Are portable mills still backordered for months-years out? I remember reading last year that the lead times were unbelievably long.I have several building projects going and have thought about buying a mil since I have wooded property, but I would have to do a lot of time consuming manual labor before I even broke even from the cost of a mil.
Two years ago I priced out 40×40 pole building 24000 with out doors i put it off, so 2021 i decided to pull the trigger. I knew prices went up so I priced 36×36 with 12 foot overhang 39000 . Lumber prices were going down from 7.48 2×4 × 8 to 3.25 so I sign a contract metal was still high and still going up. Building was up in October since then 2×4s are now 6.24 metal price still on the rise. I am now in process of finishing inside my building and of course everything is high if you can find what you need.Lumber all year has been going crazy just like metal. A friend paid his deposit for a steel building. Permitting took so long that now the building supplier can't get him the building for the price they already got deposit on because they would lose money. He is still waiting now 9 months late. I need some new interior wall sheeting for my new shop and the old one 3 years ago I used 7/16" OSB and it was awesome. That shop had 100 sheets and it was like $830 at home depot, now that 100 sheets would be like $4500. BUT the building cost me $42K and now would be over $140K. Just like everything inflation ***** and makes your $ worth pennies.
I was in the same boat back in may. I just want my garage done so I can start using it. In the grand scheme of things, while a 30% price jump isn't great, it isn't the end of the world either depending on scale. I just bit the bullet and bought it, especially since there was no guarantee it would actually go down. It did of course, after I purchased the majority of my wood though.
A friend paid his deposit for a steel building. Permitting took so long that now the building supplier can't get him the building for the price they already got deposit on because they would lose money. He is still waiting now 9 months late.
Hey, please let us know which building supplier did this, so we can avoid them.
That is not cool. Once a manufacturer quotes a price, accepts a purchase order, and takes a deposit, it is their job to hedge any pricing risk from that point until delivery. This is why futures and derivitaves exist.
I am pretty sure that in these unprecedented times it is only fair to pass on some of the cost to the customer, as no one has experience with the craziness that is our current economy.
I don't know if it would fly with customers, but I would put in my contracts with customers that final price will be determined based on materials pricing at time actual production begins. The customer would then have the option for a refund of their deposit if they wish before production begins. This could benefit customers if material prices were to go down.Our company took a $14.2 million dollar hit due to price increases because of this exact situation this year. Even though we had record sales figures and put in record hours fulfilling those orders, we were rewarded with very little this year. Feels great.
I am pretty sure that in these unprecedented times it is only fair to pass on some of the cost to the customer, as no one has experience with the craziness that is our current economy.
You must not have been paying attention in the '70s and early to mid '80s.
I was born in 1982, and graduated from college in 2009. Neither of those affected me in any way, shape, or form. Neither of those affected me in any way, shape, or form.
Woodmisers self powered one is around 12k so it going to be awhile before you’d break even on cutting non structural projects but there are much cheaper ones.If you live in an area where building permits are required you almost always need to use graded lumber. You can get your own lumber graded for a cost, but then are you really saving any money by buying a mill?
I don't know if it would fly with customers, but I would put in my contracts with customers that final price will be determined based on materials pricing at time actual production begins. The customer would then have the option for a refund of their deposit if they wish before production begins. This could benefit customers if material prices were to go down.
As a manufacturer you have to figure out a way to not end up with zero profit or a loss due to rising material prices and also keep customers happy. Maybe my idea would drive customers away so it wouldn’t work. It would be easy to base the price for a steel building on the steel futures market.I would never sign a contract like that unless it guaranteed me copies of all materials invoices, and the option to purchase those materials myself.
If you're a contractor heading down this route, realize that it means the end of "it costs what I say it costs" and hiding your profit margin behind a single big lump-sum quote. You're now talking about quoting labor and materials separately. Think hard about that.
As wages increase companies find it profitable to use more automation. They are already 3-d printing concrete structures. Wait until automation learns to frame and put on roofs. In fact some places use walls that were built by automation in a factory, and everything is done except make the connections when the house is "assembled."
We do open book jobs with more and more customers now. However, we also start the jobs with a predetermined profit margin. Its all out on the table and we know the percentage of the job we will make but the customer doesn't know how much it will end up costing them in the end but for some reason the "money people" like this setup more than us making an undisclosed profit margin. Go figure. We obviously do put in a higher margin when we bid fixed price jobs because we are assuming the risk. Sometimes we do good and sometimes we don't. We do like the idea of a consistent and guaranteed final margin. The customer doesn't always end up liking the open book final invoices, especially the last couple of years with prices being all over the board.I would never sign a contract like that unless it guaranteed me copies of all materials invoices, and the option to purchase those materials myself.
If you're a contractor heading down this route, realize that it means the end of "it costs what I say it costs" and hiding your profit margin behind a single big lump-sum quote. You're now talking about quoting labor and materials separately. Think hard about that.
