Ever feel like there's a better way to build?
Speaker:So do we.
Speaker:I'm Matt and welcome to the Mindful Builder Podcast, where we believe
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Speaker:In fact, we're learning right alongside you.
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Speaker:Thank you so much for being part of our community.
Speaker:We truly appreciate you.
Speaker:And now onto this week's episode.
Speaker:If you want me, I can actually connect with the only dancer only.
Speaker:20. So, and half now 25% off the only dance account.
Speaker:Oh, we have a, it's actually, it's actually Air Boss Dan
Speaker:doing his, uh, profu install.
Speaker:We have a special code.
Speaker:I was talking
Speaker:about moisture management, honestly, how to ventilate.
Speaker:You carry, properly, get, get,
Speaker:oh God, I God.
Speaker:So 25% of his OnlyFans account.
Speaker:Only Dans.
Speaker:Only Dans.
Speaker:Only Dans.
Speaker:And he actually installs pro climber with his top off.
Speaker:Only Dan account.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Maybe ladies who 60 plus.
Speaker:They might enjoy it.
Speaker:Definitely not in Bo.
Speaker:Not in Bondi and Coogee.
Speaker:'cause if you don't have a hardcore six pack, you have no chance.
Speaker:No one would even look at you.
Speaker:Oh my God.
Speaker:We've got
Speaker:some exciting
Speaker:news.
Speaker:Hamish.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:You go.
Speaker:Oh you, yeah.
Speaker:You've got exciting news.
Speaker:We've got exciting news.
Speaker:Well you, we've got exciting news about us, about us.
Speaker:Oh, tell me more about it.
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:you tell me more.
Speaker:Matt Pro Climber and now the official major sponsor of Pro,
Speaker:the Mindful Builder Podcast.
Speaker:We're now, we're
Speaker:now coming from, uh, the unofficial official pro climber studio.
Speaker:Yes, because we have a whole bunch of pro climber stuff behind us.
Speaker:It was just
Speaker:by chance for recording out of performance membranes.
Speaker:And they're not the only distributor, they're shotgun group.
Speaker:There's.
Speaker:Ice Smart.
Speaker:We, Shaw.
Speaker:Shelton.
Speaker:Shelton.
Speaker:Shelton.
Speaker:Shelton.
Speaker:Shelton.
Speaker:Group Climate.
Speaker:Shaw Rescue.
Speaker:We've got PHCP down in Ts.
Speaker:Michael Lim.
Speaker:Michael Lim.
Speaker:Michael
Speaker:Lim.
Speaker:Lim Builder.
Speaker:Is that in,
Speaker:um,
Speaker:Don?
Speaker:They
Speaker:official?
Speaker:No, no, no, no.
Speaker:Um, you've got, who else have you got?
Speaker:You got Brian.
Speaker:Brian.
Speaker:Oh, Brian.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We have Roger.
Speaker:Then we got chess in South Australia.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:CL Shore and we got Kho and then we got two up north and.
Speaker:Izzy.
Speaker:Oh, nice.
Speaker:The Brisbane
Speaker:ones.
Speaker:It's a growing market.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Just Dan on names.
Speaker:It's terrible.
Speaker:I know them pretty well, David, and like, you know them really well
Speaker:listening be super disappointed.
Speaker:Anyway, John Barrett and David's, um,
Speaker:sorry, but pro climber coming on for us is huge.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, we're both super excited.
Speaker:I think we're, um, part of the deal is we're gonna be traveling.
Speaker:You don't even know this, Dan.
Speaker:Um, we are gonna be doing an event down in, um, Sydney.
Speaker:Tasie, south Australia, Brisbane, and most likely Perth, maybe down
Speaker:in Margaret River, apparently.
Speaker:Apparently.
Speaker:That is a, that is an area that is growing for passive fast products, apparently.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I had a few
Speaker:training done there.
Speaker:It's beautiful.
Speaker:It is.
Speaker:I was just down there the start of the year before we had our
Speaker:little girl, and there are some.
Speaker:The wineries.
Speaker:We were already out to 2:00 AM the other morning, Dan.
Speaker:We don't need to be.
Speaker:Hey.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I'm just gonna say that
Speaker:this whole pro climber thing has nothing to do with going out and getting booed.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:It doesn't.
Speaker:So this is about, so look, we, it's just a lucky
Speaker:coincidence.
Speaker:We,
Speaker:we, obviously, Matt and I have been using pro climber products
Speaker:before, I don't know, 2018, 2019.
Speaker:Um, and when we were.
Speaker:I guess pitching people for sponsorships for this, um, for this podcast, pro
Speaker:climber was always up at the top and so we're both pretty excited to, to have
Speaker:them on board and, and you know, see the, hopefully we can all grow together and
Speaker:a hundred percent, I know that we didn't do much in the past.
Speaker:'cause in the beginning we sponsored a few people, individuals, and
Speaker:then it didn't turn out very well, like a lot of promises.
Speaker:And then we actually stopped it completely.
Speaker:And, but we actually create a good relationship over the years with
Speaker:podcasts and trainings and presentations.
Speaker:Yeah, whatever.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We did a few stuff
Speaker:with my house and it turned out pretty well.
Speaker:So I think that was a bit of a, a try before you buy for us Aim.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, um, but I think we're, we're, it, it we're both incentivized.
Speaker:Like we want to grow this podcast to areas that you guys are also trying to
Speaker:grow into because we've, we live in our bit of our Melbourne bubble sometimes, so
Speaker:getting out and doing some events and, um.
Speaker:Linking with other people and showcasing what can be done.
Speaker:Um, we've used it forever and we are very familiar with the
Speaker:product and we talk big words and
Speaker:it's not a hard, it's not a hard sell.
Speaker:It's not, it's not a hard sell.
Speaker:I mean, it's probably a good, um, kind of segue into what we're
Speaker:gonna be talking about today.
Speaker:Dan, we've obviously had you on before.
Speaker:I think they ended up being a two part episode, didn't it?
Speaker:'cause we just kept talking.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, I think the topic today is the future of building.
Speaker:Like where, where is the Yeah.
Speaker:The topic.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Where the industry is going here in Australia because.
Speaker:Let's face it, we're pretty behind, you know, and I'd, I'd like to hear
Speaker:it from your side because you did your training in Germany and now you've
Speaker:come to Australia and probably for a long time are hitting your head against
Speaker:a wall of how we've been building.
Speaker:So before we get into that, people, for people who just the
Speaker:future almost
Speaker:exactly for people who don't know you.
Speaker:Who are
Speaker:you?
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:Hi, uh, I'm Dan.
Speaker:I'm originally from Munich, Germany.
Speaker:Uh, I'm a German master carpenter construction engineer, which I think will
Speaker:lead us straight into the first topic.
Speaker:Um, my main background is definitely carpentry.
Speaker:Like some people would say also old school carpentry in Germany.
Speaker:Uh, like Joe, get in your mouth.
Speaker:So it's like old school carpentry back in Germany.
Speaker:It's a like, really, like I did lots of retrofitting and new builds.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So it means kind of pre-cutting all roof structures completely by
Speaker:hand, so you don't go on site and bring out your chainsaw or so and
Speaker:cut things together, so you just use your screw gun or your nail gun.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:So you don't cut pieces of timber,
Speaker:you don't over in Europe, you're not cutting on site?
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Just if you, oh, we can say it here.
Speaker:Just if you fuck it up, then you bring out the chainsaw.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But usually no you shouldn't.
Speaker:'cause otherwise you get in trouble.
Speaker:And is it so, so just just to go
Speaker:back to that, because I'm curious about this.
Speaker:So what you're saying is you are pre-cutting any controlled environment.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:By
Speaker:machine or by human.
Speaker:Now by machine.
Speaker:But my apprenticeship, how I learned it, because I was in a pretty old school
Speaker:carpentry business, um, I really, we had to cut everything by hand, which is the
Speaker:best work at all because like, I think I said it in a previous, um, podcast, like
Speaker:a normal raft in Germany's lung, 160 by a hundred or 200 by a hundred millimeters.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And it's eight to 10 meters long, so they're pretty heavy.
Speaker:So you really, is that why you've got big biceps?
Speaker:Oh, it's so big.
Speaker:It's massive.
Speaker:Not if you would think about my old boss, like he was even skinnier than me,
Speaker:but he was strong as a beast, honestly.
Speaker:Like unbelievable.
Speaker:So you don't see, very often you don't see the strength because
Speaker:you're not big and bulky because like hidden strength, I would
Speaker:say.
