08-20-2018, 09:10 PM
Here's a link to the last segment: Siding and Gutters
The wood for the doors was 16 - 18% MC, which is too wet to use even for exterior work, so I hauled it down into my shop and put it in the drier. While it was drying I moved on to building wood racks in the shed and moving the wood out of my shop. The racks are simply 2x4's with 1-1/4" holes drilled 3-1/2" OC. They are held screwed to a sleeper on the floor and connected to the bottom span of the trusses at the top. The holes will accommodate both 3/4" black iron pipe and 1" EMT. 1" EMT is a lot cheaper and seems to work fine with the 24" wide racks.
The pipes/EMT have a 1/4" hole drilled near one end and a screw secures it to the vertical so it can't slip out.
These racks hold boards up to 7' long.
And these will hold boards up to 11 - 12', but ideally 8 - 10'.
Those racks are loaded through the front door, or where they will be:
I'm sure you noticed that the boards are racked on edge. I do that so that I can pull out any board of interest without having to offload a bunch of boards to get to what is always the one on the bottom. One of my friends makes the argument that vertical storage is better, others that flat racking is superior. To each their own; I prefer this.
Here's why I needed the shed, and this is after one of the rolling racks with several hundred BF was already removed and the other mostly unloaded. Today, two good friends came over and we moved the wood off yet another rolling cart, several stacks off the floor, and most of the wood off the rack above the drier.
My shop is still a mess, but now I can at least see from one end to the other, and I have a plan for how it's going to look once the drier and hanging rack are removed.
Thanks for following along. Doors at some point, but probably a couple of months out due to some other things coming up.
John
The wood for the doors was 16 - 18% MC, which is too wet to use even for exterior work, so I hauled it down into my shop and put it in the drier. While it was drying I moved on to building wood racks in the shed and moving the wood out of my shop. The racks are simply 2x4's with 1-1/4" holes drilled 3-1/2" OC. They are held screwed to a sleeper on the floor and connected to the bottom span of the trusses at the top. The holes will accommodate both 3/4" black iron pipe and 1" EMT. 1" EMT is a lot cheaper and seems to work fine with the 24" wide racks.
The pipes/EMT have a 1/4" hole drilled near one end and a screw secures it to the vertical so it can't slip out.
These racks hold boards up to 7' long.
And these will hold boards up to 11 - 12', but ideally 8 - 10'.
Those racks are loaded through the front door, or where they will be:
I'm sure you noticed that the boards are racked on edge. I do that so that I can pull out any board of interest without having to offload a bunch of boards to get to what is always the one on the bottom. One of my friends makes the argument that vertical storage is better, others that flat racking is superior. To each their own; I prefer this.
Here's why I needed the shed, and this is after one of the rolling racks with several hundred BF was already removed and the other mostly unloaded. Today, two good friends came over and we moved the wood off yet another rolling cart, several stacks off the floor, and most of the wood off the rack above the drier.
My shop is still a mess, but now I can at least see from one end to the other, and I have a plan for how it's going to look once the drier and hanging rack are removed.
Thanks for following along. Doors at some point, but probably a couple of months out due to some other things coming up.
John