Building shed for firewood

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thepheniox

thepheniox

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Jan 1, 2008
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283
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ON, Canada
Hi all, I've been building a wood shed out of some wood I milled. The thing is looking awesome. I have the sides up and roof framed in, but I am wondering what would be best for roofing material tin, shingles, or I am thinking about using that green coragated plastic stuff. I think that it might actually heat the shed up a bit and dry the wood more, almost like a kiln. Anyone else ever do this and how did it work. I will try to post pictures later but I have lots of air movement through the shed so that won't be a problem with trapping the humidity in.
 
Blowncrewcab

Blowncrewcab

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Apr 7, 2008
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693
Location
Blaine, TN
I just built a wood shed thats 31' long by 24' wide, No sides, just a roof, on one side the roof is the clear corrogated plastic so the sun can shine in on the wood, the other side is galvanized metal so I can work in the shade. Best part is I can fit my 16' trailer in and have the log splitter behind it, when it's raining I can be out there splitting and stacking. now I just need to add lights and a fan and I'll never have to leave. I have some pics, I'll have to dig them up and post them..
 
caotropheus

caotropheus

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Dec 29, 2009
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396
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Portugal - Israel
A couple of years ago, I built a firewood shed (precisely, just the roof, no walls) out of steel and tin.




thepheniox,

Since you build your shed in wood using your own resources, I would suggest to use shingles to keep it cheap.
 
GlennG

GlennG

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Jul 11, 2003
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280
Location
xx
My shed has a metal roof. 6x6 posts. Survived record snow this winter.

woodshedsnow.jpg
 
Sawmill

Sawmill

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Dec 2, 2007
Messages
174
Location
Michigan
When I built mine I used corragated fiberglass like is used on a greenhouse. I think it does heat the shed up and dry the wood faster
 
logbutcher

logbutcher

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Apr 22, 2004
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2,411
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Maine
The corregated fiberglass strips are not cheap. This pole wood shed, 6 cord capacity, has been up for almost 10 years. The fiberglass strips are not very sturdy, falling branches can poke holes, heavy ice can crack them. I should have gone with cheaper or free, used barn metal roofing or even shingles for durability. Also, the fiberglass roofing requires a special, fitted installed "footing" that was a PITA to build.
 
Sawmill

Sawmill

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Dec 2, 2007
Messages
174
Location
Michigan
The fiber glass panels I used we off a greenhouse and I bought them for a 1.00 each and they covered 4 foot wide and 14 foot long. I wish I had bought more of them. They went on just like laying steel roofing and are yellowed from use but use to be clear. I have had some limbs fall on them but have never had a hole punched in one yet, but this was a concern I had when I used them. For the rafters in my shed I had a semi load of red pine logs stting here so I cut them on the mill to 8X8's and used this for the rafters and then I spaced 1X6 boards 12 inches apart as nail strips for the fiberglass. I used what ever I had on hand and the only thing I bought was a door track and some hinges. My posts are all 8X8's made out of electric poles that I traded for a saw mill job. I just cut flats on them.
 

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