Speaker:So like condition, condition, strength.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it means kind of the prefab, which is not prefab, how would you call it?
Speaker:Because like you precut all the roof structure at your place.
Speaker:And most times we actually had to do it outside too
Speaker:because like, uh, that's how we
Speaker:do it.
Speaker:We've gotta cut our rafters outside.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Now,
Speaker:but it's just like in one day and everything has to be cut.
Speaker:And then you ship it inside.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it stays dry.
Speaker:And is it, was it uh, cut.
Speaker:Outside 'cause it was so long.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And like as I said before, like it was a pretty small carpentry business, so
Speaker:it means kind of, it was an old farm, uh, um, it was an old farm, so we had
Speaker:to do it outside because if you have eight, 10 meter long rafters and a normal
Speaker:beam is like 10, 15, 20 meters long.
Speaker:So you need a, you need a big warehouse to actually work in.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So big car trees, of course, they work completely inside.
Speaker:So we had to adjust to the weather to, you
Speaker:used use like a Makita battery saw.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:And a hand saw.
Speaker:Um, so, but that's a, because you just spoke about retrofits and new builds.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I feel like a retrofit, you'd have to cut more on site.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So a retrofit is something fundamentally different than you build.
Speaker:So like I know like a lot of people asking us, okay, hey Proclaimer guys,
Speaker:when are you doing more on retrofit?
Speaker:And it's actually a really important topic, but we have to stop building
Speaker:new shitty buildings first and then we can focus on retrofitting buildings.
Speaker:But we've also, not every building should be a new builder.
Speaker:We've got seven, is it seven to 9 million existing building stock?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They have to be touched.
Speaker:We've also gotta hit
Speaker:that.
Speaker:Market.
Speaker:Having said that, well, it's, it's multi-pronged though.
Speaker:You need to stop, you need to stop building shit, and you
Speaker:need to fix up the old shit.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's also, so we wanna
Speaker:create, first we wanna stop creating new retrofittable buildings for the future.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:And, and because like also, so should, should we start calling, um, or, um,
Speaker:should we start calling like Buil homes?
Speaker:Just retrofit projects?
Speaker:Future retrofit projects.
Speaker:Future retrofit projects?
Speaker:Yeah, sure.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That was actually not funny to be honest, because as.
Speaker:I see quite a lot going around having side visits, and you hear a lot.
Speaker:It's actually a pretty sad story.
Speaker:I think we all agree, isn't it?
Speaker:Um, like one of my flatmates, she's a, um, a doctor who killed children
Speaker:and an emergency in Sydney and like, unbelievable how many kids she got with
Speaker:asthma attacks and stuff like this.
Speaker:And like, would she come
Speaker:on the podcast and talk about that?
Speaker:Uh, I don't think so because she's not specialized on asthma.
Speaker:So she does in general.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:We will get general practice.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:So, but like, and she just got someone in, like two kids in the Northern,
Speaker:they're actually my neighbors.
Speaker:And she says, oh, I just got two kids in with Heavy AS asthma and super nice.
Speaker:I talk with them all the time.
Speaker:So it's, yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker:Like how many kids and all the people and adults actually suffering from bad
Speaker:air conditions and new as an old build.
Speaker:But the question is, when people come to you to use your
Speaker:membranes, it's what's the cost?
Speaker:Oh yeah, of course.
Speaker:You know what?
Speaker:Before, before we, before we get there,
Speaker:um, you had to
Speaker:run already five to 10 topics.
Speaker:Yeah, we have, we have, we have.
Speaker:So, so you, you're German.
Speaker:German carpenter.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:how'd you end up in Australia?
Speaker:Good question.
Speaker:Um, I tried the first time 2013 with Mike's girlfriend back
Speaker:then, and then we separated and she was more like settling down.
Speaker:I had a feeling, oh, the world's still waiting for me, so I
Speaker:just really rode once a v.
Speaker:And adjustment to Proclaimer on a trade show in Munich and it was actually
Speaker:Stuttgart means, uh, roof and timber.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:It's a pretty cool trade show to be honest, and as I Hey guys, I would
Speaker:like to work for you in Australia.
Speaker:Would you be interested?
Speaker:Is that right?
Speaker:You exactly The idiot we have been waiting for.
Speaker:Nah, that's not what Lotto said.
Speaker:And they're still saying that right now.
Speaker:Why did we hire that idea?
Speaker:So yeah, all caught up, uh, with Thomas Munich and, and then actually supposed
Speaker:to go to Australia and started Australian business, uh, with other guys in 2016.
Speaker:And then we started to, uh, build a training center in Auckland.
Speaker:And then Lotus said like, oh, I think we should go to Auckland
Speaker:first and build a training center.
Speaker:And then I stopped and said, okay, I had enough from traveling.
Speaker:'cause I always wanted to work on off.
Speaker:I didn't, I never wanted to live permanently in Australia.
Speaker:'cause I have my social circle in Germany and family and France.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it's more like, uh, that out of this perspective and yeah.
Speaker:And then 2019, Thomas caught me again and then.
Speaker:He's actually, uh, the founder of Proclaim Australia.
Speaker:C Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Works together.
Speaker:I think you asked him also to be on the podcast.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Isn't did, how did
Speaker:you know about that?
Speaker:What'd I tell you?
Speaker:The other morning at whatever time it was.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, um, he might be interested because like the way how he started
Speaker:is actually a pretty cool story.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I think that's kind of intensive why he started it.
Speaker:It's pretty awesome.
Speaker:Um, it's definitely worthwhile
Speaker:because you've also got the CEO of pro climber coming over.
Speaker:Oh, like the, you all know.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Next year.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, he's coming out.
Speaker:I don't know, I don't know if Loda would be into it 'cause he's 68 and pretty cool.
Speaker:But, um,
Speaker:his mind works different in our minds on a, in my opinion, a positive way
Speaker:because Iria talk a lot with him and have a good contact with him.
Speaker:But it's funny, like if you really know the whole feedback of
Speaker:Proclaim, which he will hear more about when you interview Thomas.
Speaker:It's Yeah.
Speaker:Interesting.
Speaker:Because yours was around 10 steps ahead.
Speaker:Anyone said like, no way.
Speaker:No way.
Speaker:And it was always ahead, but that's what's so interesting.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Is, um, is pro Climber privately owned?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So
Speaker:like a privately owned by lot mall, the founders a lot Mall came out,
Speaker:has nothing to do with me, but I think it's an interesting story.
Speaker:Um, lot Mall actually, uh, grew into a, a Sawmill family.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Near man Manheim, Frankfurt, Germany, and, but he never wanted to step
Speaker:into it, so he started Timber Tim engineer in Rosenheim too.
Speaker:And then he started this whole thing.
Speaker:So he got 50,000 German mark back then from his father and said,
Speaker:okay, start your own business.
Speaker:And then the saw mill was worth millions and millions and millions.
Speaker:So it was a pretty small cut, more or less because he was always interested
Speaker:and orient in healthy buildings.
Speaker:We talk about the seventies, eighties.
Speaker:So in all the hippies, like he was like this kind of guy who goes, I
Speaker:know some of the background stories.
Speaker:Oh, have been talking and so yeah, we have to do change this and that.
Speaker:And then arguing and he was, come on, let's get to a point here.
Speaker:What's happening here?
Speaker:So he was always like, not radical, but like spot on the guys.
Speaker:We have to agree now.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So he started the first building ecological supermarket in Europe.
Speaker:So it's called the building biological island.
Speaker:And the bus station is still called building biological
Speaker:island and the mold group.
Speaker:And so you start with insulation, with paint because back then you just have to
Speaker:remember like paint have been offgassing and most of the INS, installations,
Speaker:timber treatment, big issue also like all the stuff sold, how to protect
Speaker:timber, how to work with timber.
Speaker:All the knowledge actually had to come, come from somewhere.
Speaker:Then insulation was a big one.
Speaker:Um, wood fiber and not much wood fiber, cellulose and cheap oil.
Speaker:And then after a while we realized, oh, we have to hold insulation place.
Speaker:And then he actually, um, developed a reinforced paper right as the same scri
Speaker:as the intel layer, it's called DB Plus.
Speaker:And this was actually the first official proclaim product.
Speaker:Then we realized, okay, we need a glue.
Speaker:And we always, oh, from the beginning we said like, we
Speaker:can't use any synthetic glues.
Speaker:And then know like the stories when they tried it, it was a big mess,
Speaker:so everyone hated to work with it.
