I’ll take a Gin Pole, straight up.

Lee on Deck

Lee on Deck

Here’s one to please our 11-year-old selves, and the folks over at Low-Tech Magazine: we raised the Carpenter’s Shop using a gin pole.  This is a simple and traditional method for raising a timber frame by hand, and straightforward solution to a site with little crane access.  It’s constructed from a long, straight pole with a block and tackle hanging from the top, and two guy lines (in our case, come-alongs) that help to counter the weight of the pole and the timbers, and locate the posts in their mortises.

This is an eave assembled on the deck.  A bent assembly isn't pictured, but looks similar, rotated 90 degrees

This is an eave assembled on the deck. A bent assembly isn’t pictured, but looks similar, rotated 90 degrees

After test-fitting the eaves, we assembled the first bent (like a bread slice of the timber frame, parallel with the gable) flat on the deck so that the post tenons were hanging over their corresponding mortises – so that, when rotated to vertical, the tenons would “tip” into their holes.  The pieces of the bent were fit together so that the tie beam was placed towards the center of the deck and all the exterior reference faces were facing up.  The bent was fit, measured, bound, remeasured, and then pinned and wedged.  Each bent has two ascending and two descending braces, creating an especially stable and sturdy frame.  What original wedges couldn’t be reused were cut from seasoned white oak.  It was satisfying to knock the wedges in tight, locking the half dovetail tenon at the end of the tie beam to the sloped shoulder of the post’s complimentary mortise.  Ah, wedged half dovetails.  We screwed stop blocks to the corners of the sill so that the post feet couldn’t slip off the deck as the bent was raised.  We also screwed two 2x8x16′ pieces of KD to the exterior face of posts, at the top of the post, so that they could be used as kickstands once the bent was nearly vertical.  That completed the first bent assembly.

Lee cut a maple sapling that was at least 18′ long, which is half again as tall as our posts (we realized through trial and error that this could have even been a little longer, but you could realize that sooner using a physics textbook). He attached a block and tackle to the top end of the sapling (again, if one was so inclined, we could calculate the exact number of pulleys needed to create the mechanical advantage to pull the bent up using human-power, but we had a tractor, so we used the block and tackle that Lee had).  Directly beneath the block and tackle connection, we attached two 24′ come-alongs.  That completed the gin pole assembly.

Gin Pole in Tension

Gin Pole in Tension

We screwed a U-shaped block to the deck at the foot of the gin pole, near the center of the frame, to keep the foot from slipping out of place.  The opposite ends of the come-longs were secured to the rear corners of the deck, so that the gin pole come-alongs and block and tackle created a peace sign on the deck (a peace sign without a circle, and with two extra long come-along legs).  Scott and I lifted the gin-pole into a nearly vertical position, while Lee loped back and forth, tightening the come-alongs as we raised the pole.  Working the come-alongs allowed Lee to center the top of the pole precisely over the bent.  When the pole was leaning forward so that the block and tackle hung directly over the center of the tie beam, Scott pulled down tight on the block and tackle, connected the hook at its base to the center of the tie beam, and pulled down on the free end of the rope (pictured above).  This created a stable triangle of opposing forces (block and tackle, come-along and come-along), securing the gin pole in place about 10 degrees from vertical.  This completed the raising of the gin pole.

Scott pulled down on the raising rope, and, nothing happened.  If we had not had the tractor at our disposal, we would have needed a block and tackle with more pulleys, and a rope with less stretch.  As it was, we hooked that sucker up to a tractor, corrupting the purity of a hand-raising.  For shame! Anyways.  We attached the rope to the front of the tractor as high and as close to the top of the gin pole as feasible.  I reversed the tractor and lowered the arm with all the grace of Kevin Bacon in Footloose as Scott monitored the post feet and Lee let out the cable on the come-alongs, incrementally.

First Bent, raised

First Bent, raised

Once the bent was lifted past 45 degrees, I set the brake, re-tied my shoelaces, and Scott and I used the 16′ pieces of KD attached to the tops of the posts to lift the bent to vertical, and seat the tenons in their mortises.  We screwed the KD kickstands into the eave sills, and stopped to admire our work. With the kickstands in place, we were able to plumb the bent precisely.  When we satisfied with the bent’s location, we moved the gin pole, and prepared to raise the second bent.

