notching adze - vertaling naar arabisch
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  • etymologie

notching adze - vertaling naar arabisch

TYPE OF HOUSE, BUILT FROM WOODEN LOGS; MUCH THE SAME AS A LOG CABIN
Loghouse; Log House; Saddle notch; Saddle Notch; Log homes; Log home; Wooden cabin; Log houses; Log construction; Half-dovetail notching; Saddle notching
  • An Umgebinde house in far-eastern Germany
  • Corner notch in medieval Norwegian log buildings
  • alt=Close-up of new logs in interior house wall
  • 17th-century log buildings in [[Heidal]], Norway. Corner of a ″loft″ store-house, a horse stable and a log barn
  • alt=Two-story log house in winter, with large porch and dormer roof
  • alt=Front view of two-story log house in summer, with porch and dormer roof
  • Lom Stave Church]] in [[Norway]].
  • Log building in German is known as Blockbau. Farmhouse, [[Bavaria]], Germany
  • Traditional corner notch used in Norway from the 14th century until the present
  • An old log house in [[Pargas]], Finland.
  • 17th-century log farmhouse in [[Heidal]], Norway.
  • Russian-style log house

notching adze      
قدوم نقر
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MANUFACTURING PROCES
Tube notching
‎ تَثَلُّم‎
notching         
MANUFACTURING PROCES
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تفريض ، تحريز

Definitie

Notching
·noun The small hollow, or hollows, cut; a notch or notches.
II. Notching ·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Notch.
III. Notching ·noun The act of making notches; the act of cutting into small hollows.
IV. Notching ·noun A method of excavating, as in a bank, by a series of cuttings side by side. ·see also Gulleting.
V. Notching ·noun A method of joining timbers, scantling, ·etc., by notching them, as at the ends, and overlapping or interlocking the notched portions.

Wikipedia

Log house

A log house, or log building, is a structure built with horizontal logs interlocked at the corners by notching. Logs may be round, squared or hewn to other shapes, either handcrafted or milled. The term "log cabin" generally refers to a smaller, more rustic log house, such as a hunting cabin in the woods, that may or may not have electricity or plumbing.

Log construction was the most common building technique in large regions of Sweden, Finland, Norway, the Baltic states and Russia, where straight and tall coniferous trees, such as pine and spruce, are readily available. It was also widely used for vernacular buildings in Eastern Central Europe, the Alps, the Balkans and parts of Asia, where similar climatic conditions prevail. In warmer and more westerly regions of Europe, where deciduous trees predominate, timber framing was favoured instead.

  • Sawn logs, logs sawn to a standard width, but with their original heights
  • Milled (also called machine-profiled), made with a log house moulder: Constructed of logs that have run through a manufacturing process which convert them into timbers which are consistent in size and appearance

Handcrafted log houses have been built for centuries in Fennoscandia, Fenno-Ugric areas such as Karelia, Lapland, Eastern parts of Finland. Also in Scandinavia, Russia and Eastern Europe, and were typically built using only an axe, knife and log scriber. Settlers from northern Europe brought the craft to North America in the early 17th century, where it was quickly adopted by other colonists and Native Americans. Possibly the oldest surviving log house in the United States is the C. A. Nothnagle Log House (circa 1640) in New Jersey.

Pre-fabricated log houses for export were manufactured in Norway from the 1880s until around 1920 by three large companies: Jacob Digre in Trondheim, M. Thams & Co. in Orkanger, and Strømmen Trævarefabrik at Strømmen. They were factory built from sawn or milled logs, numbered and dismantled for transportation, and reassembled on the buyer's site. Buyers could order standard models from catalogs, custom-made houses designed by architects employed by the companies, or houses of their own design. Log houses from Thams were exhibited at the Exposition Universelle (1889) in Paris.

During the 1920s the first American milled log houses appeared on the market, using logs which were pre-cut and shaped rather than hand-hewn. Many log houses today are of the milled variety, mainly because they require less labor-intensive field work than handcrafted houses. There are about 500 companies in North America which build the handcrafted, scribe-fit type of log house.