Speaker:So at some point we came up with the first tape, which our thing is equal
Speaker:code, but I'm not a hundred percent sure.
Speaker:And then some point, um, the senate of the materials of the
Speaker:paper-based material to frown hofer.
Speaker:And then
Speaker:you can't see some video, just not be seat and just slowly see down.
Speaker:Unexpected, um, yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It's good to have air rights.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:In Australians, on Australian roads.
Speaker:I wish they would have in my car.
Speaker:Yeah, just hit the curb with my car yesterday gave,
Speaker:because like the speed bump,
Speaker:so this is off topic.
Speaker:So off topic in, I was in pro climb last week and I go down to
Speaker:that car park and so big car park who's right out the front there.
Speaker:The, the first car park, like the CEO car park, it's Dan in his orange Mustang.
Speaker:No, maybe we have to edit it out.
Speaker:Um, so of, uh, so long story short, we sent the DB plus of the paper-based
Speaker:product to Fho Institute and we just got different results over and over again.
Speaker:So, so this,
Speaker:this is a testing institute to test, to test.
Speaker:What were you testing?
Speaker:Fho for Institute is the same like you see as io.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So we just tried to test the vapor permeability.
Speaker:We talk about the eighties, nineties here.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And then we realized in the mid nineties, then we realized we're
Speaker:getting different results all the time.
Speaker:And then the Frow Hofer Institute realized, oh, interesting.
Speaker:The paper changes is changing.
Speaker:Its paper permeability based on the humidity inside of the
Speaker:structure and inside of the room.
Speaker:And this was actually when the intel was born.
Speaker:So that was a mistake by mistake.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And we invented more or less the technology, which was later,
Speaker:um, used for the internal layer.
Speaker:So it's intelligent.
Speaker:So you've, you've set the market for an intelligent membrane across the world.
Speaker:More or less it still, like Fran Hofer patented it.
Speaker:It was more or less we, by mistake, invented it.
Speaker:Fran Hofer actually realized what's going on together with
Speaker:Proclaimer, but they patented it.
Speaker:That's a bit dodgy.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So they sold a patent.
Speaker:Patent, or not, they didn't sell it, but they sold a license to San Kaba, which is
Speaker:like, like seas are just bigger in Europe.
Speaker:It's like go live and Proclaimer like.
Speaker:10, 15 people, 20 people.
Speaker:And Lotto went to court against ABA and he won.
Speaker:And then two years later we brought out the inte products.
Speaker:They sued us again.
Speaker:Lotto won again and Lotto on the end because like the difference of the
Speaker:company, you couldn't imagine like program maybe made 5 million a year and Sanbar
Speaker:a multi-billion dollar company like.
Speaker:Huge.
Speaker:And we won against him and he like put a big sup world and played from, um, queen.
Speaker:We are the champion in court.
Speaker:So that's what Loda is.
Speaker:He's like really sneaky, but he really understands the game and that's how
Speaker:we actually involve the products, like the soli tech sport products too.
Speaker:So I just wanna just go back quickly to the intel, like the, I guess
Speaker:the, the timeline of the intel.
Speaker:So originally, um, this membrane was used to hold insulation in Yes.
Speaker:At what point did they go, hang on a minute.
Speaker:We need to start thinking about vapor permeability and, and air tightness.
Speaker:Air.
Speaker:So air, air
Speaker:tightness was also important because we didn't realize relatively quickly,
Speaker:um, that you definitely want to prevent the insulation from air washing.
Speaker:Wind washing, yeah.
Speaker:Yep, yep.
Speaker:And air tightness back then was actually mainly on the inside, not on the
Speaker:outside, because back then we still had vi two IC paper on the roofs, so you
Speaker:had to ventilate, which goes back to.
Speaker:A conversation with Reha and a few other guys online when we talked about warm
Speaker:roof and a cold roof, and back then German roofs always have been a cold
Speaker:roof, always have been a cold roof.
Speaker:Because as you had a vapor barrier on the outside of your roof structure, you had
Speaker:to ventilate 40 millimeters underneath.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you ventilate the insulation layer.
Speaker:And when we gimme some kind of timeline
Speaker:here, what, what, what, when are we?
Speaker:Eighties.
Speaker:Eighties, okay.
Speaker:Eighties.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, so there's a little, a
Speaker:little, little Dan running around.
Speaker:So
Speaker:I was way before
Speaker:my time.
Speaker:The reason why I wanted you to say the eighties is that we are currently
Speaker:sitting in 2025 and ventilated cavities have just become cool.
Speaker:Yeah, that's 50 years ago.
Speaker:It's crazy.
Speaker:I just
Speaker:wonder like DB Plus had 30 years, so it's actually 95.
Speaker:95. Yeah.
Speaker:Even so 30 years ago.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Alright.
Speaker:Carry.
Speaker:And that Instagram's
Speaker:caught up
Speaker:now.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So should your cavities be treated pine or not treated?
Speaker:Pine,
Speaker:let's not go down there.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Because he's got a very strong opinion on this.
Speaker:No, he did and he didn't get to say it in our.
Speaker:Rest didn't.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So the thing
Speaker:is like, we can trust which, which cross chu which,
Speaker:which, which pathway are we going down now?
Speaker:All of 'em.
Speaker:All of,
Speaker:okay.
Speaker:I just, uh, throw out the official statements.
Speaker:You've,
Speaker:you've got, you've got two minutes to explain your, uh, opinion on
Speaker:tree to pine versus at pine bat.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:so just, just for a bit of context, um, we, with a group of other experts have
Speaker:a monthly, uh, conversation, let's call it, called beer and building science.
Speaker:And the first topic that we covered was treated pine or non-treated
Speaker:pine cavity battens and battens.
Speaker:And off the back of that, there was some commentary around, um, potentially.
Speaker:You know, the, um, the treatment in the treat of pine impacting the membranes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So that's just a bit of a background.
Speaker:And then we had a conversation a couple of weeks ago about that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, um, I think unapologetically I said to you, well, I think it's a
Speaker:good thing that we've kind of thrown.
Speaker:You guys under the bus now that you've gotta try and figure out
Speaker:what the fuck's going on here.
Speaker:So, 'cause I know there was a lot of people that were
Speaker:asking performance membranes.
Speaker:Oh yeah, a hundred percent.
Speaker:What should we be?
Speaker:How many people
Speaker:did you have call up about this?
Speaker:Um, I'm not very in the service at the moment because I was hiding behind the
Speaker:cameras over the last weeks because, uh, did lots of filming well last week.
Speaker:So I wasn't directly involved.
Speaker:I was definitely more Justin and Devin here.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And our customer service.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But we definitely put an official statement together.
Speaker:Which whoever wants to know, you can ask Devvin or Justin.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, the thing, it's like using a long story short, it's like
Speaker:using pre code compliant.
Speaker:Uh, you just have to let them air dry for at least seven days and also like
Speaker:history based like New Zealand inserting, using LSP treatment for 20 years plus
Speaker:when we haven't had a single recall.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:so in summary, you can,
Speaker:you can use it.
Speaker:I still wouldn't use it because I personally try to
Speaker:stay away of treated timber.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, but, but I guess in like, just to simplify things, the treated products,
Speaker:LOSP or H three treated timber pine, as long as they're off guests Yep.
Speaker:Should be fine.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So, so we, we want, we want to put 'em somewhere, let 'em
Speaker:do their thing for a minute.
Speaker:You don't really want to get it.
Speaker:Cut it coming outta the factory.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Straight onto site and put it on your No, it can't be.
Speaker:So how about if you
Speaker:rip your battens in half and then you spray the two ends?
Speaker:That needs to set for a few days too?
Speaker:I guess so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's usually when LSP treatments most times your pressure treatment.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, but that's actually a brand statement, so it's not like that we make it up.
Speaker:So it's a statement by brands.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you gonna put the number on it and what brand approval it is?
Speaker:I'm just trying to find it, but I can't see it here.
Speaker:So you are so.
Speaker:Because it's a conversation I kind of wanted to also touch on.
Speaker:In Germany, you don't use chemical treatment.
Speaker:You use pressure treated of other sorts.
Speaker:No, we don't treat the or steam you steam press it or something.
Speaker:There's just one way where you could use it, but in general you
Speaker:completely stay away with it.
Speaker:So like we did lots of chemical treatments in the 80.
Speaker:Seventies, but it's more or less completely banned.
Speaker:So as we try in Australia, most of the times to get away with chemical
Speaker:treatments, we say like we talk about constructional treatment.
Speaker:So we actually, um.
Speaker:Work with timber means install timber, so you don't need to chemical treat it.
