>>391479What cabin are you carrying around in a bag of holding.
>Bag of Holding IV>Weighs 60lb (>27kg, so immediately fucking ridiculous for backpacking)>1,500lb contents limit>250 cubic feet contents limitSo how big is your log cabin? We'll assume you're something small like a halfling so you only need like 4 feet of clearance (We're trying to conserve space) and the logs have got to be like a foot wide each, too, so that's a 5 foot tall house.
>250/5 = 50So now you've got a footprint of just 50 square foot to play with. That's going to be like 7 x 7 foot of floor space (Including the walls; effective space is 5 x 5 foot) That's quite a bit smaller than the average bedroom, but fortunately you're a halfling at like 3'9" or something so you could probably lay down in this cabin. This would be like living in an 8' x 8'' room for your average human.
So the walls are 5ft high and logs are 1 foot wide so that's 5 logs per wall. The circumference of your house is 7ft*4 = 28ft (Ignoring overlap).
We can effectively, for the purposes of calculating weight, consider your house to be made of a single log which is 28*5=140ft long.
>r = .5>L=140>L*pi*r^2 = 140*pi*.5*.5 = pi*35 = 109.9557 cubic feetCall it 110 cubic feet
So what kind of wood are we using for this? Well our maximum weight is 1500lb so the heaviest the wood can be is
>1500/110 = 13.635...Call it 13.65 lb / cubic foot
The only wood which is light enough, even when dried, that I can see is balsa wood.
So congratu-fucking-lations. You've got a piddly little 7x7x4 foot BALSA WOOD log cabin which weighs you down a whole 60lb and considering that you're a halfling I doubt you can carry that.
This doesn't even include any furnishings. This is you just sleeping on the cold hard ground from the "comfort" of your cabin.
>sources:>http://www.d20pfsrd.com/magic-items/wondrous-items/wondrous-items/a-b/bag-of-holding>http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/weigt-wood-d_821.html>Google calculator