![]() ![]() They make the coldest houses because of their tight grains. Poplar logs are the cheapest and easiest to find. As we took it down we drilled holes down from the top for wiring, and anchor bolts. ![]() The last one we built was first assembled 10 feet from its permanent foundation. The one trick you need to know is that you will have to assemble it twice. The jigs are easy to build and you can cut both ends of a log and have it ready to install in under 20 minutes. You can find plans to build a jig to cut your own notches on the internet. If you can find dry logs for sale you can mill themselves with a saw mill, chainsaw mill or hire someone to custom mill them for you. An added bonus is that you don't have to be a perfectionist because 99.99% of people don't see the flaws in workmanship. This style is the easiest to build the easiest to finish, and you won't have to tear your house apart if you have to change a log.īuilding a log cabin yourself is a lot easier than you would think. Use dovetail corners and make you spacing 3-4 inches between each log and make sure that they are at least 10 inches wide after being milled. If you do decide to build with logs I would suggest that you go with D shaped logs which are flat inside and round outside. More than 20 of my friends live in them and I have built a dozen now myself. You will notice this when your stove goes out in the winter. While logs are a decent at absorbing heat and radiating it back to you they also she'd it to the outside world. You will never come close to achieving the insulation values of a 8 inch stick framed wall. When you build your house it is hard to change wiring and hang cabinets on the inside walls. After 15-20 years you will have to sand the entire outside and restain the logs.įinishing the inside can be tricky if you don't plan well. If one log rots you will have to tear the entire place apart in order to change it. They stain easily and can quickly rot if your roof isn't large enough to keep the rain off on windy days. They can swell and shrink every year if you live in a wet climate which can cause your chinking to deteriorate. The logs can shrink and settle at uneven rates. My brother pays more than double than his neighbor does for insurance because his house is built out of logs. Both pay a premium because they live outside the fire protection zone and the closest fire hydrants is 4 miles away. In Northern British Columbia my brother is paying $4,500 a year to insure a 30x30 house with a full basement and a 3/4 loft his neighbor only pays $1,900 a year for a larger stick frame home just down the road. If you plan on buying house insurance look at the rates before you build. ![]()
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