for adding a car muffler to a generator. I heard that 3 8x8x10' would be sufficient for the 20 ft. run. Andy I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD Thanks to both of you and the others for all the help and ideas. My friend bought a whole gasoline generator. It runs AC and the rest of the house. I am not sure how it would do if the electric gas dryer was used as well. Andy |
#15
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Andy wrote:
My friend bought a whole gasoline generator. That's good. Other's have tried a half gasoline generator and even a three quarter gasoline generator. Those tend not to work out so well. |
#16
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The Daring Dufas wrote:
On 8/25/2013 6:51 PM, Andy wrote: The generator may be hooked up for a week. I thought that would be a consideration in the design of the cover. Those things are very noisy and maybe a cover for it by itself with some sound insulation. I have seen plans for adding a car muffler to a generator. I heard that 3 8x8x10' would be sufficient for the 20 ft. run. Andy I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD Gas in basement ? Greg |
#17
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On Sun, 25 Aug 2013 20:33:56 -0500, The Daring Dufas
wrote: I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD It must be really annoying, when one has no electricty, to listen to loud, annoying generator of someone who does have it. |
#18
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On 8/25/2013 11:24 PM, gregz wrote:
The Daring Dufas wrote: On 8/25/2013 6:51 PM, Andy wrote: The generator may be hooked up for a week. I thought that would be a consideration in the design of the cover. Those things are very noisy and maybe a cover for it by itself with some sound insulation. I have seen plans for adding a car muffler to a generator. I heard that 3 8x8x10' would be sufficient for the 20 ft. run. Andy I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD Gas in basement ? Greg The genset ran on natural gas as did the fellow's furnace and water heater which were also in the basement. Usually a "stationary" genset installed in a home will be run on propane or natural gas. If the genset is the size of a small car and the homeowner wealthy enough to own a large enough house to need a really big generator, the genset could be a diesel fueled unit. ^_^ TDD |
#19
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Most electric gas dryers only use a couple amps
for the motor and the controls. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/25/2013 11:02 PM, Andy wrote: Thanks to both of you and the others for all the help and ideas. My friend bought a whole gasoline generator. It runs AC and the rest of the house. I am not sure how it would do if the electric gas dryer was used as well. Andy |
#20
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During one of the power cuts, someone decided to
leave his generator on all night. I wasn't all that pleased. It was tempting to go do some thing impolite to his generator. I do my best to run only at reasonable hours. Being considerate. In the case of your customer, wasn't the generator itself noisy? Would that be loud in the house? .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/25/2013 9:33 PM, The Daring Dufas wrote: I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD |
#21
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Half gasoline generators are less able to
run electric gas dryers. Everyone nose that. Me, well, I know my sniff. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/25/2013 11:55 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote: Andy wrote: My friend bought a whole gasoline generator. That's good. Other's have tried a half gasoline generator and even a three quarter gasoline generator. Those tend not to work out so well. |
#22
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Nitrogen, oxygen, and argon are the gasses
in the cellar. The exhaust gasses went through the wall. Knowing TDD as I do, I'd have to guess that was exterior wall. I heard a report one time, of a HO who did run a generator in the cellar "left the cellar door open to let the exhaust out". And killed himself and his family with the monoxide. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/26/2013 12:24 AM, gregz wrote: The Daring Dufas wrote: I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD Gas in basement ? Greg |
#23
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In today's entitlement society, there is also
the "crabs in a bucket" mentality. Doesn't matter what we go through, as long as everyone is miserable, together. Now days, no one cares if the other person went to college, worked hard, and spent endless hours working, saving, living frugal. The people are cold and dark, and that other person has generator, so the angry short sighted selfish types who spent all their money on cable TV and vacations have to go take care of the rich guy who benefitted unfairly. I have little respect for the "punish the successful" mentality. Wish we could get back to the early days of "respect the successful, learn from them, and work hard so you can enjoy the success also." I admit it, I'm a right winger. I work for a living, and respect those who succeed. I also want that idiot on the next street to shut off his generator at 9 PM so the kids in the area can sleep. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/26/2013 2:55 AM, micky wrote: shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD It must be really annoying, when one has no electricty, to listen to loud, annoying generator of someone who does have it. |
#24
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I've heard of people using the engine out of automobile
