nadogail
Well-known member
May you enjoy the Good Health and your PNW Compound for many years.
I bought a Woodland HM126 a few months back. My grading guy is going to be pushing dirt all around the shed and down the hill so I dont have a good spot to set it up right now. As soon as he's done I'll work on setting it up.Yep, I know that "switch" is coming sooner than later!
Are you still contemplating a saw mill?


The assessor in my county was already out before final signoff. It is what it is. I'm just hoping the temporary and unpermitted (not required due to size) structures in my camp area that he saw dont add to the taxable value.When my shop received it final inspection the county, Snohomish, was out within 10 days taking pics to add to my assessor page for taxes.



What I've been struggling with. While its technically possible to build a system with enough solar/battery to ride out really cloudy days....at some point it just gets stupid expensive and makes sense to just run the genset for a bit....I can add up to 24,000w of additional panels or I can more add batteries to the system but there is a point where there is diminishing returns.
There's 3 reasons I dont want to go with the 18kw inverters.What I've been struggling with. While its technically possible to build a system with enough solar/battery to ride out really cloudy days....at some point it just gets stupid expensive and makes sense to just run the genset for a bit....
Out of curiosity, why all the 6K inverters as opposed to a couple of the new 18k units?
Thanks! Feel free to send them the link to this thread and I'd be happy to answer any questions they have as I go through the learning process with it.Nice detailed posts with lessons learned, thank you! Looks like you're going to have quite a nice compound when you're done.
I have friends not far from you who are putting in a similar water setup. I'm going to have to check with them if they've heard of the RPS solar pump.











Oh yeah, the nail gun is a lifesaver here. About 180 nails and 1 large tube of liquid nails per post.That's great progress! It sure is looking good.
Are you using a nail gun for the posts? That's a lotta nails.
My gutters are going up as we speak and the floor will be poured tomorrow...

So something like this? The center three posts have double trusses. Spane put this up for me. I'm east of Everett. 32'w x 28'd. They told me I could put a ceiling in it so I did using 3/8" plywood and blow in insulation. Anything I have in attic space is on either end where the span is only 5'.Last Friday we were able to get the last of the posts nailed off and the the trusses were delivered. I was planning and ordered 3/12 trusses and the supplier decided to send me 4/12 so with some quick measurements and negotiation I accepted the 4/12 and a decent reduction in price.
We spent the weekend marking and building truss assemblies. 4 out of 8 are complete right now and I'm trying to get the rest done during the evenings this week. The goal here is to do as much work on the ground as possible.
From all of my research, this design is pretty unique to the PNW where two trusses are built into an assembly using blocking then they fit over the posts on blocking that's screwed into the sides of the posts.
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Yup, exactly like that except I'm on 8' centers with 2x4 perlins and my engineer didn't spec out connecting the truss webbing in any way. I'll connect the bottom cords of the trusses like yours is as they're still pretty floppy without that blocking.So something like this? The center three posts have double trusses. Spane put this up for me. I'm east of Everett. 32'w x 28'd. They told me I could put a ceiling in it so I did using 3/8" plywood and blow in insulation. Anything I have in attic space is on either end where the span is only 5'.
That's a cool way to do it and definitely much cheaper than any equipment rentals. For setting my trusses I'm renting a telehandler and a scissor and have a friend I trust lined up to drive the telehandler while I'm in the scissor with a tag line on the end of the truss. I've seen it on youtube a few times so I'm pretty much an expert now.When I built my pole barn, I ordered the posts long so I could use them to hoist up the trusses. I built the middle bays 2’ off the ground and lifted the entire assembly with 6 come alongs. I had a friend on an extension ladder on each post and lifted it all together.
Great way to do it. Anytime you can use the equipment you have and save on rentals seems to be the winner, even if it takes a little while. I'm at about 26' to the peak and the truss assemblies are around 650lbs so i'm out of the range of any of the skid steer truss booms.To lift our metal trusses we added an 16' extension made from 4 2x6s onto one of the fork tines on our loader, and then suspended it w/ webbing. Shade tree, but the numbers punched out ok and it worked fine, albeit w/ a very light hand on the controls.

