Why you shouldn't buy log cabin kits

Have you ever heard of a butt and pass style log cabin? Most people haven't, and there is a good reason for it.

You will probably learn more about log homes in the next five minutes than you would learn from talking to a log home salesman for five years. In the next couple of paragraphs we're going to reveal the deep, dark log home secret: butt and pass.

The log home "industry" doesn't want you to know about butt and pass log homes. When you pick up a log home magazine and flip through the pages you will see dozens of kit log cabins that look very beautiful, but you will almost never see a butt and pass style log home. Typically the kit log home magazines show Canadian chinkless and saddle notch log cabins. Why?

The kit magazines are 100% supported by advertising from manufacturers of log cabin kits. And here's the big bombshell:

It is not possible to make log cabin kits out of a proper butt and pass style log home.

The reasons for this have to do with the technical nature of building a butt and pass log home vs. building log cabin kits that must be shipped somewhere else and "reassembled" by a builder. The reasons are too detailed to go into here, but suffice to say that there is no such thing as butt and pass style log cabin kits.

Why should you know about butt and pass log homes?
If you are planning to build your own log home (or hire a builder to do it for you), you should educate yourself about the different styles and methods of building a log home before you start shopping for a kit or a builder. You should definitely at least know the difference between Scandinavian chinkless and Canadian Chinkless. You should also be familiar with the butt and pass style, because they have certain advantages that manufacturers and builders of log cabin kits won't tell you about. Advantages that you won't read about in log home kit magazines. A properly built butt and pass log home has many benefits, so here are just a few:

Butt and pass log homes are generally the least expensive type of log home -- some of our members have built them to code for $7,500 total for a finished house.
Butt and pass log homes are stronger than any other type of log home.
Butt and pass log homes last longer than any other type.
When built correctly, a butt and pass log home requires no ongoing maintenance (such as coating your house with sealants and other chemicals every few years). We've never seen a log cabin kit that doesn't require sealants or other chemical treatment every few years. Do you really want to breathe that stuff?
The average person can do everything required to build a butt and pass log home -- without buying a log cabin kit or hiring a builder.
As you can see, there is an entire log home universe out there for you to discover -- become the most educated consumer you can, or your log home might be the biggest financial mistake of your life.

Comments

Butt & Pass

Maybe the word is getting out. I have noticed on log plans/co. website the Butt and Pass method with pictures! Wow maybe its no longer a secret.
I orginaly did not like the butt and pass method. I figured if I could build it --it cant be that great. Well I started doing my research thing-and have found no settling issues with Skip's method of Butt and Pass-that is a huge plus. To me the butt and pass style also looks way tougher than other styles. It has a rugged look to it IMHO!

LINKS TO SOME HOMES B&P METHOD PLANS
http://www.eplans.com/contemporary_house-plans/HWEPL62991.hwx
http://www.eplans.com/contemporary_house-plans/HWEPL62973.hwx
http://www.eplans.com/contemporary_house-plans/HWEPL62972.hwx This last one looks like the same as the one for sale by a member built by the river-looks identical

Ron

Butt & Pass Kit homes

Ron,

The main question is whether they still mill the logs, opening them up for water infiltration and rot along their entire surface area, and also how they fasten one course of logs to the one below it. LHBA's pinning method eliminates worries about settling/building green that most butt-and-pass kit style homes still have to deal with. Lots of kit homes use butt-and-pass - it's just that they usually mill their logs to have flat surfaces for stacking, instead of round dowel profiles.

If they're using REAL logs, that's awesome. If they're pinning so settling isn't a problem, that's awesome too - but I doubt either of those is the case.

Kit homes/mill

There are 2 Log Home builders on the way to my property. I saw a house going together-It was the hand hewn with wide chinking-pretty good sized timbers. This style can grow on you as I never really liked that look at first. Its wood it certainly looks better than drywall/stucco. I think the Cartwright home on Bonanza was the same style.
But that's a lot of work mainly dove tail style on ends I think(which is pure craftsmanship) and I personaly like the natural look of logs instead of a 8 x 14 or whatever there using. It did look nice though. Trophy log homes was building it. These companies cater to the wealthy as I have priced several homes from different companies leaving me no choice but to build my own. And I am looking forward to doing so!
Milling can also be done on logs(still round) leaving them in dowel shape(perfectly round)-not my style either.

Ron