Quote:
See, I don't think of it as being on the ground. I think of an A-frame house as being one that has the A shape on top (the bottom part of the A hanging over the edge), which a box/rectangular shape below it. If you're talking about a coop where the side parts rest on the ground, fine. That's not what I was envisioning then (or what I want to build).
example of A-frame on the ground:
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Wj2y1BBpRwI/TNfxbvjVahI/AAAAAAAAABg/Lnweq07SPcw/s1600/A+Frame+Coop.bmp
Example of A-frame house not on the ground
http://www.benfieldatt.com/Images/McMahon.JPG
Your description of pieces led me to this:
http://www.nwcustomcreations.com/store/images/rightangle.jpg
which is what made me think the triangles fit together to make the ends (like a truss?) that the longer roof pieces would fit on.
That's the idea, although instead of sitting on the ground the coop like that chicken tractor (which is about a 45 degree ridge angle) mine will be on legs- I wish I were rich enough to have CR make me a set of chicken feet a la Baba Yaga's hut, and I wish I could remember where I put the old oil barrel stand to support the floor!
Your second pic is only an A-frame in the eyes of some prefab log cabin builders and real estate agents. I'd call it a story-and-a-half gable end entrance cabin but then I learned these terms by helping my dad study for his Carpenters Union journeyman's test. A classic A frame (like some of the ski huts south of 1-90 just east of Snoqualamie Summit) has no external walls at all, and to be considered an A frame the roof has to make up at least some of the ground floor exterior walls.
I have been interrupted about one thousand and thirty times since I started to write this, I have another/a half-sole on my old cold, it's raining outside and I need to get the fence and racoon-proof cover done on the wyandotte coop today, so any grouchiness/pedantry/general bad manners must be put down to me having run out of energy to pretend I'm a nice person, sorry.
I love baba yaga!!!!!!!!!
See, I don't think of it as being on the ground. I think of an A-frame house as being one that has the A shape on top (the bottom part of the A hanging over the edge), which a box/rectangular shape below it. If you're talking about a coop where the side parts rest on the ground, fine. That's not what I was envisioning then (or what I want to build).
example of A-frame on the ground:
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Wj2y1BBpRwI/TNfxbvjVahI/AAAAAAAAABg/Lnweq07SPcw/s1600/A+Frame+Coop.bmp
Example of A-frame house not on the ground
http://www.benfieldatt.com/Images/McMahon.JPG
Your description of pieces led me to this:
http://www.nwcustomcreations.com/store/images/rightangle.jpg
which is what made me think the triangles fit together to make the ends (like a truss?) that the longer roof pieces would fit on.
That's the idea, although instead of sitting on the ground the coop like that chicken tractor (which is about a 45 degree ridge angle) mine will be on legs- I wish I were rich enough to have CR make me a set of chicken feet a la Baba Yaga's hut, and I wish I could remember where I put the old oil barrel stand to support the floor!
Your second pic is only an A-frame in the eyes of some prefab log cabin builders and real estate agents. I'd call it a story-and-a-half gable end entrance cabin but then I learned these terms by helping my dad study for his Carpenters Union journeyman's test. A classic A frame (like some of the ski huts south of 1-90 just east of Snoqualamie Summit) has no external walls at all, and to be considered an A frame the roof has to make up at least some of the ground floor exterior walls.
I have been interrupted about one thousand and thirty times since I started to write this, I have another/a half-sole on my old cold, it's raining outside and I need to get the fence and racoon-proof cover done on the wyandotte coop today, so any grouchiness/pedantry/general bad manners must be put down to me having run out of energy to pretend I'm a nice person, sorry.
I love baba yaga!!!!!!!!!
