A timber purchasing question

A timber purchasing question

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Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,030 posts

272 months

Thursday 9th April 2009
quotequote all
I fancy building a small shed this weekend. It's going to be about 5 feet wide, 2 feet deep and 7 foot high (because most sheds have a door designed to leave a red stripe across the forehead of anyone over 5'8"). I can't find any 'off the shelf' sheds the right size.

After an evening's scribbling, I've drawn up a shopping list of the various bits of timber I need, eg 3"x3", 3"x1", tongue & groove etc, and am pondering the best place to buy it. From the handy shrink-wrapped DIY places I can get to B&Q, Homebase and Focus, and from the hairy-arse builders places I can go to Jewsons and Travis Perkins. Short of touring every single one, can anyone give me a reasonably authoritative view on which might be the best value?



I can enhance this post to 'Royal Flush' level by adding that the shed could be seen as a Property, and that I shall be Financing it hehe

GasMonkey

475 posts

228 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
I fancy building a small shed this weekend. It's going to be about 5 feet wide, 2 feet deep and 7 foot high hehe
Thats not a shed, that's a wardrobe. smile

Edited by GasMonkey on Friday 10th April 00:26

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,030 posts

272 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
GasMonkey said:
Thats not a shed, that's a wardrobe. smile
Pretty much! All it has to hold are a Flymo on one side, some foldy-up garden furniture on the other and a few garden tools in-between. Existing 'shedrobes' are either too wide (this has to fit between a chimney breast and a wall - 62") or are too low, or are hideous plastic things.

AndrewW-G

11,968 posts

224 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
For my money it's got to be a timber merchants (builders merchants at a push) the quality of the timber sold at B&Q isn't the best. Avoid shrink wrapped packs as they have a tendency to warp and in my experience split far easier

GasMonkey

475 posts

228 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
GasMonkey said:
Thats not a shed, that's a wardrobe. smile
Pretty much! All it has to hold are a Flymo on one side, some foldy-up garden furniture on the other and a few garden tools in-between. Existing 'shedrobes' are either too wide (this has to fit between a chimney breast and a wall - 62") or are too low, or are hideous plastic things.
Argos do this



Sizes are: (H)4ft 10in, (W)3ft 8in, (D)2ft 1in. £87.99
cat no - 705/7269

If they sell them, I am sure you will find alternitive suppliers? HTH smile



Edited by GasMonkey on Friday 10th April 01:13

mrmaggit

10,146 posts

255 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
I fancy building a small shed this weekend. It's going to be about 5 feet wide, 2 feet deep and 7 foot high (because most sheds have a door designed to leave a red stripe across the forehead of anyone over 5'8"). I can't find any 'off the shelf' sheds the right size.

After an evening's scribbling, I've drawn up a shopping list of the various bits of timber I need, eg 3"x3", 3"x1", tongue & groove etc, and am pondering the best place to buy it. From the handy shrink-wrapped DIY places I can get to B&Q, Homebase and Focus, and from the hairy-arse builders places I can go to Jewsons and Travis Perkins. Short of touring every single one, can anyone give me a reasonably authoritative view on which might be the best value?



I can enhance this post to 'Royal Flush' level by adding that the shed could be seen as a Property, and that I shall be Financing it hehe
If you want to give me a call, I'll give you a list of Timber Merchants in your area, as East Anglia is a bit big.

Apart from cheap crap (as had been said earlier), I really can't see why anyone uses the big sheds. Use your local independant. [Mini rant over].

Colin 0115-941-2861.

redgriff500

27,649 posts

270 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
A bought one is about half the cost of building one as they use thinner timber than you can buy.

None of the places you mention are cheap.

You generally want a Timber Merchant or a local builders merchant NOT a chain.

I get timber 3x cheaper at my local place than at Jewson, EH Smith etc and I wouldn't even consider B&Q etc

mrmaggit

10,146 posts

255 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
redgriff500 said:
A bought one is about half the cost of building one as they use thinner timber than you can buy.

None of the places you mention are cheap.

You generally want a Timber Merchant or a local builders merchant NOT a chain.

I get timber 3x cheaper at my local place than at Jewson, EH Smith etc and I wouldn't even consider B&Q etc
Thank you for that vote of confidence, Redgriff.

Nice to know somebody appreciates us. smile

Chrisgr31

13,737 posts

262 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
Oue shed, kindly supplied by the insurance company after its predecessor burnt down, was bought from a national company, but they made it taller for us. Partly for the same reason the OP complains about and partly because the original was tall and I wanted like for like!

So so you can sheds made taller.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,030 posts

272 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
Thanks all. In the past I've found Jewsons etc to be more expensive that DIY places because I don;t get a trade discount.

Anyway, the whole thing is up in the air because I (foolishly) visited a local garden centre and got some silly ides like a £900 summerhouse... so I'll do nothing for now!

HiRich

3,337 posts

269 months

Friday 10th April 2009
quotequote all
On the question, i'd agree with the local timber merchant.

But having built something similar, I'd also add:
  • 2by2 is fine for the structure, if you include some diagonal braces.
  • Water will get in. Don't make the shelves from mdf, use a good ply. And waterproof it properly (especially the exposed edge) with PVA glue. Ditto for the base (water on the path seeping into the structure)
  • Such limited depth may make it unstable. Allow for a couple of small brackets to tie it to the wall at the top.
Beyond that, getting the doors right, and reasonably watertight will be the tricky bit. I used a z-frame of 1.2x0.5 battens which wasn't enough to prevent warping of the doors. If I did it again I would:
  • Make a more solid doorframe, including top and bottom
  • Add a strip of simple chamfered skirting board at the top, to prevent dripping water going behind the doors.
  • Make a more solid door. Treat the t&g as non-structural cladding.
  • Come up with a better latching mechanism, so the one door can be opened without the other catching in the wind. I have a single padlock betwwen the doors at mid-height. Each door also has a basic plastic spring clasp to a shelf support at the same height. I would try to find something like magentic clips top and bottom (if I made the doors more rigid along the centre line
  • Create a larger overlap of the two doors (at least an inch, probably more)
Still, it's been a very handy store for pots & potions, the main shed being down the bottom of the garden. Hope that helps and good luck.