 it's going to puke then. The eat grass to make themselves throw up to get rid of the herbals. Freaking robot. Shit. Dad. I want to get one of them and a cat. Put it on. We can retire from this. Right then. The cold water is no good now. We've had a bit of a speed bump. More like an emergency stop isn't it than a speed bump? Slabs dried off really nicely. Day after. Excuse me. So what day is this? Tuesday. Do you remember the profiles today? Yeah I've got the profiles. Thank God. So today's job. It's threatening rain today according to the app. Which always tells us this is going to be like nice and dry when it actually chucks it down. We've broved putting the mix in. So Dad's getting the profile set up now. We're going to get at least get that up to finished height. Want to go on that? Yeah. One more course to go on that. But one in a bit. So 11 courses all the way around. Then the pillars are going up to a little height. Goal height. 208 courses. So I'll just take you to the front. It's a shame because this is the easiest way through but not for the not for the barriers. We have to go the long way for the barriers. But as you can see, steels have arrived. Apparently they arrived 15 minutes before we did. So nice and convenient. So the idea today as well is if the rain does come, we're going to cover the brickwork up and get these set up. Because these, I'm sure Dad's mentioned this before, they're going there obviously. But they're a bit longer so they're going to go past here and go a bit further out. Which isn't really a problem because it's behind rendering. So luckily I've got them too long. Yeah, better too long than too short, isn't it? Let's say that's all there is to it at the moment. Too short, that'll be between the plan to stay. Yeah, big mistake, that's too short. But yeah, so that's all there is so far. Mix is nearly ready. Profiles are getting ready. So yeah, let's get cracking. Is that how they do it? Is that how the YouTube people do it? On to the next. Maybe this is in the way. I forgot how. Just a quick one as a follow-up to one of our videos, the right way up video. These brick are the same. These have got the feather on them. So a bit more obvious on the ends. But if you can't, some of them aren't really easy to tell. But as I mentioned in the video, have you noticed these have a serial number on the back? 244A. I think it says IM21. So obviously that's the year in manufacture. But anyway, those numbers correspond to the right way up with the brick. So if you can't tell which way the brick is, double check the back. Very handy that. Not all of them are like that, but these are, some of them are quite difficult. But yeah, see that looks right way up, but it's not. That's the right way up. And then you double check yourself with the numbers and letters. So there you go. Because this pillar is only a brick and a half, we need to check the house wall, which as you can see is out about 10mm. Yeah, so I've topped the bottom by 10, 15mm. So when you set this pillar out, if I had to set that out at exactly brick and a half by the time I got to the top there, I would have had a cut in it. So what we need to do is pull this pillar out at least an extra 10mm, just make the joints a bit bigger. And then probably even make that, the cross joints the same, but just keep this joint against the house a bit bigger. And then it's going to reduce as we get towards the top. And we should still have a brick and a half pillar at the top, as long as we make it big enough at the bottom. Just a little tip there. That's so easily done because not all houses are plumb. Don't assume the house is plumb. That was always important when we did conservatories, because if the conservator had high walls on it, then you had to check at the top and the bottom. If it did run out of plumb, then your brick work would end up too small. Let me think too small. Yeah, you'd be plumb from the bottom, but the frames would push out over the top. So forget it, it's too hard to explain. Check a TPC for your measurements and double check your plumb on the house. Aggressively tight, because I ended up having to open up a little bit. Make sure the joints are nice and tight. And as Alex put the last two in there, that'll do for normal speed for a bit. We don't do enough normal speed, so I'll try and get a bit every now and again, but it's radio time now. So there you go, we're all set out. Solid wall, solid wall. Three brick pillar, door opening, brick and half. I'm not sure these are by folds or not, but they're just the doors anyway. Yes, we'll just crack on now. We've done ourselves in by putting that wall up first, but couldn't be helped. We need to get some brick work up yesterday while we had the time. That was just purely to get a bit, get ahead of ourselves with the brick work. Oh yeah, Alex has just squared it up, so that's it now. That's finished. So you've got this pillar on the other side, carries on up. It's just to take the beam for the span of the doors. The plan was originally to go