to power a larger PTO driven generator. Or, using a farm tractor if they are farmers. Makes sense, to me. One water district, I did some work for them. They have diesel generator, and a big tank of fuel outside the pump house. Makes sense, to me. Many hospitals, fire departments, and other agencies have backup generator. For me, when the power is out. I go into "hunker down and wait it out" mode. I just keep reviewing all my blessings of health and such, and try to stay busy helping friends. I've pumped cellars, run others furnace, and lot of things like that. I'm best when I'm busy doing things. One couple friends, water in the cellar. They bought inverter to try and power the sump. Hooked it to a couple wires inside the truck. Would have been more likely to work if they used the short cables (provided, for this reason) and hook directly to the battery. They went to his brother's house, and got his old Honda generator, which didn't start. I chatted with them on the phone, and went over to help. The spray can of ether I brought, started the generator. That helped pump out the cellar. The carpet had gotten wet, so the teenage son cut it with utility knife, and carried it out. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/26/2013 3:39 AM, The Daring Dufas wrote: The genset ran on natural gas as did the fellow's furnace and water heater which were also in the basement. Usually a "stationary" genset installed in a home will be run on propane or natural gas. If the genset is the size of a small car and the homeowner wealthy enough to own a large enough house to need a really big generator, the genset could be a diesel fueled unit. ^_^ TDD |
#25
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On 8/26/2013 7:23 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
During one of the power cuts, someone decided to leave his generator on all night. I wasn't all that pleased. It was tempting to go do some thing impolite to his generator. I do my best to run only at reasonable hours. Being considerate. In the case of your customer, wasn't the generator itself noisy? Would that be loud in the house? If I recall correctly, it was an Onan genset and even though it was air cooled, the mechanical noise was fairly low. I installed and serviced a lot of 4 cylinder air cooled 15-20kw Onan gensets and with the critical grade muffler, the mechanical noise is at a very low level. If I was in the market for a home generator, I'd look for a used 20kw Onan air cooled NG genset, with proper maintenance they run forever. ^_^ TDD |
#26
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On Friday, August 23, 2013 6:07:08 PM UTC-4, Andy wrote:
Concerning your belief that I don't know what I am doing. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, even if it's wrong. If you knew what you were doing, you wouldn't be referring to a patio roof as a "cover," and you wouldn't be asking for construction tips on this newsgroup. You also wouldn't be spouting random BS about generators that have nothing to do with the subject at hand. |
#27
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On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 10:10:44 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
If you knew what you were doing, you wouldn't be referring to a patio roof as a "cover," http://lmgtfy.com/?q=images%3A+patio+cover |
#28
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wrote:
On Friday, August 23, 2013 6:07:08 PM UTC-4, Andy wrote: Concerning your belief that I don't know what I am doing. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, even if it's wrong. If you knew what you were doing, you wouldn't be referring to a patio roof as a "cover," Have you DAGS for Patio Covers recently? and you wouldn't be asking for construction tips on this newsgroup. Do you know what a.h.r stands for? With all of the OT stuff that ends up in this newsgroup, an actual construction question is a welcome sight. You also wouldn't be spouting random BS about generators that have nothing to do with the subject at hand. The OP does seem to toss random comments into his posts, but he did eventually connect the generator's noise with a question as to whether or not that might factor into the patio cover's construction. One could argue that there are ways to build the cover that would "muffle" the noise from the generator or perhaps something could be built around the generator as part of the project - something which might impact the construction of the cover itself. |
#29
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On Monday, August 26, 2013 7:23:34 AM UTC-5, Stormin Mormon wrote:
During one of the power cuts, someone decided to leave his generator on all night. I wasn't all that pleased. It was tempting to go do some thing impolite to his generator. I do my best to run only at reasonable hours. Being considerate. In the case of your customer, wasn't the generator itself noisy? Would that be loud in the house? . Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org . On 8/25/2013 9:33 PM, The Daring Dufas wrote: I had a customer who owned a single cylinder stationary genset installed in his basement with the exhaust going through the wall. It was still quite noisy outside so I went to my pal who ran a muffler shop and got him to make an extension pipe with a glasspack muffler which added to the existing muffler brought the sound level way down to a nonirritating tone. His neighbor's really appreciated it. ^_^ TDD They are loud, but it beats the heat that we have in Texas. I told him today to consider some kind of cover for the generator itself. He would not want rain getting on it. Putting in some fiberglass mats may help with sound reduction in addition to a muffler and/or glass pack. It's about 8700 watts of output. Andy |
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