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This article is one of two on JLC Live in New England. In it, you’ll find best practice tips for: (Click to Jump to any of those sections below.)

For part two for this article including featured products, Press for Products from JLC Live.

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If I had a dollar for every time I was asked …“What brought you up to Providence for this year’s JLC Live?” I’d have … idk … like $14.  I wanted to compare this Show to the Remodeling Show. That being an event I have been (loosely) associated with.  And I wanted to attend a Residential Construction Show that perhaps I wasn’t so involved with.

JLC Live Providence Convention Center

I was able to acquire the press pass, and I did make a few appointments (with friends and brands). But I wasn’t so obligated that I couldn’t take in a good portion of 49th edition of JLC Live.  As Hanley Wood (the producers of the event) put it – this one is “Boots Not Suits.” And frankly, I wanted to see.  Plus, friend (and presenter) Greg Burnet had simply gotten me pretty darn stoked on it.  He had told me that at one time they would build an entire house right there on the exhibition floor.  Really?!  Not this year … unfortunately, but still … plenty of sawdust did fly. And a portion of my title up there I can credit to new friend Bill Robinson, also presenting.  (Thanks Bill.)

Set Set Up Sawdust JLC Live

Attendees JLC Live 2013 New England

As it stands, the Journal of Light Construction (formerly New England Builder) hosts two hands-on, live-action trade events yearly. And this one in Providence, as I understand it, pulls very, very well.  The assumption to why, of course, because of those deep New England roots. I headed up for three days last week and found that the Show was in fact pretty lively (Standing Room Only in many of the on-the-floor clinics on Friday).  When not tied to an obligation and when not roaming about the streets around the Providence Biltmore in Providence’s Art District, I  sat and enjoyed some spectacular best practice presentations from some of the industry’s brightest minds.

Providence Biltmore

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* Framing

Mike Sloggatt shared time in the Framing and StairBuilding Clinic, but it was Mike’s presentations that I was most interested in seeing. He had the only sessions I doubled up on. I caught his presentation on Wall Framing Strategies and Roof Framing to bookend the first day.

Mike Sloggatt Wall Framing Strategies

Mike, though primarily a remodeler, has come to embrace some of the techniques that production builders employ. This includes “framing in kits” – cutting framing for window packages (or perhaps doors), as well as for common walls, all at once and up front.

Mike uses some nifty tools, none of which are really revolutionary, complex or new.  He uses a story pole for quick repeat cuts.  He totes or builds a site-built square for racking, squaring and tabling lumber … for quick gang cutting.  Many of you have seen my own temp cut table that I have almost permanently set up in the rear of my house (ha!).  Well, Mike one-ups this.  By being very particular about selecting a piece of scrap ply, which he looks to crown, and then by strapping 2×4 scraps across it, he can cut virtually anywhere along its length.

Mike Sloggatt Roof Framing

In the afternoon session, he took us through the basics of roof framing. (Something I find I’m very, very weak on). Roof framing as Mike presented it is a simple matter of mathematics. Despite all that might seem to go into it.  “We are most concerned with determining the angle(s) of a triangle,” Mike says.

While the framing square can be an incredibly useful tool with laying out roofs, and especially with making seat cuts, Mike worked very efficiently using a construction calculator.  While I am tempted to layout the steps that Mike prescribes for determining angle, lengths, as well as for setting the ridge, perhaps it is best I point you instead to an article he did for Gary Katz’s This is CarpentryCommon Rafter Framing.

* Drywall

Myron Ferguson hosted the Drywall Clinic. I knew Myron because I in fact own one of his books – Drywall – Professional Techniques, Great Results.  (He didn’t know me.)  I sat in on his presentation regarding Sound Control.

Myron Ferguson Mass Loaded Vinyl

To nutshell sound, there are two kinds – airborne and structure-born. While insulating and sealing (with expandable foam and acoustic-rated caulking) are obvious good practices. Certain design decisions too have a big impact on sound transmittance, he said.  Hi-hat recessed can placement (and number), heat registers, door placement and further any break in the drywall, including for electrical switches and outlets, can dictate how freely sound can move.

Where a good design, which takes into account sound, can help mitigate some of the airborne offenders, Myron suggests. When addressing structure-born sound look at products and techniques that provide de-coupling. Myron introduced a product new to me – Mass Loaded Vinyl, an 1/8″ sheet good available most commonly in four foot rolls.

As presented by Myron the vinyl could be installed either inside or out, but I think I’d have to look at other thermal and air movement information before I went so far as putting it on a home’s exterior.  MLV may be installed not only behind drywall but it can also be used overhead (working in a team perhaps) and underfoot.

* Old House Updates / Plaster in Remodeling

Old friend Mark Clement was in the house. Mark was assigned the Building Performance space and I sat in on his presentation regarding Old House Energy Updates.  As Mark puts it, and when considering how to approach any work where plaster is present, it is a matter of … decisions, made only after answering a series of questions.  Should the client (or we, if we are working in a room ourselves) stay or go?  Does the potential of what can be gained (through energy updates and other retrofits like fire-blocking) outweigh the lead-based, and other, risks associated with removing plaster?