Speaker:So it means kind of fresh all to the ground.
Speaker:For example, certain application methods.
Speaker:Still, we have different conditions here.
Speaker:We, so it's very important we not just copy everything 1 0 1.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We have high amenities here in Australia.
Speaker:We have something called termites.
Speaker:Um, but most of the times you're quite fine with H two treatment, isn't it?
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So it means kind of, it's, uh, bux and the other.
Speaker:But you just forgot it.
Speaker:So it's actually not only bad, to be honest.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So the LOSP, they like organic solvents.
Speaker:That's the nasty stuff.
Speaker:It's more or less petro.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, okay, so treated timber is fine, but you just need to be mindful of
Speaker:when you are using it, when you're putting it on, and the conditions
Speaker:that you are putting it in.
Speaker:Yeah, it should be definitely kind of dry.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So the actual timber product wants to dry.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So you order it a week before, put it on your site, let it sit there, dry it out,
Speaker:would be a very safe way to go about it.
Speaker:Yep, yep, yep.
Speaker:So I'm
Speaker:actually just thinking right now that we have up until recently
Speaker:been using H three treated plinth boards that we are ripping in half.
Speaker:They're quite usually can be wet sometimes and they're usually quite wet.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So
Speaker:it takes a long time.
Speaker:You have to see like if you have a closed look, what's happening.
Speaker:So you have to sell.
Speaker:So you normally try to dry the timber.
Speaker:Then you pressure treated.
Speaker:Um, and it means actually you lock the cells of the, of the timber.
Speaker:So yeah, it takes more time for the timber to dry out.
Speaker:So I think we definitely should give the timber time to dry out.
Speaker:So I would personally say that go down to 15% of below, but we know that no one,
Speaker:not everyone has like a moisture sensor.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Blocks.
Speaker:I
Speaker:think.
Speaker:I think, you know what, I think there is just being aware of this now,
Speaker:like, you know, hopefully there's people listening to this now that.
Speaker:Might just be, they might just take that little bit of extra
Speaker:care, thinking about when they're actually getting material to site.
Speaker:Um, they might store it in a rack somewhere, cover it
Speaker:up, let it dry for a minute.
Speaker:Bulk order your timber at frame stage that you're gonna be
Speaker:using for your treated pine.
Speaker:Let it sit there.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And then you, then, then throw it on.
Speaker:I think it's just about, just slightly tweaking the way
Speaker:that you are doing things.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And if you wanna avoid it, just avoid it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I avoid it.
Speaker:So I don't want to go down that path.
Speaker:The treated pine thing, just wondering.
Speaker:We just, we've cleaned it up for them.
Speaker:I think it's wonder
Speaker:for the audience.
Speaker:I think we chomped like 10 topics and we have, we have.
Speaker:So, so I
Speaker:guess I want to get, because we are gonna talk about the future building.
Speaker:So seventies, eighties, nineties, right.
Speaker:People are thinking about better building.
Speaker:How do we manage moisture?
Speaker:How do we, you know, manage, how do we stop wind washing
Speaker:in our, um, in our insulation?
Speaker:This is all happening while Australia's going through massive booms of buildings.
Speaker:You know, we've got, and low energy costs a very important at low, low,
Speaker:low, yeah, true low energy cost too, so it doesn't cost that much
Speaker:to heat and cool your building.
Speaker:So it doesn't really matter if you're building leaky, you
Speaker:know, unins out buildings.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Your experience coming from Australia, like what was one of the f what,
Speaker:what's your first thoughts about the buildings that you are seeing here?
Speaker:A funny thing is, I just told this story somewhere, I think the first time
Speaker:when I came to Australia and I saw a timber structure sitting in the rain.
Speaker:I think I was staying there in the rain for five minutes and really just looking
Speaker:at the structure and not, I couldn't make it up how someone would actually.
Speaker:Just store a structure in the rain.
Speaker:So that's how it felt like to me like, 'cause like in most parts of
Speaker:Europe, if there's a rain cloud coming, there's just running and yelling
Speaker:nothing else until it's covered up.
Speaker:So timber doesn't get, as timber structures, they don't get wet at all.
Speaker:End of story.
Speaker:If you have a problem next day, you can be sure that the house owner or the potential
Speaker:or the future house owner will stay there with Thelen, uh, with the lawyer.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Even if you don't have a damage, but it means kind of like timber
Speaker:structures, they don't get wet.
Speaker:End of story.
Speaker:Is that why
Speaker:everything's prefabrication?
Speaker:To limit that risk.
Speaker:Yes, of course.
Speaker:So really, and like,
Speaker:I can't even remember when we actually didn't build prefab in this case, because
Speaker:the roof, as in timber structure wise, because bricks of course, brick by
Speaker:brick by brick, and that's what it is.
Speaker:But usually back then you put the roof on, you cover the roof, and
Speaker:then you just let it sit over winter.
Speaker:So usually you just let it dry out over winter.
Speaker:And when, when we talk prefab, we're not talking, a whole house
Speaker:is being plunked on a site.
Speaker:We're talking components almost.
Speaker:So it might be the roof R.
Speaker:Think of trusses.
Speaker:Trusses are a prefabricated method of building.
Speaker:It's little parts of the building.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That then you essentially put together like Lego to then
Speaker:build.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I think that's probably the issue with prefabrication.
Speaker:We think here, we think on a huge level, say a sips or a carbon light or a full
Speaker:house, um, or a drop in pod, there are.
Speaker:I, it's, I think where the pre prefabrication Australia would take
Speaker:off is the tiny component methods and little bits along the way.
Speaker:So in a house you wanna have 15 prefabricated methods.
Speaker:I think like
Speaker:when we talk about whole houses, it would, as, in my opinion,
Speaker:it wouldn't make sense to, um.
Speaker:Precut, all the stutts and everything else.
Speaker:So it definitely would at least penalize.
Speaker:Yeah, I think like that's a good middle way that you're penalize, you put your WB
Speaker:layer on on the outside because you know you have your half a year resistance.
Speaker:That's,
Speaker:that's probably a good, um, distinction to, to make.
Speaker:So prefabrication in my opinion is something that is just,
Speaker:you know, it's plug and play.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's coming on a truck.
Speaker:It's going in the connected together.
Speaker:It's good to go.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Panelized construction on the other hand is the actual panels.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So sips, as you said, carbon light, like a prefabricated 6, 10 84 frame.
Speaker:Like, I think that's the future
Speaker:specifically.
Speaker:Like, because like most, I just wonder if we talked about it last time.
Speaker:Um, but like, 'cause people talk about prefe, ah, Australia's not ready.
Speaker:And then also it's difficult for us as a builder, um, you don't wanna give away too
Speaker:much responsibility for multiple reasons.
Speaker:So I think like small scale prefab is actually where we're gonna talk about it.
Speaker:Everyone can actually do his own prefab without massive costs.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So like think about a system like, and I'll use sips for example.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Is you have your sips come, it's already got your membrane
Speaker:maybe adhered to it already.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So as they get craned on, you're just jumping up and screwing it together.
Speaker:Taping it off.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And that's the method that we start with.
Speaker:And then we, you can't have your electrical prefabricated.
Speaker:We can't have the plumbing prefabricated.
Speaker:Or pro run.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, you of course you could.
Speaker:But the thing is kind of, if you really go like full prefab or modular systems, like
Speaker:you need really, really good planning.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, and also huge factory because then you have multiple traits working together.
Speaker:If you just, like, you have one spot where you cut your framing
Speaker:and then you just nail your frame together, nail screw together.
Speaker:You put a USB board on, you put your WB layer on, you flip it,
Speaker:you put insulation on, you put in teller, on beds, on, on both sides.
Speaker:That's your panel.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like a carbon life.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But I, I'd even argue that if you are, if you're considering doing it yourself,
Speaker:just do it with the external membrane on.
Speaker:There was
Speaker:my next, there was my next point.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:'cause
Speaker:I, I kind of feel like that is not hard to come at.
Speaker:I, I actually don't understand why the SIPS panels don't come pre.
Speaker:Membrane.
Speaker:We, we, I've talked about this with Dave before.
Speaker:That's Yeah, there are, there are some, there are some kind of logistical reasons.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And we, we've, we have talked about doing it before and we've kind of run
Speaker:some numbers on sticking it here on it.
Speaker:'cause that's probably what you're
Speaker:doing.
Speaker:But that's what, but to me that's what makes the sense.
Speaker:Like that's how we, that's how as a society, especially when we look at
Speaker:the, the lower hanging fruit of say, um.
