how high is too high?

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mn woodcutter

mn woodcutter

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I ran out of pallets and needed to empty the truck. I hate handling it more than I need to so I just kept on stacking. I sure hope it stays put. It's a 12 ft pallet and both stacks are tied together with multiple 2x4s spanning the width but I still am worried. It's over 7.5 ft high. Anyone else been in the same boat?20151122_153404.jpg20151122_153308.jpg
 
ashy larry

ashy larry

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I had one fall. I had stacked two rows on pallets and went pretty high. One side of the pallets collapsed and the back row fell. It was weird bc it had been there for a couple months and i was nearby splitting wood. Watched it fall. What are the chances?

Luckily it was cedar, partially doty oak and some red oak poles. I just restacked in a different spot.
 
Dustyw

Dustyw

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ohio
My grandpa taught me to put a wire around the metal fence post on the end of the stack and run it it a ways and wrap it around a piece of wood. So if the post wants to lean out, it has to drag the wood with it, it's always worke for me as I don't put fence post in the ground very far as I take them back out in spring.
 
Kevin in Ohio

Kevin in Ohio

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Normal stacks for me are about 8 1/2 foot high. For long term storage I'll stack them with a heavy inward lean. This keeps them in place as dry down.

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First rick you normally have to do 2 at once.
 
sledge&wedge

sledge&wedge

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Yeah I took a ride in that boat last year... and three re-stacks later I think I finally got mine to get itself under control and keep its balance. Mine got knocked over by some heavy straight-line wind (30-40 mph) that we got back in the summertime. I gave up at one point and left it laying in a pile for a few weeks before finally mustering up the courage to re-stack it and take my time so it stayed. I wish I had a good suggestion for you, but I don't. :(
 
Kevin in Ohio

Kevin in Ohio

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what is with the back of that shed roof,, behind the binder???


More work!!!! Bad post and the whole shed needs straightened up again. Mother nature has not been too kind to us. Everytime we get one fixed up she decides to send a BIG windstorm. We've got 2 fixed up again and have 3 to redo.

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When the wind rips a road sign off, you know there is some force!
 
mn woodcutter

mn woodcutter

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More work!!!! Bad post and the whole shed needs straightened up again. Mother nature has not been too kind to us. Everytime we get one fixed up she decides to send a BIG windstorm. We've got 2 fixed up again and have 3 to redo.

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When the wind rips a road sign off, you know there is some force!
Wow that is some serious wind. We have those straight line winds too. Once we had a semi trailer get tipped over and three of our canoes went over a mile in each direction.
 
Joined
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Location
MN
More work!!!! Bad post and the whole shed needs straightened up again. Mother nature has not been too kind to us. Everytime we get one fixed up she decides to send a BIG windstorm. We've got 2 fixed up again and have 3 to redo.

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When the wind rips a road sign off, you know there is some force!
That is some insane wind.

When we get winds like that I know there will be more firewood for me waiting along a logging road that abuts a recent cut. A few more trees along the cut line uproot each time as their roots didn't plan for them to be out in the open.
 
turnkey4099
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se washington
Normal stacks for me are about 8 1/2 foot high. For long term storage I'll stack them with a heavy inward lean. This keeps them in place as dry down.
First rick you normally have to do 2 at once.

Yep, that's my method of stacking out in the open, stack about 6 1/2' high. Never had one fall over but have had the ends blow out after several years. Black Locust doesn't rot so I have a lot of it out there in the pasture that I scrounged when the locust borer struck. One stack of 12 ricks blew both ends out after 10 years. Those piles never quit 'working'.

Harry K
 
Kevin in Ohio

Kevin in Ohio

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Wow that is some serious wind. We have those straight line winds too. Once we had a semi trailer get tipped over and three of our canoes went over a mile in each direction.

The first 2 pics show the main woodshed. It is completely full. close to 80 cord in there. The only thing that kept it from going down is it is resting on the woodstack! It may be beyond saving at this point. Old style tobacco shed. Someone stole all the wood siding off of it and we resided it with metal. Then it blew the whole standing seam roof off. We then straightened it all and put it back on with straps to hold the rafters on. Then it blew it off the foundations. Poured a lot of new bases with concrete replacing the round rocks and then it did this. Bad place for a barn I guess!

The other shed is here at my place. Is worse than it looks as it shifted off the foundations as well. Broke a lot of beams and posts and insurance totalled it out. I think we can save it but it'll be loads of work. Amish guy wanted $40,000 to do it. That's a new pole barn to me.

I had enough wind for a while needless to say.

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Even folded my old windpump back

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Got it all fixed up this Summer. Ended up disasembling it, straightening and back up in pieces.
 
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