Building a Brick Pier [For Students]
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- čas přidán 22. 06. 2023
- Terms:
Actual & Nominal Measurements
Modular Measurements / Modular Construction / Modular Ruler
Slack to the Line vs. Hard to the Line
Tips:
Starting Corner Brick for each Course
Filling Corners
Brick Spacing
Plumbing Jambs; Keeping Jambs Slack
Brushing the Face of the Pier / Wet Mortar
Focusing on Quality, Not Speed
If these videos have helped you out, please check out my instagram or perhaps donate to the channel.
Thanks for your time,
PB
Instagram Link: / masonry201youtube
Donation Link (PayPal): paypal.me/Masonry201?country....
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Your the best,im watching you from Zambia
@@IsaacChibwe Thanks for the comment!
I have had my own masonry business for over 40 years. mostly brick,stone and fireplaces back in the day. you did a good neat and clean job. the haters on here arent masons, just weekend warriors. keep up the good videos
Thanks for the comment!
I'm happy to see your video. Amazing pier🏫
Good man. Keep do what you doing 🏗️🕌🏫🏫🕌🏫🏫🕌🏫🏫🕌🏫🏫
Save my day. I need to build a brick column in my basement to reinforce sagging floors. It does not occur to me that it should be hollow. When I stake bricks prior work, they would fall when column get higher. Without your video I would try to build a solid brick column and it would probably fell.
Thanks for the comment and good luck with the build!
I absolutely love every one of your videos. You do an amazing job of explaining what you are doing and why you are doing it. I am a rank beginner. I have signed up for a masonry class at my local community college, but it doesn't start until late August. I have just been practicing in my garage for the past six weeks or or so. Everything I know, I have learned from your videos. The worst part about practicing, however, is hand mixing the mortar and tearing it all down when I am finished. You have inspired me to try another pier tonight! Again, I really appreciate the thought, time, and effort that you have put into these videos. They have been very helpful. Thank You.
Thanks so much for the comment! Good luck with the masonry class. If you have any questions at all, or something seams unclear to you that you're learning about, don't hesitate to ask me about it. I'd be happy to help you out.
@@masonry201 Thank You. That's very kind of you.
@@kahr2728 yes. It’s about 4:1. Sand to lime. It breaks down easy, and can be reused over and over.
You do a great job of explaining what you are doing I would recommend your videos to anyone learning to lay brick or block
Thanks for the comment! I primarily make these videos for students that are just starting out. I try to put myself in their shoes and thoroughly explain (maybe over-explain) what I'm doing as I go. Thanks again!
Please teach the youth your skills 🏗️🕌🏨🕌🏨🕌🏨🕌🏨
Thanks for the comment!
this guy is a pro for sure.
Thanks for the comment!
I’m a journeyman bricklayer, yet I still love watching your videos, because I love this trade! 💯🦾
Thanks for the comment!
The best of the best! Thank you!
Thanks for the comment!
Great Video !!!
Thank you, very helpful ❤
Thanks for the comment!
Always brush diagonally keeps brush from dragging in mortar to much.
👍 just watched fantastic
Thanks for the comment!
Great video !
Thanks for the comment!
I had small masonry business for almost 30 years, and sold to my guys. I came across job teaching masonry to new interested students a few months ago and took position. Your incredibly thorough video's are the best on the internet at teaching anyone how to do masonry construction correctly - no short cuts!!! Thank you so much! Side note: I would like to ask you a question privately but do not now how to contact you. Not sure that is even possible?! If you know how this could be done i would appreciate it, if not I understand. Once again, thank you so much for your video's!!!
Thanks for the comment! You can email me
Masonry201@outlook.com
Thanks again!
sent yesterday in case ended up in your spam. @@masonry201
Well done boss
Keep on
Thanks for the comment!
So glad I found this video. I have no experience with construction or masonry. I have a project I'm working on and I need to build several pillars on desert sand. How would that affect my ability to level it and also what kind of mortar would you suggest in a dry climate that does have a monsoon season?
you are fantastic
😃Thanks for the comment!
The double in the window arch 😂 wow…..
Thanks for the comment! Student fireplace project.
How many hours should it take a trained mason/brick layer to build a 6 foot pier of an equal size ?
Thanks for the question! If everything is stocked and ready, mortar is made, and the footing already completed, it should only take about 2 to 3 hours.
7 bricks x 27 = 189
Depends on type of brick somewhat. Depends if you're putting poles up. Poles take time also but faster for most. Bidding a job building freehand 350 brick per day. Exceptional bricklayer 3 piers 7 hr.
Would you recommend a DIYer homeowner use this video to tackle on home project or is this still geared more for professionals and there are more nuances that weren't necessarily captured here?
For context, your video was so good that it actually made me believe that I can do it if I followed your instructions and tips. But that may just be an illusion for an amateur underestimating the work and also overestimating my skills. 😅
Thanks for the question! This video is geared towards students that have worked their skills up to this point. Meaning they've learned how to build basic block projects, and have moved on to brickwork. They've learned how to spread mortar for brickwork, lay brick to a line, apply head joints, use basic tools such as a level and ruler, etc.
I would say the key part of building a pier, that students don't realize until they mess up, is keeping every single plumb point either perfectly plumb, or slightly slack to the line. Students will usually move on to the next course, think their previous course is "good enough", when it's not. Then they're "fighting" the pier the rest of the way and it turns out horrible. Every project the student builds, they can build it better the next time.
For tackling this yourself, doing the things that require almost no skill, perfectly, will help out the total project. Such as, the mortar is perfect consistency, the brick are clean, dry and stocked correctly, the layout lines are sharp and right on, your tools are clean and ready, etc. Also, you can always try a practice pier first before building a real one. Thanks again for the question!
@@masonry201 Thank you for your detailed and nuanced response! Very much appreciated to get feedback from even some of your older uploaded videos.
Nice pier😊
Thanks for the comment!
ty
Thanks for the comment!
Great video 👍
I can I calculate a depth of concrete footings for the column if the frost is not an issue?
There's a bunch of different factors. Is it load-bearing? How tall, dimensions, etc.
If you're making something like a pier for a mailbox, about the size of this pier, a 24"x24"x8" concrete footing would be fine. No frost line? Must be nice to live there! Thanks for the question!
Check local codes. Check soil conditions. Architects are really supposed to design things. There are standard details for most things.
While you play with the floor I'll have two more brick in. Double butter yes👍
How do you make your motor whitish
The mortar is "practice" mortar. It is just a mix of sand and lime. No cement. It gets re-used over and over. Thanks for the question!
Measure diagonally for square it's faster
When you said every brick we lay is important that's the way it should be looked at I've worked with alot of guys that say that's good enough f it for every brick or block they lay and their work ends up looking like shit
Hahah! Thanks for the comment!
Nominal meturemen.
Hello everyone 👍🧱
You wouldn't last a hour on a regular job.
Was really hoping he was going to educate us how you build a pier/column NOT on a concrete slab and on the earth. Obviously pillars cant just go straight on the earth and need a foundation of some sort and this guy skipped right over the very first step. Not a good video to skip over the VERY first step.
Brow you are better than this get a Crick Level and get a wood handle Rose trowel while you are at it.
Thanks for the comment! 😀 I used Crick and Smith levels for about 20 years. Been using Stabila the last 5 or so years. I got frustrated with the vials reading slightly different, from top to bottom. Now, I don't care if the level is made of sheet metal, if it reads consistent, I'll use it.
As for the trowel, I really don't have a preference. I issue Rose trowels to the students. I think they're more durable. I sometimes use Rose myself.