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| A Hard-Working Deck Builders Rig |
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By Mark Clement
What I like about decks is that each one has a mix of site work, layout, framing and finish carpentry. You can build them with a basic set of hand and power tools, but you can build them better, faster and easier with the right tool mix. And the good news is that these deck builders tools are terrific on other sites, so they pay for themselves quickly if decks arent the only things you build.
Sitework
- Hydraulic Equipment. Of course, you can dig holes by hand, but, man, thats work. When youre staring down 35 three-foot deep postholes, its nicer to look at them from the back of a compact skid-steer. An auger attachment drills straight, wide, and clean post shafts up to four feet deep. The machine easily moves through gates and turns in tight spaces. Many can be configured with a bucket for earthwork and forks for moving or lifting materials.
While you might not be able to justify buying a skid-steer, renting one (and having it delivered and picked up) is an affordable option. Sunbelt Rentals rents the Toro Dingo, while The Home Depot rents a GK Prowler (no delivery). The Gravely Skidster is another popular model. Check United Rentals or your local yard for their version.
- Hand Tools. For small digs, you need four tools: a square-edged garden spade for cutting square shafts into the ground; a digging bar for tough soil and rocks; a long-handled shovel for removing the fill; and the will to dig deep.
- Combination Hammer. On digs with rock-hard clay, a mega-load of rocks, or other obstructions, a 14-pound combination hammer like the Bosch 11241EVS equipped with a spade-iron and set on chip-mode breaks up tough clay and rocks without having to rent a jackhammer. Itll blast out concrete from existing footings (with bull-point or chisel) or other obstructions, and you can use it drilling for lag shields when fastening the ledger to concrete or masonry.
Layout
- Laser levels. A laser level is the best way I know to strike a level line for a decks ledger board. Shoot a dot at one side of the house in the deck location, mark it; shoot one at the other. Snap a line. Done deal.
- Spirit levels. Two, four, and six-foot spirit levels take you the rest of the way. Six-foot levels are great for framing, four-footers are nice for plumbing handrail posts, and a two-footer comes in handy in oddball locations like framing benches, and double-checking stair stringers or grade-level decks.
Cutting
- Circular Saws. I use three circ saws on most deck sites. I can do it all with one, but not as fast. I have a Skil 8¼ -inch worm drive for cutting 6x6. The amount of time and energy using an 8¼ inch saw saves here is hard to describe.
For lopping off joists, sizing decking, and general cutting, I use a 7¼ inch wormdrive. The front-heavy worm drive is also ideal for cutting joists to length once set in place (See Article ___ Deck Framing for more on this production deck builder technique). The tool gives you extra reach and its weight pulls it through the work.
On very wide decks I also run a Makita BSS610 6¼ inch 18 volt circ saw as my free-safety. Its great to move all over the place for sizing decking or squaring the ends of boardsand theres no cord.
- Recip Saw. You need a recip saw for finishing off the notches in 6x6 posts, but theyre also nice for cutting back tree limbs, bushes and small stumps. Skils toothy "ugly" blade is great for this.
- Slider. A sliding compound miter saw is the perfect tool for setting up a production cut station when I have to install beveled 2 x 2 pressure treated pickets. I just set up a stop on my portable cut bench, then load the saw deck with pickets, bevel the saw, and have at it. I also use the slider for cutting small handrail and framing blocks like for the Lowes ChoiceDek handrail I recently installed. If youre installing a cedar or PT rail cap, the slider is ideal for getting the right miters.
Fastening
- Cordless Impact Drivers. Not having one of these on a deck site just costs you time. Seriously. I like a 12, 14.4, or 18 volt unit for socking in lag or ledger screws, cinching carriage bolt assemblies and for screwing down decking. Theyre fast, tough, and lighta great combination for deck builders. The new Lithium Ion impact drivers have awesome power and run time, too, which saves trips to the charger.
- Auto-Feed Screw Guns. If youre screwing down more than a coupe of decks per year, your knees, back, and spirit will thank you for using an autofeed screw gun and collated fasteners.
Oddball
Mark Clement is a remodeler and author of The Carpenters Notebook and The Kids Carpenters Workbook, Fun Family Projects!.
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