back into there and take the wall right back to there, but we need the internal wall. So yeah, we'll get on that time that's for a bit now. Seen a bit? The cold water's no good now. We've had a bit of a speed bump. More like an emergency stop, isn't it, than a speed bump? They're having our lunch and the customer isn't happy with the door opening, which is fine. So we're going to be changing that, but we don't know how we're changing it yet. So Robbie and Robbie will be here tomorrow, so then everything can be rejigged. Doesn't affect this side. There might be a pillar here, there might not be. We'll find out tomorrow. That pillar could be reducing in size. It was three brick by three brick, so it's the same as that over there. Once bigger doors, so that might be going. So if that one goes, that one goes, and we might have to just chew that out and take that pillar back a bit. But these things happen. It's a customer's job. It's up to them. So as long as they're happy, we'll get it fixed. So what we're doing now is we're going to use up more to what we've got left. I'm going to put a corner up in there. We can get a corner up to there. That'll probably a course higher, and then we've got this to run in, three courses, and then we've got two courses to make up. So I'm just going to cut the blocks down for that. I've got loads of blocks, so I've got plenty. So I'll just cut them over there in the garden. Yeah, we didn't get enough commons, but I'd rather do it with the blocks anyway, so it's the same material. Keep the building control happy. That's pretty much it for now, isn't it? It's finally trying to rain now, isn't it? Two o'clock. We've done so well today. It's barely rained. The app says rain all day, didn't it? From nine o'clock, and it's not rain much at all. So obviously we've got all this done, all that, all that, top course on there. So we're running along, and then like somebody just took a leg up and tripped us up and fell flat on our face. It's not a problem. All that it affects is our deadline for the weekend, which we've got a big deadline to hit, which we should still be okay. I was hoping to fit another job in on the Saturday, but we'll have to see. So yeah, let's crack on with this block work corner, while Alex has a bit of a tidy up and I don't know. The block's in the bar already for here. I've covered the blocks up outside. If you just have a little brush up outside, in fact you can bring the trestles and the planks around, put them over there, because we're not mixing there tomorrow, are we? They're all out of the van. They just need bringing round. As eager then to be mentioned the trestles, we don't like trestles. It's my thing there. It's my thing. Stop taking stuff from people. The blues come through the hessing going back over the meat. Yeah, as you can see, it's finally arrived. We've done damn well to dodge it today. There we go, managed to get it backed up. Can't return that corner because we don't know what's going on with that corner tomorrow. It'll still be green tomorrow. Yeah, so we don't know what that's going to do tomorrow. We'll use the... What do we call it? Reciprocating saw? Saber saw? Saber saw, that's it. Yeah, we can use a saber saw to tood that out. That might be coming down all together. Here, here. What's up with it? What are you doing? Oh my god, I don't think it like them here. It's going all like, it looks like it's got frosting on it. So, we've got up there as high as we can. That's going to have to be cut down, because we don't know what we're doing. It's going to puke then. They eat grass to make themselves throw up to get rid of the herbals. Oh, for your robot. Shit. First time seeing one of these in action. We've got one of them, it's called me. I want to... It's called dad. I want to get one of them and a tire from this. Yeah, that'll go, that'll go viral, won't it? Anyway, so back to the job in hand. That's, that's just got two courses going there, wherever the pillars end up. I think the pillars are all being reduced. The customer wants more glass. He wants bigger doors and more glass. Because as that stands, that door is smaller than the door he's got here. And he wants that to be as much glass as possible, because it's bi-folds. But the trade-off is you need, you need a bit of strength in pillars for bi-folds to hang the door. But see, if the doors stack that way, they're going to stack against the back door. But I suppose if you're using the bi-fold, you're not using your back door, are you? Anyway, that's, that's for the customer and Robbie to decide tomorrow. So tomorrow, clear this out, start on this. The accros are there, planks around the front, trestles around the front. So everything's here ready to go. We'll just nip to burst going in the morning to pick up the extra strong boy we forgot. And a couple of bags of cement and probably another tub of brown dye, because we're throwing all this brown stuff away. So yeah, wherever this ends up in the video, we'll see you either in the next video or in a minute.