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02

From a small shed to a larger more complex home, the basic construction assembly remains the same.

See below for our typical construction assembly process.

Step 1:    

Begins with the wall layout, snapping the wall chalk lines, and marking the anchor bolt locations. 

Step 2:

Next the anchor bolts are set by drilling holes into the slab, then epoxy setting the anchor bolts into the concrete slab per the engineers specifications. Our raised foundation system animation is coming soon!

Step 3:  

 Next, the bottom track struts are placed over the anchor bolts and secured throughout using a torque wrench, tightening down on a coupler nut and washer to specifications.

Step 4:    

Next, starting at a chosen building corner, two panels are placed over the bottom track strut and threaded rods are fastened into a coupler nut at each anchor bolt located on each end of the two panels.

Step 5:

Next, a top strut is placed over the top of both panels and dropped into the concealed hat channel and over the threaded rods; Then a temporary 45 degree strut bracket is placed over the top strut, and special nuts secure the brackets to the strut and torqued for temporary bracing only. 

Step 6:

Next, a specially designed corner panel post is placed over the bottom strut and the vertical insulation strips are inserted into the adjacent vertical panel edges.

Step 7:

Next, a 90 degree bracket is placed over the top struts and over the threaded rods at the corner, special nuts are used to fasten the plate to the struts, and nuts are applied over the threaded rods and torqued to specifications. 

The corner is set.

Step 8:    

Next the vertical insulation strips are placed over the threaded rods and the next panel is set over the bottom track, top track struts are extended using brackets as specified and the process or torqueing down the panels is repeated. 

 

Header panels are placed over a strut acting as a concealed steel lintel. This strut (lintel) rests on a vertical strut at both jamb ends and is bolted together. Threaded rods are used at the jambs in the same method and are torqued down.  



Note:

GloPac's patented ReZist-It system uses pre-engineered and proprietary bolted strut connections which are highly versatile and nearly limitless in it's ability to join the ReZist-It system together!

Similar to the Childhood toy known as "the Erector Set"

The ReZist-It system is a simple and highly effective methodology!       

A simplified simulation of the  ReZist-It  System

®

The basic construction assembly process unfolds as follows:

Copyright 2012 © Global Pacific Technologies, LLC.   ReZist-It is a registered trademark. All rights reserved.​

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