- Location
- East yorks
Not being the party pooper but
HSE would love to see those pictures, don‘t think I’d post them.
Think he is in Holland so they maybe have different rules
Not being the party pooper but
HSE would love to see those pictures, don‘t think I’d post them.
party pooper , they don't have H S E any way so there!Not being the party pooper but
HSE would love to see those pictures, don‘t think I’d post them.
why is it when we build a shed its never big enoughView attachment 880612
Front of the roof on, and already filling up.
A Dutch saying "gedogen"Think he is in Holland so they maybe have different rules
Did you put any hardcore in first ,,the blocks have sunkView attachment 985932
View attachment 985928View attachment 985929View attachment 985930View attachment 985931
Well it has been a while but we are ploughing on.
Part of the reason it took so long is that although I had a big pile of nice bricks I had no intention to use them for the shed. I used those to replace the ugly parts of the yard and use the old ugly stuff for the above.
These tiles are 30 by 30 cm instead of the 10.5 by 21 bricks I have on my yard so laying them is a very quick job.
I look forward to be able to enter the shed with the industrial forklift so I can make far better use of the space.
In that shed ,,two nice valleys where the tractor has run on themWe are on pure sand soil so no need for hardcore. Which blocks do you mean?
top marks that looks smartView attachment 986249
View attachment 986248
Almost finished with the rough work. The handful of tiles on the second photo are the leftovers, that's advanced calculations for ya luck, or as I like to call it, luck.
My father told me the story of the tiles which I thought I would share. My uncle worked for a meal company and heard that at another meal company they where going the give the paving away for free (I guess they got new paving, not sure), so being a sucker for free stuff my father got a nice 2 axle turntable trailer and hauled it home in one load, out of quute a populated town, no straps or whatever, just on pallets stacked on an open trailer with a 60 something hp International. I did some calculations and those tiles add up to about 17 cubic metre, multiplied by 2.5 that is over 40 tonnes... He told me the tractor wouldn't go in top gear
People where pretty insane back then.