Speaker:Uh, the volume builder industry or as you recall, nor you say it, Dan,
Speaker:the future of the retrofit market.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The, we need to the future retrofit
Speaker:market.
Speaker:So Retrofittable buildings.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we need to create a system that is like around the building, go around the
Speaker:building once, because at the end of the day, it's labor that costs the money.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And we, I think we haven't talked about health because when we
Speaker:talk about the building codes and we talk about mold Yeah.
Speaker:And mold index of three.
Speaker:Uh, it means kind of, we may more or less, we can't have any visible mode
Speaker:anymore in our timber structures.
Speaker:So how do you wanna prevent your structure of getting moldy?
Speaker:Even it's just your bottom plate or anything else.
Speaker:If you don't cover it up immediately and in a stick frame, you have to be
Speaker:realistic, specifically in Melbourne.
Speaker:'cause you never have rain here.
Speaker:Never.
Speaker:And it's never, it hasn't rain for the past month.
Speaker:Yeah, past five minutes.
Speaker:And, and then it's mainly on the calendar too, so, you know,
Speaker:it always rains Saturday and Sunday so you can cover it up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it means actually mold is not an issue in Melbourne.
Speaker:If it would be, how can you prevent malts on your structure?
Speaker:So just,
Speaker:just for those listening, Dan's actually been sarcastic.
Speaker:I know it's probably a little bit hard to kind of tell because if he's German,
Speaker:I know I have a pretty stupid sarcasm, but
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:So can I ask you a question?
Speaker:So at the moment we've got a, um, and I don't know if you know the
Speaker:answer to this, uh, hardwood timber.
Speaker:Do you think that's more, um, or less susceptible to mold?
Speaker:Most of the times, yes.
Speaker:But, um, how sustainable is hardwood because it usually grow, um, significantly
Speaker:lower than actually softwood.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I think also like in Australia, we shut down most
Speaker:of the hardwood for sustain.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it means it will come over from, most likely from South America.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Um, so as much as I like it, but I'm more like the person, when I
Speaker:see someone chucking out hardwood.
Speaker:Because of retrofitting a building, I get it built something.
Speaker:Oh no, we're the same.
Speaker:So, um, it's
Speaker:almost like, um, when you, with the hardware, we are just shipping
Speaker:the problem somewhere else.
Speaker:Like, it's like, oh, we're not gonna knock it down here, wipe our hands clean,
Speaker:but let's import it from somewhere else.
Speaker:No, we could go deep.
Speaker:The rabbit, how, how actually hardwood or like eucalyptus is
Speaker:actually harvested in South America.
Speaker:Oh, I don't wanna even know.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:So
Speaker:it's quite easy.
Speaker:You cut on rainforest and you, I guess the point is, what I was making is
Speaker:like different, different timbers behave differently in, in certain conditions.
Speaker:And that's the thing, that's something that as a, a carpenter, you're not
Speaker:taught about timber in Australia.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Which like, because like in the last episode, which I guess will
Speaker:come before when you had Devon.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You talked about like the education system having apprentice, and that's
Speaker:also part of the education system.
Speaker:The first year when you apprenticeship in Germany, you spent full time
Speaker:at school, which sounds crazy.
Speaker:I think that's
Speaker:when you spoke about that last time, I was just like, poof.
Speaker:Like.
Speaker:Mind blown.
Speaker:Yeah, and also like, because you need to be a master carpenter, start a cabinetry
Speaker:business, you need to have like your train trainer license, which is a fixed part of
Speaker:your, of your exams, of your final exam.
Speaker:It doesn't mean that you're going to be better or know better, but at
Speaker:least you have some fundamentals.
Speaker:We just got off the track.
Speaker:But I think, I don't, I don't think, I think education is an important part.
Speaker:Don't, because you really need to have a close understanding
Speaker:actually how to work with timber.
Speaker:So like in Japan or in Germany, usually specifically if you use
Speaker:timber on the outside, you actually install it how the timber was grown.
Speaker:So there's actually an upside down.
Speaker:So you install a timber.
Speaker:On the, on the direction of the timber group.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I actually watched a, um, uh, Instagram reel on that and it
Speaker:was, that was the black one?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And it was like, like that's, you know, had it sort of showing, you know, these
Speaker:studs going in place and then someone saying, no, no, that's not how you do it.
Speaker:Yeah, I learned that too.
Speaker:It was, and, and then they turned the timber around because they
Speaker:showed which way the knot was going.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:'cause the knot you could see was going down.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They actually wanna turn it around.
Speaker:So the timber.
Speaker:Gets installed how it was growing.
Speaker:And also like you can see, like, I'm shaking my head here, just being like,
Speaker:I'm just trying to think about this.
Speaker:But it's actually super simple because like if this is the knot, usually
Speaker:you have always a darker parts.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:With, uh, closer, um, rings.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And the wider parts.
Speaker:And as.
Speaker:The, the branch is just have creating more pressure.
Speaker:On the bottom side.
Speaker:You have a higher density on the bottom than on the top.
Speaker:Oh, okay.
Speaker:So that's where you can see that's direction.
Speaker:I look all the knocks
Speaker:in the ceiling here,
Speaker:uh, behind you, I think you can see it on the model.
Speaker:Oh, so,
Speaker:so that's, so that's where the branch should be coming from that point.
Speaker:That's where the pressure point.
Speaker:Yeah, I think, I think you can see on the internal one here, on the
Speaker:right side mid floor connection.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:This one.
Speaker:So you can definitely, in my opinion, see that's a bit dark on the right side.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Interesting.
Speaker:Wouldn't think about that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But this is, it goes back and we, I kind of want to get at comparing the
Speaker:path, and I don't know if this is on the topic, but comparing the path of,
Speaker:let's just say a German carpenter to how the carpentry apprenticeship is
Speaker:sped out here, because I have a problem at the moment that we're producing.
Speaker:It's, it's all about the number with apprentices at the moment.
Speaker:We're not concerned about the quality that we're producing.
Speaker:We're just concerned about hitting a certain number to tick a box.
Speaker:But that's a future problem.
Speaker:We're just creating it again.
Speaker:Oh yeah, a hundred percent.
Speaker:Because we, we don't create skilled labor for the future.
Speaker:And the funny thing is, like, um, the TAFE teachers, I know
Speaker:they have the same frustration.
Speaker:So I, I work together with a few TAs and I know quite a few.
Speaker:They're super motivated and wanna do it better, but they're not
Speaker:even allowed to do it better.
Speaker:I really don't wanna name any names, but it's kind of, um, most of them actually
Speaker:know them, aware of the same problems, and they're working on our asses off.
Speaker:So there's one TAFE in Sydney.
Speaker:This guy is organizing like courses on Saturday, how to wrap buildings because
Speaker:it got canceled from the program.
Speaker:He's organizing himself and the students, like the last time we
Speaker:went, we had 35, 40 students.
Speaker:They all came in by themself.
Speaker:So the
Speaker:students want it.
Speaker:The teachers want it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But the government fucking tick box is like, ah, like yeah.
Speaker:The government always, and I understand that they're always the biggest barriers.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's difficult because like of course, who to blame, but of course like you need, the
Speaker:government wants to pump up more builders because we need more and we need another
Speaker:55,000 more for the Brazil Olympics.
Speaker:And so on and so on.
Speaker:So we just hear all the numbers or we need more and more and more.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:1.2
Speaker:million homes, five years, but that's 1.2 million homes that we get to fit
Speaker:fix up that are actually probably about one point, I think 1, 9, 9, 9.
Speaker:I think
Speaker:Australia's not the only country has having this problem.
Speaker:Germany exactly the same, like we are like half a million.
Speaker:It's, it's,
Speaker:it's a world, it's a world issue at the moment, like housing.
Speaker:I think one of the, I mean, let's sort of focus on some of the
Speaker:positive things and maybe some of the things that we can influence.
Speaker:You know, I put a, I put a, um, post ad on social media last week saying,
Speaker:Hey, I'm chasing a chippy and a, and a car planner, an apprentice
Speaker:between now and the end of the year.
Speaker:And I had a teacher from TAFE reach out to me saying, Hey, I am a teacher at tafe.
Speaker:I'm a qualified chippy.
Speaker:Um, I'd love an opportunity to come out and work at one of your
Speaker:sites so I can then go back and.
Speaker:I teach my students how to build better.
Speaker:Nice.
Speaker:And I said, well, why don't you just bring the students out?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:To one of our building sites.
