His200HerScout
Well-known member
Been meaning to post pics for a long time!!!
First off, the old shed. Wow, what an engineering marvel! It was made from telephone poles, those horizontal wooden beams near the top of telephone poles that hold the wires, old plywood road signs (no, I am not kidding), and corrugated steel & plastic. Apparently some previous owner worked for the road commission -- at least that's the story I've heard.
The roof was constructed of what I decided to call trussy things. Sort of like rafters, but without a ridge beam. Sort of like trusses because they had a cross-piece near the peak. They were about 6 feet on center with no purlins between, so the 1/2" plywood sheathing spanned nearly 6 feet. The roof was so weak that my father in-law and I ended up picking the corrugated roof off with shovels because I thought I'd go through the roof by standing on it.
Telephone poles probably have a large weight bearing capacity, but they weren't notched, so the roof load was carried by carriage bolts, which (of course) sagged. Also, the telephone poles were not set with any precision, so the builder just added (a few inches worth of) nuts and washers to the carriage bolts to make the trussy things parallel. This also contributed to the roof sagging.
Honestly, I can't believe this thing didn't fall over decades ago... And it was full of garbage that came with the house when we bought it. The only good thing I can say is "thank you for using box nails, because it came apart easily!"
I shot some video of pulling the poles out of the ground with my truck using a railroad tie and a chain. Now THAT was fun. I'll have to post that here or on YouTube.
First off, the old shed. Wow, what an engineering marvel! It was made from telephone poles, those horizontal wooden beams near the top of telephone poles that hold the wires, old plywood road signs (no, I am not kidding), and corrugated steel & plastic. Apparently some previous owner worked for the road commission -- at least that's the story I've heard.
The roof was constructed of what I decided to call trussy things. Sort of like rafters, but without a ridge beam. Sort of like trusses because they had a cross-piece near the peak. They were about 6 feet on center with no purlins between, so the 1/2" plywood sheathing spanned nearly 6 feet. The roof was so weak that my father in-law and I ended up picking the corrugated roof off with shovels because I thought I'd go through the roof by standing on it.
Telephone poles probably have a large weight bearing capacity, but they weren't notched, so the roof load was carried by carriage bolts, which (of course) sagged. Also, the telephone poles were not set with any precision, so the builder just added (a few inches worth of) nuts and washers to the carriage bolts to make the trussy things parallel. This also contributed to the roof sagging.
Honestly, I can't believe this thing didn't fall over decades ago... And it was full of garbage that came with the house when we bought it. The only good thing I can say is "thank you for using box nails, because it came apart easily!"
I shot some video of pulling the poles out of the ground with my truck using a railroad tie and a chain. Now THAT was fun. I'll have to post that here or on YouTube.
. So I made a model out of plywood scraps and paint samples and thankfully the actual color is what I expect


