jim618326
REGISTERED
Hi everyone,
Glad I found this forum. It's been a long time since I've built anything significant. Complete two car detached garage start to finish from hole dig, foundation, to 150 foot concrete driveway in 1982. Major home renovations including cape dormer in 1992. All without nail guns and all the latest cool tools out there. A 12' x 16' shed around 2007 (with nail guns). About to embark on a detached 18' x 30' detached garage. In the meantime, I decided to build a small wood shed. What I have discovered is that is impossible to find green Douglas fir lumber. So I bought kiln dried Doug Fir. I immediately discovered that every time I put a nail (0.113 x 3-1/4") through the end of a 2 x 4, cross grain, it splits it. I did some research and found the green Doug fir comes with a red painted end. Looked through my old project photos and found the lumber with red painted ends. I remember the last hammer blow on the 16p nails, you would see moisture water come out of the wood. Nothing ever split. We never had any issues with the green Doug fir warping or twisting. Loved working with the stuff. Also, the projects had a lot of time to dry before any sheetrock was installed.
So my question is what changed? Did the building code change to require kiln dried lumber? I don't know how anyone works with this stuff. Is it still possible to buy green Doug fir anywhere in Connecticut?
Thanks for the help.
Glad I found this forum. It's been a long time since I've built anything significant. Complete two car detached garage start to finish from hole dig, foundation, to 150 foot concrete driveway in 1982. Major home renovations including cape dormer in 1992. All without nail guns and all the latest cool tools out there. A 12' x 16' shed around 2007 (with nail guns). About to embark on a detached 18' x 30' detached garage. In the meantime, I decided to build a small wood shed. What I have discovered is that is impossible to find green Douglas fir lumber. So I bought kiln dried Doug Fir. I immediately discovered that every time I put a nail (0.113 x 3-1/4") through the end of a 2 x 4, cross grain, it splits it. I did some research and found the green Doug fir comes with a red painted end. Looked through my old project photos and found the lumber with red painted ends. I remember the last hammer blow on the 16p nails, you would see moisture water come out of the wood. Nothing ever split. We never had any issues with the green Doug fir warping or twisting. Loved working with the stuff. Also, the projects had a lot of time to dry before any sheetrock was installed.
So my question is what changed? Did the building code change to require kiln dried lumber? I don't know how anyone works with this stuff. Is it still possible to buy green Doug fir anywhere in Connecticut?
Thanks for the help.