How about L or A walls?
Don't like pressure from just 1 side. Spoke to some people about them at highland show and they said they'd need to be fixed.How about L or A walls?
Have you got any pictures please? What sort of price are you thinking?Ours are similar to @solo but are 24 ft long to drop inside the stanchions to cover 20 ft doorways and the adjoining personnel door. They are a 6 inch channel girder frame clad with ply sheets 4ft high, and bolt together to build up to 16 ft high if required.
Got some to sell if anyone is interested.
How about L or A walls?
dangerous IMO - a A block killed a dog here and almost my father as well - do not trust them loaded one side
Interesting. I’m currently building a small grain shed and was thinking of just putting a walls down the middle to separate. Might be better going the girder and panel route insteadI know of one or two farms where they won't have L or A blocks for that very reason. The timber/diagonal girder thing is safer because you can largely man handle them into position, no concrete hanging off forks etc which is just asking for grief.
Interesting. I’m currently building a small grain shed and was thinking of just putting a walls down the middle to separate. Might be better going the girder and panel route instead
How do you move/fit concrete panels then?I personally would be keen to avoid the need for employees to ever be hanging large concrete objects from a loader carriage/forks on chains/straps.
I’ve put lots up and down on my ownI personally would be keen to avoid the need for employees to ever be hanging large concrete objects from a loader carriage/forks on chains/straps.
I was thinking thisIs the tonnage stored you gain really worth all the effort/expense/time
Where did I say how many tons?Is the tonnage stored you gain really worth all the effort/expense/time
You didn'tWhere did I say how many tons?
Probably be better with a rethink of the whole shed to be honest.You didn't
How do you move/fit concrete panels then?