Saturday, January 13, 2007

A new barn floor!

This is a short note, but a hopeful one. The warm weather we've been having has kept alive my drive to make improvements to the property through the winter. Today I met with a concrete contractor and we discussed a new floor in half of my barn. I want to use an area about 22' by 24' as a woodshop and "out of the weather" storage depot for house materials. I'm hoping I can buy things cheap while they're on sale, before I need them.

Percy says he can dig out the dirt that's there now, lay in 4" of rock and pour a 4" slab of concrete for me in the next week or two. I asked him if he'd bring in a Bobcat or what and he just grinned and said, "Do you know what a Chinese backhoe is?" I laughed because I knew there was a lot of shoveling ahead for his crew. It should be easy digging though, most of it's rotted cow and horse manure. I'm going to have him spread it in the "garden to be."

Once the floor's been laid I should be able to repair the rim joist on the north gable end of the barn (eaten away by weather) and perhaps even get that gable resided, if the weather holds warm like it has been. With a new floor, new joists, and new siding, we'll be ready for a garage door and really be going to town!

It was fun to bust out the old junky flooring and walls that had been put in there by someone. Much of it was oak that was a good bit rotted out. I managed to get a fire started (VERY carefully) in a small brush pile with a little gasoline. I tried kerosene first because it's safer to work with and it wouldn't light for some reason. I stacked on the junky boards from the old floor. Once they got going they burned really well. I ended up with a bed of coals about 18" high and 3' in diameter. It was so hot I couldn't get near it to push in the unburnt ends. I had to flip them in with a rake from a distance. Even though the day was in the 50's and rainy.

There were some old pine boughs from the other side of the house, down by the power pole. I decided to clear out that area a bit, but the pile was too big to lug so far by hand so I fired up Eloise and hooked a chain up and drug over a good sized load. I used the biggest limb I could find as a "bed" and piled the other limbs on top. Hooked up the chain and away she went. Eloise fired right up, no problem, btw.

I'm hoping to clear a good path to the power pole because at some point I want to bury the power lines into the house. I really don't like them hanging around. The power comes in from the back left side of the house and the phone/cable comes in the front left, so I will have some good experience with a trencher before I'm done. :)

The back line, the power cable, will be a bit tricky since there are a lot of rocks close to the surface there and getting the power line under ground might be a challenge. At worst I figure I'll just lay the cable on the rock and build a berm of earth over top of it to the right depth. If the cable can't go into the ground, the dirt can rise above it...

I still have about six posts to cut out of the barn. Someone installed some VERY sturdy posts to anchor the corners of box stalls, they're sunk into concrete, etc. I intend to just cut them at the top by the joists and flush with the dirt on the bottom. The footings can probably be jack hammered low enough to be buried under the slab. My concrete guy says they won't be a problem.

I've got a book on hot water heat for slabs. I want to try out the system on the barn/shop floor and see if I can work it right there. Even if the floor never gets super hot, being able to bring it from 30F to 60F will be a help on the feet in cold weather. My intention is to hook the loop up to some homemade solar collectors as an experiment. We'll see how well it works out. I'd like to hook it up to a solar electric powered circulation pump. That way it will only circulate when there's sunshine (heat) to be gathered. Not sure of the engineering math involved, but this is a great toy for a tinkerer. :)

Off to bed, a full day ahead tomorrow.

Doug

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Finally, something new! You should be careful with putting gas over kero....does your wife know the treacherous things you get into?

Doug Dobbs said...

Doug Dobbs said...
It has been a busy fall, not much time to work on the house. Things are getting better now.

As for the "accelerants", believe me, I was exceedingly careful with that pile.

This time around we did it a bit differently. We used a small amount of gas in a plastic jug, with a kerosene "fuse". Kerosene fumes won't ignite the way that gas fumes will, so it is safer to work with. As it turned out, we didn't really need either. The kerosene didn't burn well in the leaves. By the time the fire reached the gasoline jugs and melted them they were irrelevant. Once the small stuff caught it was enough to get the big stuff going and the logs all burned merrily. I was afraid that they'd be hard to start.

The biggest asset I had was a MAPP torch. It was able to really get the damp leaves going and from there it was no problem. We had flames reaching 25' inside of ten minutes.

And yes, my wife knows what sort of treacherous things I get into. She wanted to light it. :)

Doug