Speaker:And he's like, that's amazing.
Speaker:So we do have good people, as you said, heaps in.
Speaker:'cause I, I actually, you know, was just sort of cast in this,
Speaker:you know, comments saying, oh, the teachers don't give a shit, you know?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So they're all part of it, but.
Speaker:But it's actually the, the, the system, the program that they're
Speaker:trying to teach that hasn't changed
Speaker:for so long and like, yeah, no, I had it like, uh, like really, it's
Speaker:one of my favorite stories with tif, but I remember always during COVID.
Speaker:And like I think 10, 15 to 20 of the head teachers from the chippies, they came to
Speaker:my training as I went to their location and there was one like mid sixties guy
Speaker:really saying in the background, like looking over the shoulder, 90 degree,
Speaker:like body language, told the whole story.
Speaker:I took him one hour and he came to me and asked questions, so it
Speaker:means come he was also full on.
Speaker:So it means kind of, you can't hide the truth and even if they're very skeptical.
Speaker:Of course for myself, I have to be very careful how I transport my knowledge.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I try to be as polite and respectful as possible.
Speaker:'cause like quite a lot of people actually of say, ah, in Germany it's
Speaker:better and, and that's the way how we do it is my, you're not in Germany.
Speaker:It's like, yeah.
Speaker:The reasons why I bring it up is not because I think it's better on
Speaker:as a me, I'm better as a person.
Speaker:So I'm just trying to implement as much as I can to lift the level for everyone.
Speaker:'cause there's a lot of things we do better in Australia.
Speaker:Like what, for example, a thing like he could potentially build
Speaker:houses significantly cheaper, uh, in Australia than in Germany because
Speaker:like as external wall in Germany would be like four or 500 millimeters.
Speaker:So you don't need that much material here in Australia.
Speaker:We have a healthy, comfortable, energy efficient building.
Speaker:They, I think we, just, to be honest, my opinion, if you
Speaker:would ask me, okay, Daniel, what would you change the way work.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Would say, okay, we have.
Speaker:It dramatically improved the quality of timber.
Speaker:'cause most of the timber is wonky as it is, like it's nearly impossible to build
Speaker:quality buildings without wasting a lot of time with, uh, planning and city of sea.
Speaker:So normally four by two, you cut 'em in half, you just glue them together back
Speaker:to back, so they're straightened up.
Speaker:Um, so you just, you cross glue them.
Speaker:Then you put those B boards on the outside and the best case should be
Speaker:Australian produced, which we still don't have a factory, but it would be great.
Speaker:And put the membrane on the outside and that would be a
Speaker:great basic setup for a wall.
Speaker:Just this setup would change a lot.
Speaker:No noggins because you have OSB board on the outside and you don't need
Speaker:noggins because your timber is straight insulation in, inte in chop down.
Speaker:And if you really just get it run, you save so much time.
Speaker:I mean, what, why I brought up the hardwood thing before and I, I will
Speaker:give a bit of a plug to Australian hardwood, Australian sustainable hardwood.
Speaker:We've recently, uh, trialed a product on one of our building sites where it's
Speaker:a. Glue laminated one 40 by 45 stud.
Speaker:So it's the, the timbers, the, the little bits of timber that make up
Speaker:this stud are actually quite small.
Speaker:They're little offcuts and they're actually offcuts of their typical,
Speaker:uh, manufacturing process.
Speaker:So this timber is ultimately gonna end up as pulp.
Speaker:Mm. So they're trying to figure out a way to turn it into a product.
Speaker:Sort of like crafted hardwoods, kinda like craft.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, I guess in the same vein of turning a, um, you know, a, a product,
Speaker:a waste product or something that's gonna get burnt or pulped or something
Speaker:into a usable high-end timber.
Speaker:Now, I'll tell you right now, those timbers are gun barrel straight
Speaker:and beautiful too.
Speaker:You don't even wanna cover it.
Speaker:And they're, and they're beautiful, which is why I was asking.
Speaker:I think there is a, and.
Speaker:I dunno what like, how scalable it is.
Speaker:That was my next question because like if it's a byproduct, I'm pretty
Speaker:sure it has its limits and quantity.
Speaker:So
Speaker:byproduct, but also they've, they're now sort of identifying maybe we could
Speaker:use some of the thinning trees now.
Speaker:I did, one of the first things I asked, um, Chris, was
Speaker:where's the timber coming from?
Speaker:'cause I'm not gonna put this timber in if you're fell old growth forests.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And he said at the time, I think so he said in two or three weeks.
Speaker:A hundred percent of the timber that we're gonna be using
Speaker:is from plantation hardwood.
Speaker:Australian Plantation.
Speaker:Australian Plantation Hardwood
Speaker:from Danny Tasie.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, but again, I dunno how scalable it is because if everyone kind
Speaker:of adopts this, uh, you're gonna use the timber up pretty quickly.
Speaker:But in saying that, if, if we're all of a sudden getting a hundred homes a year that
Speaker:are using one 40, oh, I think it's one 40 by 35 would be the, the ideal timber.
Speaker:'cause it's lighter.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, at 600 centers.
Speaker:Even if a hundred homes a year are being built like that,
Speaker:we're still making an impact.
Speaker:A hundred percent.
Speaker:It can,
Speaker:it can be in the weather a little bit longer.
Speaker:They're straight, you know, you're not, um, having to deal with, um, straightening
Speaker:externally and internally, it's like
Speaker:we don't want our timber in the weather anymore.
Speaker:I know we don't want that timber in the weather, but this is why I
Speaker:was asking like, is hardwood gonna be uh, a little bit more durable?
Speaker:Yes, but I couldn't tell you because specifically it is so funny.
Speaker:Most of Australian hardwoods still don't know their properties and
Speaker:everything, so every time when they go in a joinery or I see off cuts,
Speaker:most of the times I have no idea, like German hardwoods or European hardwoods.
Speaker:I know them all pretty well, and that's the fascinating part for me as a cheapie
Speaker:because like I. I pick up each off cut.
Speaker:That's, I just work with cedar last Saturday.
Speaker:I took the off cuts there.
Speaker:Actually, my car, every time when I go in my car have this nice cedar smell.
Speaker:It's like your air freshener.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:So, um, like I'm really like a nerdy chippy in this case.
Speaker:So I really love timber, and that's a fascinating part with Australian
Speaker:timber because you have so many different types of hardwoods.
Speaker:On the other hand, I couldn't tell you what all the properties of
Speaker:Australian hardwoods are, to be honest.
Speaker:Specifically mold sensitivity of each thing that I just know, like that pine
Speaker:and specifically the plywood we are using here, like is super sensitive.
Speaker:Super sensitive.
Speaker:The ply.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The, the plywood standard, 12 plywood we have
Speaker:is sensitive to mold.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:You know, you know like when you, when we sheet our house, it easily turns moldy.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You see, I keep saying my trainings like there's a rain cloud on the horizon.
Speaker:It turns moldy.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, um, and we have to be very aware as builders that we will be liable
Speaker:now based on the building code.
Speaker:Is it a good thing, a bad thing?
Speaker:But I, I personally, I don't see how we, when we build buildings, how we can get
Speaker:away leaving our structure in the rain.
Speaker:I really don't know, because I don't think we can keep our building
Speaker:mold free inside of the membrane.
Speaker:So we've
Speaker:created a. Standard, uh, a, a terminology in the code about mold
Speaker:and what we can and can't do, but no pathway to solve the problem.
Speaker:But at least mold is in the building code.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Yeah, but it's more in, there is
Speaker:already a big step, but what's more dangerous?
Speaker:Not having a pathway because that's, that's a scary.
Speaker:Thing if we are not, we don't have a, a guide on how to do that, or we're never
Speaker:taught, or we're never educated on, um, and again, we're going back, we're in
Speaker:a bubble that we, we know about this, but nine outta 10 average people don't.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Maybe even nine and a half or 9.9.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:That's, that's not easy because it would come back to education.
Speaker:I think like that's why the work we are all doing is so
Speaker:important, like having events and.
Speaker:And at some point I hope we make an impact on government level, to be honest.
Speaker:Like that's why we as pro climber fights where we have like Jesse and Will, uh,
Speaker:sitting on courts levels and connecting,
Speaker:you know, off the back of this podcast, we're not gonna stop
Speaker:frames being built and getting wet.
Speaker:No, we're not gonna stop that.
Speaker:So what are some of the things that we can do now immediately to minimize the risk?
Speaker:I'm not saying we're gonna completely eliminate it.
Speaker:You know, we can have this conversation in another 10 years time.
