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The Regenerative Home's video: Stair Stingers in a Small Space with Landing and Turn to Attic Links to tools used in Descr

@Stair Stingers in a Small Space with Landing and Turn to Attic. Links to tools used in Descr.
Large Carpenters Square. Link https://amzn.to/2GQYWf7 Stair Stringer Stops for Carpenters Square. Link https://amzn.to/2GuTu25 Saw used to cut stringers Large Makita cordless Link https://amzn.to/2QR4Emv Large speed square Link https://amzn.to/2QrUXeI Glue used to glue down plywood subfloor Link https://amzn.to/2Nbi60b Impact Driver Milwaukee Link https://amzn.to/2GQZlhD Nail Gun used for Framing. Link https://amzn.to/2N8Ec3o Air filtration system https://amzn.to/2EueX7J Washable Outer filter https://amzn.to/2HeaiJZ Today I want to talk about designing and building stair stringers and the tight space so the first thing that you're always going to do when you create stringers is you're gonna measure your eyes and your rug so you can see that we built the platform here why we build the platform here was because we wanted to end the stairs on the hallway we didn't want this to go out into the hallway does that look weird so so when I calculated the rise there was no way. We were going to build standard stairs they would be come all the way up here so then we calculated something I built a platform a calculator when I first built it I built it too high as I didn't calculate the head space here. When you're doing it feeling weird custom leave remodels you're not everything always going to get something to the right size so this was about as much head space as I can get and they drop this platform back down to a level that will give you that much head space another thing that you'll notice is that this platform is about inches longer then it has to be for the foot wide stair turns and that's exactly for this. So that we could have just land the second pair of treads on it the next thing that I want to bring your attention to these the rise of these little stringers so these little guys are fairly similar to the top spinners but you don't have to make these stairs exactly the rising around the center as. As these and the reason I like this your cadence changes it's only when a step itself it's too high or too low on the same time then it becomes a trip hazard so you walk them up and they're saying we wanted them to be fairly similar but they're not exactly the same that would have taken a lot of complicated math to get these to be exactly the same and so we didn't bother okay so the next thing. I want to bring your attention to are these long streamers so when we did this first we didn't do it correctly and I'll tell you about that in a minute but if you see this is this is actually exactly inches which is pretty much your minimum tread and then these are and, Travis this is pretty much maximum underneath again it might be a little over maximum but that was as small as we could get with this wide of a tread as we could in order to make these stairs work now if you look here you can see these are slightly back angled. So we cut obviously marked out all the stringers and then we cut back an inch to give ourselves another inch of tread width so we could get closer to a standard stock or a standard stairs you see that there's the last thread is recessed down from the second floor so the mistake that we made is on the treads on the on the stringer itself there's nine Rises and nine runs and so, When we when we calculated the total rise and run we divided them by nine rises and nine runs and that gave us an incorrect number so instead we have this extra rise so then we changed it to rises and runs and then cut the stringer out of that and then it worked fine so what I recommend is that you number your rises and you number your runs and then that way you'll know the exact number of rises need actually the runs that you're going to use no matter what another thing to bring your attention to this is what I find most people mess up on is the measurement of the rise is finished for a finished floor so in every case. It's a little bit different so for example down here this is our finished floor so and this up here's another finished course so then we have to subtract out how much rise we're going to have from this finish board in this case it turned out to be an inch and a half in this case heater it turns out to be three quarters so when you cut your stringer mostly if you watch the other videos you know you make your stringers and then you cut the bottom out. So that this first step is the same height as all the other stuff when you put the final tread on so there's going to be a three quarter would tread on top of this so we cut that out so when we add this in it'll be exactly the same and then it transfers up each step at the same time the other weird thing for us for this one is that this is a wood finish the floor and at the top it's a carpet. Links are amazon associate links.

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This video was published on 2019-02-16 21:37:44 GMT by @Lush-Planet-Electric,-Design-Build on Youtube. The Regenerative Home has total 16K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 249 video.This video has received 125 Likes which are higher than the average likes that The Regenerative Home gets . @Lush-Planet-Electric,-Design-Build receives an average views of 3.3K per video on Youtube.This video has received 7 comments which are higher than the average comments that The Regenerative Home gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.The Regenerative Home #Stair #Stingers #diy Today has been used frequently in this Post.

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