Originally posted by LEP
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Concrete In Pole Shed
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Extra couple inches of concrete for 12 ft wide up the centre with 14 ft x 18 ft door at far end great for driving loaded trucks right though.
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You can’t raise hopper top inside with an 18 ft ceiling
You sure can’t drive in a 16’ door with them up
You hafta work inside hopper sometime
Cieling fans hang down 2 feet
Don’t do it
Don’t even think about
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Originally posted by LEP View PostIn 1998 I built a 42 x 66 with 18.5 ft walls. I have 16ft doors. I think it was $2,000 to go 2ft higher. I wish I had.
Neighbor put 16ft walls and 14ft doors and can't get his combine in. It's a tr87.
6" concrete on 12" tamped fill covered by 6 mil poly, 12" squares 1/2' rebar, no issues with loaded trucks.
Used 2" styro around building, down along slab sides and 2' horizontal.
Never been below zero inside, no cracks beyond stress cuts in floor, done in 20'x20' squares.
Just keep it warm, ground under slab never heaves.
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131/2 ft is legal height on the highway. Dry vans are near that.
Some of those old black bridges are only 14' in the centre. Only 13' near sides where braces hang down.
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Do what neighbor did put light and mounts in hopper to get thru door and forget about them until he went to unload first hopper of winter wheat the next year
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Originally posted by jazz View PostSo we landed on 48x60x18 with a 24ft wide x 16ft overhead door. The price tag will be in the $125K range. Post building with Goodon.
Just wondering if I should have got that door wider.
we have 26 foot bifold
it has served us well but get on the phone and change it to 24' x 18' bifold
you will never regret it , bet not much more either , we have had more trouble with overhead than bifold and almost impossible to get airtight seal on overhead like bifold with auto lock , goodon won't install overhead either but will bifold unless it changed
spend a little extra on remotes that stop partway and definitely auto lock
thats shop is the same size as ours exactly , you will be happy with the size
we have a 16' overhead on the side at one end
sure nice for snow tractor etc.
ours was $68 k with 18' x 26' bifold and 16' x 16' overhead in 2017
no inflation there lol
but canola was $9
PM if you have questions
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I turned my pole shed into a heated shop 7 years ago. Floor is 6" thick with in floor heat. We put a 2 X 6 all the way around the inside and poured up to it. Not a crack so far but that's due to a very good packing job when I built the pad for the pole shed. I think it also helps that the weight of the walls is solely on the poles and not at all on the concrete.
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Don't forget to put some Ipex water line in the floor in case you ever want to heat the building. A heated shop floor makes for a nice workshop. Only thing is that if you ever want to bolt anything to the floor you have to know where the lines are. I didn't put insulation under the slab, but 2 FT out on the outside perimeter. Don't know if it's better or worse put it seems to work...floors nice and warm in the winter.
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