insulation is good if you want to store volatile stuff that is also harmed by a freeze. I have paints that I'd rather get out of the garage, but for the freeze problem. I do plan on insulating and putting some very marginal heat in there this winter.What benefit is insulation unless you are turning it into a work shed.
Same with windows.
I have a 20' that with the four foot of sliding door open, allows enough light all the way to the back. If I need something at night, I have a 60w bulb for light.
Corrugated metal all around. Treated plywood floor on a cinderblock foundation.
Wood framed with 2x4 along one length (both vertical and horizontal) and two sets of shelves along back.
Tractor will take up and need an extra 1-2 ft clearance on each side.Yeah, paint, chemicals and some other things. Not to mention my diesel tractor and it's happiness at 30 degrees instead of 10.
The insulation I was mentioning was actually 1.5" of rigid foam board under my slab. 3/4 of my shed will buried in dirt due to how I built it (into the side of a hill on my walkout) so I'll retain some thermal mass that way too from the ground.
It was thin and cut up like coke cans.... feels like aluminum.. i know its not adamantium
Did you screw it into the plastic or through bolt it?...
Screw plywood on the inside of the shed all the way around...
What I'd really like is a 20' container. Set it right behind my garage.
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I think what he was getting at is that aluminum does not rust, it is simply not possible. It does form an oxide patina layer, but that is not rust. Rust is an iron oxide, and as such, needs an iron material to form.
For your shed, not sure where you are at, but yeah plastic is great for a temporary structure and light duty storage, but that is all. UV rays will decimate a plastic shed fairly quickly (5-10 years) and is definitely not as secure.
I would personally go with a kit and source the lumber myself if going for a relatively permanent structure for long term use. Absolutel nothing wrong with the plastic ones as long as you know what you are getting in to before hand.
Yeah, paint, chemicals and some other things. Not to mention my diesel tractor and it's happiness at 30 degrees instead of 10.
I need a shed for my forklift. I cover it with a tarp but a shed would be much better for it.
This is not a farm. I run a boatyard and I have three machines. The latest addition is a 18 ton telescoping boom, rough terrain 1978 Grove crane. The forklift is a Allis Chalmers. My main money maker is a 1960 marine travel lift. It had a capacity of 10 tons when it was new.
Why would it change?This is not a farm. I run a boatyard and I have three machines. The latest addition is a 18 ton telescoping boom, rough terrain 1978 Grove crane. The forklift is a Allis Chalmers. My main money maker is a 1960 marine travel lift. It had a capacity of 10 tons when it was new.
For a toolshed, the floor and insulation/humidity levels are important.
No sense to let all your tools rust.
They make compounds for this issue, but then you have to wipe off your tools every time and recoat them.
I noticed this, any tool left in my garage over winter has rusted. I have to keep my tools inside now. When I have the money I want to insulate and seal the garage, and bring in some more power so I can condition it, too.
Definitely if I was building a shed I'd insulate it and all. Treat it like a small house basically.
I've done that - priced out a similar sized shed, and I can save a significant amount of money vs. the kits they sell at HD, AND have a better shed (16" centers, rather than 24"). If I'm in town tomorrow, I'll stop in one of their demo sheds & take a bunch of pictures, then post prices of the pieces to do-it-yourself.Bs. I just built my own shed 6 months ago. Go to the lumber section and price out a similar size shed and it will be equal or slightly more than the kits. I'm not sure why you keep spewing this 1/2 price as it's totally inaccurate and simply put made up bs.
And I built my own thinking I'd save a ton of money over a kit. After I was done I looked at the kits and was in shock and pissed I had spent so much time and money when I could have done the kit for less money and still have it 10 years from now.
Guessing maybe worn/leaky hydraulics? I'd expect it to still be capable of at least 80% the original though.Why would it change?
I noticed this, any tool left in my garage over winter has rusted. I have to keep my tools inside now. When I have the money I want to insulate and seal the garage, and bring in some more power so I can condition it, too.
Definitely if I was building a shed I'd insulate it and all. Treat it like a small house basically.
I haven't had the opportunity to try it, but a couple people have suggested soaking tools that have a little surface rust in brake fluid. I have plenty of brake fluid - I'd prefer not to send it to the landfill; and if I don't need more within a month of opening a bottle, I will not use it in a car.
