blueovalforever
Member
I was curious if anyone out there has used wood pallets for walls or ceiling in their shop? I can have as many as I want and have a rather large shop to buy materials for.
You could buy brand new steel paneling for it for the effort and time you would spend reclaiming pallets.I was curious if anyone out there has used wood pallets for walls or ceiling in their shop? I can have as many as I want and have a rather large shop to buy materials for.
I find when I try breaking down pallets I end up with 60-70% of the wood cracking and splintering before the nails start to come out. Maybe I am doing it wrong.
Break them down with a sawzall. You cut the boards off by cutting through the nail shafts under the board. Then you can easily tap out the nail heads with a punch. We did a bunch for a wall at my buddy's house.
You can strip a pallet in under a minute this way.
I just gave a safety training session and pallet reuse was one of the things I covered.
Pallets are supposed to be stamped to identify whether they are treated or not.
DO NOT reuse any pallet marked "MB". It stands for Methyl Bromide and it will off gas and can cause harm. It can also cause harm from contact. "MB" treatment has been banned in many countries and has not been widely used for a while, but many treated pallets are still in circulation. "HT" means the pallet has been heat treated to kill pests. "KD" means it has been kiln dried. "DB" means nothing was done other than the wood was debarked to give it a uniform edge. "EPAL" is a European standard and that label indicates the pallet is "HT" & "DB". "EUR" is an outdated Euro logo and should not be reused unless it also has "EPAL" on the pallet.
Red & blue pallets come from "pallet pools" which means the pallets are rented. They should not be reused because they may contain formaldehyde and other treatment chemicals.
Tommy
So let me ask - for an outdoor fire pit, which of these are harmful when burned?
Check out this video. Guy used some on part of his shop, both the garage and this video turned out great
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When I worked for IBM, I had access to pallets used to ship electronics from Asia. Many of them had really nice looking hardwood boards and were not juicy with moisture like most pallets I see. I scavenged some good wood from those but had to cut the nails as mentioned.
Depending on the source, the first order of business might be a good pressure washing.
I used (am still using) rough sawn Poplar and corrugated metal, on the man cave end, OSB on the walls is the shop area, one section at a time.
Looks killer - exactly what I want to do, down to the corrugated panels.
1) Is the vertical lumber butted together or is there a tounge and groove?
2) What's the purpose of the OSB Behind the vertical lumber?
3) do you have a shot of inside of that cabinet door?
I have though about using pallets in my basement for my "man cave" area. Can you pressure wash them to get the chemicals off???