Mark Clement Old House Updates

While the RRP Rule for remodelers specifies methods for handling the removal of plaster, Mark provided additional tips for working both within and beyond the Rule. If deciding to remove plaster, he suggests protecting floors with Ram Board or perhaps with a sacrificial piece or two of drywall. Turning off heating and cooling equipment, as well as sealing registers and returns is important.

Mark told of the effectiveness he’s seen with site-built, self-closing plastic fitted screen doors. When slammed, these doors create a negative pressure effect within the room, forcing potentially hazardous dust back inward.  One member of the audience, too, chimed in suggesting that he has had some success running a small clothes steamer (hmmmm, maybe a standard humidifier?) during tear out.  The added humidity in the room, he suggested, helps weigh down and control dust.

Mark recommends a technique of removing plaster that he credits to Tom Silva.  Mark calls it simply, the “peel and pry.”

* Siding

I ended my series of sessions with Greg Burnet’s bit on Installing Siding.  Sponsored by LP Smart Side, Greg is LP’s lead siding trainer for a lack of a better way to put it.  He walked us through some of the recommended best practices with installing this engineered wood product.  More impactful, I felt, and while not required with SmartSide, Greg ended his segment discussing rain screens.

Greg Burnet Rain Screens

As highlighted by my three days, the topic of rain screens remains an amazingly hot topic.  I scored possibly the bedrock article on them, co-written by  Bill Robinson and Gary Katz – Detailing a Rain Screen for Siding.  A rain screen in its most basic form, as Greg told us, creates an air space (behind siding, for example) which allows for both drainage and for the convective movement of air which will dry water vapor.  And we know, Greg insisted, “Water WILL get behind your siding.”

JLCLIVE logo

* After Hours

In a lot of cases, I had to trade one presentation or appointment for another. There was just so many clinics that I would have liked to have seen.

There were many highlights, though, beyond what I could have picked up in these sessions.

Unplanned spottings of Gary Katz became almost a fun game (sorta in the vein of “punch-bug” … surely, and yeah, I was the only one playing. ha!).  I grabbed a quick chat with him while he was in between sessions on Thursday.  You’ve got to admire all he has done for the industry and his sincere passion for the craft.

Gary Katz JLC Live

Tweeting from the Show … “And there’s Gary Katz … again. It’s kinda like I’m touring with the Dead.”  For those that know (of) him, this seems to work.  (Good fun.)

Gary Katz JLC Live Miter Saw

I had inspiring (power) lunches with A Concord Carpenter, Robert Robillard and Sue Burnet of ToolBelt Productions (Greg’s wife and partner). I spotted Heather S. of Baltimore’s DAP Products. And I had a fantastic time at the group dinner Friday night. I met some great guys from Vermont, while also sitting across from Myron the Drywaller (mentioned above). The stories just seemed to swirl.  It was fun chatting too with Andy Engel the newest editor with Fine HomeBuilding.

For Andy, and on following up with some promised hot dog research – I spent an afternoon canning pepper relish (for quick cash) while passing through, or near, Danbury, CT in 1995.  The name of the hot dog stand I believe was Blackie’s – but I can no longer find a location in Danbury.

* A Note on Submitting to Hanley Wood Publications

I bumped into David Frane, editor at Tools of the Trade, and had the opportunity to speak with Tim Healy of JLC.  I asked them both about the process of submitting to their magazines. According to Tim, and speaking only about JLC, the magazine is always in need of new contributors.

Start maybe with a technique you have perfected, or a how to. Don’t be overly concerned with the writing, both David and Tim say.  (After all, it is an editor’s job to bring out your story). “Lead instead with a few good pics,” Tim says.  Not necessarily hi-res, but “images with people in them, doing stuff.”  It is important to know that the magazine will expect that each step (in a how-to, for example) is represented by a picture in the final draft.  “Don’t think too big and ask for suggestions,” Tim says, “Email.”

Tim ended our conversation saying that “building envelop stuff is big right now … water management, flashing and roofing.”  These are good topics to pitch.

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Cutting Station JLC Live

While I don’t have too much in the way of a second post from JLC Live, I did take some product meetings during the Show. There are a few things I saw that I’d like to give some love; Next Time.  ~jb

4 thoughts on “Building Moxie Archive: Notes from Providence :: Welcome to JLC Live – the Saw Dust Show

  1. Typo – it’s Mike Sloggatt. Thanks for the update – I didn’t make it this year so nice to see the reports.

  2. phew … the proofreader was on vacation, the dog ate my notes … that was bad, thanks for getting my back Dan. I appreciate you swinging over and speaking up. Glad it was helpful and hope to catch up with you at one of these things soon. cheers. ~jb

  3. You’re probably still hung over from the “after hours.” As long as we’re quibbling, it’s “formerly New England Builder” too.

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