Speaker:We're still gonna be building timber frames in the rain during winter.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It'll, it'll continue to happen.
Speaker:So what are some of the things that we can do?
Speaker:It's not
Speaker:positive thinking, EMBA.
Speaker:No, I understand.
Speaker:No, no.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But, but I know what you're saying.
Speaker:You know, what are some of the things that we can do right now?
Speaker:So tomorrow, you know, some frames are gonna rock up on a truck.
Speaker:The trusses are gonna arrive.
Speaker:What are some of the things that we can do?
Speaker:Alright.
Speaker:It's gonna get wet.
Speaker:They're probably already wet.
Speaker:They're prob potentially wet.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So we built it, throw it up, we're wrapping it, you know,
Speaker:in a, in a timely manner.
Speaker:Um, and it's probably a bit of a loaded question 'cause I kind of know the
Speaker:answer, but I wanna ask you, but what are some of the things we can do once
Speaker:we've stopped the frame from getting wet?
Speaker:What do you need to do before plaster goes on?
Speaker:What do you need to do before floor coverings going on?
Speaker:Just keep your timber dry is from the beginning, and if
Speaker:it got wet, just let it dry.
Speaker:That's very, very important.
Speaker:So like, you know, like the few of the tassie builders they put turn fans on.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, one of my favorite tips, which I've seen a few times on social media
Speaker:is put your bottom plate on packers.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like in 10 50 millions of wa so your bottom plate doesn't sit in water
Speaker:because it takes ages to dry out.
Speaker:This is
Speaker:something where I've got a new frame coming up, but the hard thing is.
Speaker:Is the building survey survey gonna sign off on that?
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:it's just gotta be the engineer drawings.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's, yeah.
Speaker:And that's a good point.
Speaker:It has
Speaker:to be in the engineer as long as you're fixing this Right.
Speaker:Uh, underneath, um, right where the Packers, it's no problem at all.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, yeah, I mean, if you are point lighting under every stud, no problem.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:Easy.
Speaker:Yeah, of course you have to.
Speaker:But the time, you have to use common sense here.
Speaker:Of course, you can't have like a load bearing wall and then
Speaker:the packers left, middle left.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:But there's gotta be, there's American systems that they've got these, this in
Speaker:New Zealand?
Speaker:It's in New Zealand.
Speaker:They've got, they've got like a, it's like a tape you roll out that's
Speaker:got like perforated mesh for it.
Speaker:Like a, oh, I didn't
Speaker:know about that.
Speaker:I've just seen, I've just like a
Speaker:tape you roll out and it's got like, um, I. Like, not core flute, but
Speaker:it's got drainage planes through it.
Speaker:Ah, I think like a super simple, just put on 10 mill packers and you stop
Speaker:capillary, you can just wipe your water.
Speaker:And water allows to dry out front.
Speaker:I mean, you know, dev So scary.
Speaker:I'll give
Speaker:you another, I'll give you another idea for a product that you can start
Speaker:selling through Performance membranes.
Speaker:It's a something a a a bottom plate packer.
Speaker:My, that will be an off the shelf product.
Speaker:I have some better ideas you could bring on the market.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Well maybe we can take that offline and we can do it ourselves.
Speaker:So we've only got probably 10 minutes left.
Speaker:We'll just gone another three hours, like last time
Speaker:and, and I think, you know, we have, you know what, we have
Speaker:gone all over the place here.
Speaker:I think we've kind of, we've touched on everything.
Speaker:We've kind of touched on everything, but you know, like we've talked
Speaker:about, um, prefabrication and I think obviously this is something
Speaker:that, you know, we talk about a lot.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Training.
Speaker:Of apprentices probably how far we are actually behind here in Australia.
Speaker:And it's, that's what you said?
Speaker:That's what I said.
Speaker:Look, and I, I'm always half glass full when it comes to this kind of stuff.
Speaker:On, on
Speaker:that positive note.
Speaker:The buildings we are building are up there, if not some
Speaker:of the best in the world.
Speaker:The way we build here with the systems we have, the systems are already here.
Speaker:If you choose to build correctly, it's a choice.
Speaker:You can choose to use pro climber or you can choose to use a
Speaker:non-compliant shitty metal sharking.
Speaker:That's an active choice that the builder makes, that we, we have
Speaker:the solutions here right now.
Speaker:It's, I mean, it's probably to the point I was just about to say before is
Speaker:like, you, you, yes, we're behind, but now we, now we now we do have a choice.
Speaker:We've got the, the, the education here.
Speaker:We've got the people willing to give up their time to train people.
Speaker:You've got podcasts, you know, build Insight, SBA Future Builder.
Speaker:All these people are helping educate builders right now on how to build better.
Speaker:And we also have to see, because I see like with Jesse and Billy
Speaker:sitting on building courts level.
Speaker:There's a reason how, why mold made it into the building code.
Speaker:Oh, right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:'cause of, 'cause of those guys, essentially maybe.
Speaker:Um, and also like there are quite a few people also on higher levels as not
Speaker:higher levels, but on the, on, on the science level, like Mark bury Cedar.
Speaker:Cedar, so.
Speaker:Uh, mark Bury is a professor for architecture and building
Speaker:science in utas in Tasmania, and he's also a massive advocate.
Speaker:So even on heaps and heaps of architects, they're also like
Speaker:fighting to recreate better buildings.
Speaker:So he means kind of, very often there are a lot of builders who
Speaker:wanna do it better and very often feels like you really alone.
Speaker:But as I live my bubble, I travel a lot around Australia.
Speaker:Um, had also a few presentations on universities and TAs and
Speaker:heaps of MBAs at the moment.
Speaker:So definitely can say you guys are not alone because there's so
Speaker:many people who wanna do better and they're actually really like
Speaker:thankful, uh, for all these positive information, the right information.
Speaker:Then also, like quite a few people listening to your podcast these days too.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's why I recommended it on the end of every my, all of my presentations.
Speaker:Oh, amazing.
Speaker:We, um, touching on Jesse, uh,
Speaker:have you had a mono already?
Speaker:No, we haven't.
Speaker:We've gotta get him on.
Speaker:He's always in Germany.
Speaker:We we're going up to Sydney next year.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:No, he's
Speaker:just always there.
Speaker:In summer.
Speaker:We,
Speaker:we got, we're gonna do a three hour podcast with him, like he's worth
Speaker:spending our time with for three hours.
Speaker:Oh yeah, of course.
Speaker:Um, going back, I don't think, and he maybe knows, but I, I also think
Speaker:he probably doesn't understand that moisture study that he did.
Speaker:The Australian study on moisture management has probably been the biggest,
Speaker:uh, uh, pouring of petrol on the fire to.
Speaker:Ignite the conversation in building, also
Speaker:giving a guideline in my, I think he, yeah, he just spent four
Speaker:and a half of years of his life to, uh, create this document.
Speaker:So is it almost a page day?
Speaker:I would say so, yeah.
Speaker:And I got, I got a question.
Speaker:So the amount of work you put in there is like, and it's still like, while building
Speaker:up Proclaim Australia, we really have to see like, there was a day-to-day business
Speaker:and I would say like, uh, most of the book happened on his couch, not in the office.
Speaker:So, so, so you need someone with so much passion to bring this
Speaker:document out to really like,
Speaker:so you could say Jesse's like always probably more right than you are.
Speaker:A hundred percent.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:Oh, we got that on
Speaker:video now.
Speaker:No, of course we can have
Speaker:that play in the pro climber office.
Speaker:I think, I think, I think my respect for Jesse is not a secret, to be honest.
Speaker:He's, we disagreeing a lot, which is good because like we know
Speaker:exactly the reasons why and yeah.
Speaker:And with those
Speaker:disagreement you create.
Speaker:It's sometimes when you are so hell bent on thinking a certain way you don't
Speaker:think how someone else might think.
Speaker:So that disagreement actually gives you those, uh, questions
Speaker:that someone else might ask you.
Speaker:Before time a
Speaker:different perspective because like we all, as humans, we think like
Speaker:that our way, our perspective or the way how we think is always right.
Speaker:I just Did you love yourself too?
Speaker:Um, it's always the right one.
Speaker:And so it's kind of always good to challenge and not battle
Speaker:each other, but like challenge each other in a positive way.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:To be actually a consider your own opinion again.
Speaker:I think like it's, it's not comfortable.
Speaker:It's not comfortable.
Speaker:Consider I might have been wrong.
Speaker:And I think that's, and that's a thing also a big battle for
Speaker:builders because they listen to us or they come to my trainings.