Lee in Tee at 10 degrees

Lee in Tee at 10 degrees

The gin pole was not the only low tech technology employed at the Carpenter’s shop.  Lee used an adze to cut the tenons of the first floor joists, allowing him to work in a tee shirt in single digit temperatures.  After the bents were raised, we used a water level to level them.  On sunny sites, it’s sometimes easier to use a water level than a laser.  If you want to know more about either of these methods, please let me know.

New blue water level hung at reference corner

New blue water level hung at reference corner

Sometimes the oldest technologies provide the best solution for the job at hand.  From wedges and ramps to pulleys, I am surprised at how right my physics teachers were about the ubiquity of simple machines.  When applied purposefully, with careful consideration, these approaches can be safer, simpler and cheaper.  While I appreciate the romance associated with historic contraptions, ultimately, romance is not the reason we employ them.  These technologies are selected when they are the most functional option for the job at hand.  We were just lucky to have some fun with them up in Poland.

Tradition

Tradition! – tra-di-tion!

Completed frame

Completed frame

 

10 thoughts on “I’ll take a Gin Pole, straight up.

  1. The website and blog are great. I tweeted the gin pole blog on my account @Gothiccottage Best, Judy

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  3. I liked your use of the gin pole. Have you used counter-poise in you constructions?
    I have a restoration question for you.
    I’m helping a friend with some restoration of his house. It’s a 45 year-old expansion on an old farm house. The 6″x8″ timber-framed cedar rafters were extended 3 feet beyond the 3 foot deep eaves. All 6 feet are in view, against the underside of 2 x 6 T&G roof deck boards. The rafter ends beyond the eaves were not protected from the weather with a metal cap/flashing. These rafter ends are rotting. There are 102 of them.
    They were thinking of using epoxy wood fill but I think they are too far gone for that.
    I suggested cutting them back at the roof edge but they want to preserve the existing look.
    Any ideas on how to cut off the rotted section and splice, and/or, add in a new piece and give it proper support beyond the roof edge?
    I don’t think doweling would give enough support to keep the added piece in a straight line with the original rafter.
    Does any company make a metal gusset or weldment to join the new 3 foot end to the original rafter? I think that would look too obvious, though.
    What would you do?

  4. Hi Dean,

    Honestly, I haven’t used a gin pole enough to comment on the use of counter poise. Also, typically, we are working on homes older than 45 years, and the exposed rafter tail look is fairly contemporary for our region, so take my advice with a grain of salt. I’d cut the rafter tails back to the eave, behind the plane of the sheathing, so that you don’t have end grain exposed to weather. Then I’d see if I could find a Simpson bracket, or something custom made, that would support the end of the rafter tail, and hang it outside, rather than try to stitch it to the rafter. If the bracket would be too visible, you could strap from end of rafter to rafter tail with a simpson strap across the top, and toe screw the sides. Not a particularly traditional fix, but this doesn’t sound like a traditional building.

    Thanks for reaching out, and good luck,
    Jessica

  5. Hi Jessica,
    Ending at the eave would give the rafters protection from the weather but, am thinking of your hanger idea or a scarf joint to give the homeowners the look they would like to keep. Then flashing the exposed top of the new “tail”.
    I could also remove the shingles at the affected rafters and strap to the 4 x 4 T/G roof sheathing then to the top of the new “tail” and also dowel the tail to the existing rafter and toe screw to the sides of the existing rafter.
    We have time to give this some thought.
    Thanks for your reply.

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  9. Found your website through low-tech magazine. Wonderful stuff. My family were sailors, and then loggers who dabbled in farming. All of our outbuildings and barns were built of poles and logs from our property and employed numerous sailor methods to raise them.

    May I offer that the description needs one additional word, and that is derrick. You were using a gin-pole derrick. Older vessels are wonderful examples of rigging to enable cargo transfer. Have a look here. https://www.beyonddiscovery.org/ship-construction/derrick-rigs.html

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