Thursday, March 01, 2007

Finishing the platform

After hoisting up the cross beams we bolted them to the main beams. Luckily, hauling up the smaller cross beams was a lot easier than hauling up the main beams. It wasn't as difficult to maneuver them around the existing beams and get them into place.








After cutting the floor joists to length and hauling the joists to the site, we drilled the holes for the eyebolts into the tree trunks. We basically eyeballed their location to place them as symmetrically as we could. We had to use a pretty large lever to twist them all the way into the tree. After they were in, we determined how much chain we'd need to reach from the platform to the eyebolt, and cut the chain to length.

We next start hanging the joists. It was pretty exciting sitting 16 feet up on a 4" X 10", trying to hammer in the hangers at a weird angle. Luckily we all survived, and made pretty quick work of it. We left one joist out, knowing that we'd frame in a trap door spot later.










Since the platform was 16' X 8', we didn't have to trim any of our plywood subfloor. We quickly screwed it down, stiffening the platform significantly.











Then the moment of truth came, and we removed the temporary supports from under the main beams. I was worried that the platform would swing and rub against one of the trunks, which wouldn't have been a fun problem to solve. Luckily the platform hung centered between the trunks. We adjusted the turnbuckles to try to level the platform, but it appears we'll have to re-cut some chain in order to level it out correctly.





When up on the platform it moves and sways more than I expected. I suspect it won't sway as much once we add the walls and roof.

I ended up spending the night on the platform that evening. It was amazing to hear all the nocturnal activity around me. The tree is located near a creek and there seemed to be a small army of raccoons working the creek banks. There was a possible UFO sighting, but I'm not supposed to talk about that.

I hope to make a trip back in the spring to see how the platform weathered. Hopefully the tree is still standing, the platform hasn't warped, and it otherwise survived the winter intact.

4 comments:

chumly said...

Wow. Like to see this when it is done.

Greg & Julie said...

Looks like a fun project! What type of eye bolt did you use that turned into the tree? I am designing a treehouse (6'x10') and am planning on suspending it similar to the way you did. I contacted McMaster-Carr and they said that they didn't carry any eye-bolts with lag-screw thread in the 3/4" range. Do you have any pictures or part #'s?

Thanks,
Greg

Pete & Kristen said...

Hi Greg,

I really had to hunt around to find the right type of eye bolt. As you found, McMaster didn't have anything appropriate in the size I was looking for.

I ended up finding a manufacturer (www.chicagohardware.com) that made galvanized 1" X 6" lag threaded eyebolts with a shoulder. You can see a picture near the bottom of http://www.chicagohardware.com/catalog/14_15_eyebolts.pdf

I called Chicago Hardware to find a local distributor. It took about 2 weeks for them to show up, and I believe they cost about $40 per bolt.

Hope this helps, and good luck with your build!

Pete

Greg & Julie said...

Thanks Pete! Just what I was looking for.