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I spent literally weeks looking for a corrugated steel roof supplier. All the places I looked had absolutely ridiculous delivery prices for what I was after (£120 delivery for a £100 order).

 

I then came across metal4U, a mere £20 delivery.

 

I wanted the steel roof as a it should last a good thirty years and then it could be recycled. I'm not really convinced that some of those bitumen corrugated roofs will last the test of time.

 

A decent agricultural/fencing supplier should keep corrugated steel roofing in stock, the last time I bought some it was about £1.50 per foot, and 2 foot cover width. So 10ft sheet apprx £15 +vat

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Our log store was originally a hide out for catholic priests during the reformation in 1550's? 516a26bcd9bdce7a3cab092c839c9fe8.jpg

 

I'll take some more pics on Monday of the roof construction it's something to behold!!

 

 

1550 eh ? Should be seasoned by now . :001_smile:

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  • 2 weeks later...
Here's the first wood store that I built.

 

e816d8f34dcab12c7d10bf690a0e674e.jpg

 

I'm thinking of building a logstore very similar to the one MonsterMonster built, but instead of digging and backfilling the uprights, i was going to use 100 x 600mm fence post spikes (only 450mm in the ground).

 

Do you think these would be secure enough? The structure would obviously be freestanding, so it's really just the wind getting under it and lifting the spikes out of the ground that i'm worried about. It's going a fairly heavy soil.

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I would have thought you'd be fine, especially once it's full of logs (assuming the base is connected to the uprights)

 

Yes, that's the thing, it won't have any floor. I keep log in cages made from stock fencing on pallets and move them in an out with forks.

 

Logically if I have 12 post and each can resist 100 kgs of upwards pulley, them I sure i'm worrying over nothing. Thanks.

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I'm thinking of building a logstore very similar to the one MonsterMonster built, but instead of digging and backfilling the uprights, i was going to use 100 x 600mm fence post spikes (only 450mm in the ground).

 

Do you think these would be secure enough? The structure would obviously be freestanding, so it's really just the wind getting under it and lifting the spikes out of the ground that i'm worried about. It's going a fairly heavy soil.

If your roof is of similar construction, onduline sheet, the chances are that they would rip off before lifting the weight of the structure in high winds. I used quick set cement for my posts giving me the comfort that they will not shift. I used about 1.5 to 2 bags per post which might be cheaper than spikes.

 

Sent from my Alba 10" using Tapatalk

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