I received my NT trailer on Friday, and put it together. I'll have my lumber on Monday, and will begin construction! Here is my final design. I would love any input.
Thanks for all of the resources here!
phanslin wrote:Tony,
It is a bunk for our son. It will fold up when he is not with us. I like the idea of building the wall to support the addition of another door.
I hope to get the wall construction underway next week. I plan on Titebond ii for the core of the walls, and PL around the edges. My question is will that be enough? Should I use Brad nails, or screw them down at all?
Thanks again for everyones input!
tony.latham wrote:phanslin wrote:Tony,
It is a bunk for our son. It will fold up when he is not with us. I like the idea of building the wall to support the addition of another door.
I hope to get the wall construction underway next week. I plan on Titebond ii for the core of the walls, and PL around the edges. My question is will that be enough? Should I use Brad nails, or screw them down at all?
Thanks again for everyones input!
Put the Titebond on with two people working with dixie cups and chip brushes. You have to work fine. Really slop it on. (What's a little squeeze out?)
I like to use both weight and a 1/4" crown stapler (push hard, and then thunk a staple in).
You can't have too much weight. The weight alone in that photo wasn't enough to push down the open areas.
I'd suggest you attach–-with screws or clamps––wood blocks on your exterior so that when you set it on your skeleton, it keys to where it needs to end up. Otherwise it'll want to slide around on the glue. Once the weight and staples (or grabber screws) are on, remove the key blocks.
It also helps to set your skeleton on your exterior and pencil in where your cutouts are––so you don't have to guess where your screws/staples need to be.
Tony
KCStudly wrote:Tony is the proverbial "Phantom Builder".
KCStudly wrote:Tony is the proverbial "Phantom Builder".
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