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shop
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 4:26 am
by huntingpal
I have a 30x40 and it filled up fast. After only 5 years in it I am now getting prices to add on another 12ft. leento on the whole back side. You can never build it too big. A guy has to have STUFF and the more room you have the more STUFF you will drag home
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 6:40 am
by Rudi
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 8:38 am
by jim turner
I hear you, I first built a 40x60 pole barn and it is full then I built a 30x50 shop now it is full and I have no place to work without moving things around, What is a guy to do?
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 9:00 am
by George Willer
jim turner wrote:I hear you, I first built a 40x60 pole barn and it is full then I built a 30x50 shop now it is full and I have no place to work without moving things around, What is a guy to do?
You are so close, but you missed the size by a bit. My pole barn is 40 x 72 and the shop is 40 x 54. Mine is ALMOST big enough.
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 9:01 am
by Joey
You guys sure know how to depress somebody!
I'm in the process of trying to finish up a 20 x 40 shop, sure is a purty thing! After reading this thread, I find myself wondering if I need to build up reasons (excuses) the convince the significant other that I might need more room later. Hmmmm, a barn in the making in a few years?
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 9:32 am
by Clem
I just put an extra lean on my small barn for a Cub. I used cedar planks from an old barn that fell in for the entire project. so just a bundle of shingles is all I was out! I love reusing stuff. I can fit one Cub in and a set of cultivators.
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 12:24 pm
by cowboy
Hey Clem Can we move the cub to one side and let me camp out there for a few months
Looks like I will be working at the brent run landfill agin in a month or so. I should be in Oscota MI in a week and when I am done I am heading that way.
When I get to building a real shop I do not think I will put floor drains in. They always fill up with mud and that one one of a kind bolt you Need ends up fallind down in it. One of my friends has his angled down and out the front door. He will start at the back of the shop and hose everything down and out the door.
And rather than having the sliding doors on the outside of the building he has them on the inside so he does not have to worry about shoveling the snow away from the door track in the winter. He built shelves all the way to the ceiling infront of it so the doors slide between the shelves and the wall.
Billy
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 12:59 pm
by Clem
Cowboy. That is good news being back to work and all. That means more $bucks$ for cubs. When you get settled in on your new job stop on over.
By the way everyone, is pea rock a good thing to put down for ground support?
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 3:28 pm
by cowboy
Hi Clem
You want a sharp stone crushed that will bind and pack together. For a driveway or shed floor I use 12a which is a crushed limestone with fines in it that will pack down and stay in place. Pea stone is for drainage.
Billy
oops
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 4:36 pm
by huntingpal
I ment to post a replie to another thread. I just noticed I started another new one again. I need to start slowing down and watching what I am dooing.
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 5:01 pm
by John(videodoc)
pea gravel like walking in sand
get road pack in a few years it'll be like concrete
Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 7:35 pm
by Little Indy
Joey wrote:You guys sure know how to depress somebody!
I'm in the process of trying to finish up a 20 x 40 shop, sure is a purty thing! After reading this thread, I find myself wondering if I need to build up reasons (excuses) the convince the significant other that I might need more room later. Hmmmm, a barn in the making in a few years?
Consider making one end wall non-load bearing so that you can knock the wall later. I am doing this on my new barn so that if I want to add 8-16 feet I will be able to do so without worring about that portion falling. I added three 2by8's as beams on the end.
Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 7:39 pm
by Little Indy
When I bought this property (1976) the previous owner did not set the treated wood poles of my horse barn (this is where I am keeping my tractors at present) in concrete. I sure wish he had. A lot easier to do it when the barn was built than now.
Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 7:53 pm
by George Willer
When I bought this property (1976) the previous owner did not set the treated wood poles of my horse barn (this is where I am keeping my tractors at present) in concrete. I sure wish he had. A lot easier to do it when the barn was built than now.
The poles will last longer if they're backfilled with clean washed stone so they can drain. Setting them in concrete will shorten their life.
Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 8:36 pm
by cowboy
We used to put fence poles in with the big end down to keep them down. I decided to put a little extra traction on my 4x4's
This is what my little 12x16 foot shed looked like yesteday at 2:00 pm
This is what it looked like at 7:30 yesterday. Boy digging post holes in hard yellow clay by hand is a pain
The only spud bar I have weighs 60 pounds. Ouch
Billy