Speaker:And very often, eventually I just think like, what have I done right?
Speaker:And what have I wrong?
Speaker:What have I done wrong in the, in the past?
Speaker:And that's why I've been very careful how I actually, 'cause most
Speaker:of the times people think they're coming to a sales presentation.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then I come up with building physics and all the other stuff.
Speaker:And you haven't done it, it's fine.
Speaker:Conversation.
Speaker:And, but I, I still have to be very sensitive.
Speaker:It doesn't work every single time, but I try.
Speaker:So to really give people like a sensitive, a first step into this kind of world of
Speaker:better buildings and building science.
Speaker:So Dan, we have a segment on this podcast sponsored by MEGT, called the
Speaker:MEGT Mindful Moment, and the whole idea of this, so MEGT Australia's
Speaker:leading apprenticeship experts.
Speaker:They are.
Speaker:Uh, that we are coming up with an idea for apprentices and people in the industry
Speaker:and a bit of advice that can help them go on their way to, to educate themselves.
Speaker:I wanna get, and we haven't spoken about this prior to this, I wanna
Speaker:get three tips that you would give anyone in the industry, apprentices,
Speaker:apprentices on their journey to, uh, just through their trade.
Speaker:What would you, what's the biggest three tips you would give them?
Speaker:First of all, I would always say like.
Speaker:Get yourself good tools and take really good care of them.
Speaker:Like and the chisels for example.
Speaker:They should be all sharp and if you have apprentice, you should always
Speaker:go to the toolbox and check if you can share himself otherwise said,
Speaker:okay, go sharpening even if you have something more important to do a thing.
Speaker:That's kind of, because like it's kind of an old, it doesn't matter if in
Speaker:Japan or in Europe, like the way how I treat your tools and specifically
Speaker:your chisels is actually how you treat.
Speaker:You're building how you build.
Speaker:That's, I think, a very important part because it's the mindset, how you
Speaker:actually work step by step through your building and how you detail everything.
Speaker:Step number one, treat your tools.
Speaker:Have good tools and treat them well.
Speaker:'cause usually buy them once in your life if you take care of them.
Speaker:Um, step number two, keep a learning mindset.
Speaker:Um, it's kind of, I had to, for me it wasn't easier because.
Speaker:Me with my big mouth.
Speaker:Also, like when I finished my apprenticeship, I thought
Speaker:like I know everything, um, which is, yeah, pretty cool.
Speaker:But I remember also like when I did my black belt in karate, my teacher
Speaker:said, so, so now you have the basement.
Speaker:So now you're ready to start training.
Speaker:Do you know what that is?
Speaker:That right there is probably one of the best analogies that you could
Speaker:give, uh, an apprentice carpenter who's just finished their time.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Now you've got the basics.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Now you can start your, your, your real journey on becoming a carpenter.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But that's how it is.
Speaker:And that's like a difficult part when you go back, like to the TAFE system because
Speaker:like in TAFE you learn the same stuff.
Speaker:You one side and usually you should go to school to take time to.
Speaker:Work, learn in depth, um, to to, yeah, to work with your hands.
Speaker:And my third tip would be go back close to the first tip
Speaker:is use more of new hand tools.
Speaker:Get your hands out and get cut bits and pieces by your, by your hands.
Speaker:Get your shoes out or get your hand plan out and just if you have small bits and
Speaker:pieces, but the hand plan has to be sharp and you shouldn't have to be sharp and
Speaker:your so needs to be really nice so you can actually make nice cuts per hand.
Speaker:And for me it's still normal.
Speaker:Like it's just I shave things off by hand, step by step.
Speaker:But you see like, oh, there's still like a bu okay, take my hand planer and work
Speaker:it out, get the sandpaper out and sand it.
Speaker:Like, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I'm actually just imagining that in my head, like, um, the difference
Speaker:between using like an electric planer or battery planer versus
Speaker:using a, you know, like a hand plane
Speaker:and there's always a use for something.
Speaker:So I'm not saying you shouldn't use it, but.
Speaker:I think the best things, as much as I hated it back then, but in the first
Speaker:year of my apprenticeship, I wasn't allowed to use any power tools at
Speaker:schools of, you have to remember, full-time school two days a week.
Speaker:Just practical, like building stuff, models, roof structures.
Speaker:You're just allowed to use hand tools.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:It's so different here, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We look, it's, it's kind of the conversation that we kind of
Speaker:had as a, a brief into this.
Speaker:This podcast is building to the future.
Speaker:The rule, honest is true, is we're actually just looking into the past.
Speaker:Yeah, well the an, I mean at the end of the day, the answer's there really aren't
Speaker:they further you point you were saying
Speaker:before?
Speaker:Yeah, I have heaps of ideas, but, uh, but like I keep talking about my ideas, but
Speaker:I don't have the time to execute them.
Speaker:So, but it needs kind of something, a figure and something where
Speaker:actually apprentice actually can like follow and say, okay, cool.
Speaker:It's a way through my apprenticeship where I actually see and learn
Speaker:things, which you usually don't see.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:But.
Speaker:Take pride in your work, whoever's doing it, and always go all in and
Speaker:try to be as good as possible and always try to improve yourself.
Speaker:That's what thing is like, always think like, how could I have done it better?
Speaker:Be always critical of your own work.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But also celebrate the wins.
Speaker:Yeah, a hundred percent.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:but that's also like very important for you guys and that's super hard
Speaker:for me because I just working with the two young guys, three young guys
Speaker:in Sydney and I keep forgetting like.
Speaker:Shouting them out.
Speaker:And so, because like, uh, this one's ticked off, move on to the next one.
Speaker:So for us, if you have like people helping us or working for us, it's very important
Speaker:to really get a tip on the shoulders.
Speaker:Like, so I really like it and go into the detail, not just a phrase.
Speaker:And I like it and said like, specifically this detail, 'cause you
Speaker:looked at it, it's like, I really liked it how he worked it out.
Speaker:Do you know I, uh, I was on the phone to Beth the other day.
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:And um.
Speaker:I was telling her like, how good one of my apprentices was, and
Speaker:I'm like, oh, yeah, she's amazing.
Speaker:Like she's, you know, probably one of the better ones I've ever had.
Speaker:You know, she's enthusiastic, you know, she shows up.
Speaker:She, uh, always, she's always keen to learn.
Speaker:And Beth turned around to me and said, have you told her?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I said, no, I didn't.
Speaker:I haven't.
Speaker:She goes, okay, cool.
Speaker:You should.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I got off the phone and I sent her a voice note.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I, I said exactly what I said to Beth.
Speaker:And the response was awesome.
Speaker:It was exactly what, how Beth said she goes.
Speaker:'cause she probably doesn't know that you're thinking that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So, you know, you, it is important and, and I, I'm not gonna say that this is
Speaker:my theory, but you know, it is a lot easier to, uh, reprimand, reprimands
Speaker:probably the wrong word, but like, give constructive feedback when you are also
Speaker:giving positive feedback at the same time.
Speaker:Compliment sandwich.
Speaker:Well, not even a compliment sandwich, but if you are constantly picking up
Speaker:people for the things they're doing right, it makes it easier when you, when
Speaker:if you're always saying, that's wrong, that's wrong, that's wrong, that's wrong.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They're never gonna listen.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Specifically like there's the, there's a saying in Germany if, if
Speaker:you don't, if you don't complain, it's enough of our praise already.
Speaker:It's a very parian thing.
Speaker:It does.
Speaker:It's exactly the opposite.
Speaker:Daniel, uh, this won't be the last time you come on.
Speaker:Um, I'm sure we'll have you on multiple times Yeah.
Speaker:About
Speaker:myself.
Speaker:Again, thank, thank you for Thanks mate.
Speaker:Again,
Speaker:sharing your knowledge, everything you do in the industry, uh, we
Speaker:are gonna have pro climber blast over every podcast coming up.
Speaker:But if you do want to, uh, reach out and find your local
Speaker:distributor, pro climber.com au.
Speaker:Um, follow Dan on Instagram, air Boss, Dan, uh, pro climber on Instagram.
Speaker:Um, there's some great resources.
Speaker:He's have, they have all the details, technical data sheets.
Speaker:Um, if you're unsure on how a detail goes together, they've
Speaker:already got the solution, and if they don't, they will help you.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:oh, we have heaps of new details coming up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:Flow connection with us and chat about.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, Seth.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So thank you very much for coming on.
Speaker:Thanks man.
Speaker:Cheers.
Speaker:No worries.