That is nice but you really needed to use treated lumber on the bottom against the concrete and you need to put some vents up near the top of the walls.
02:49 Should have used Roxul Safe-N-Sound insulation. The sound deadening it offers is very quiet. Your fiberglass insulation has virtually no sound-deadening properties. Could have put it on the shop wall as well. 18:04 Should have used a mechanical wind-up timer instead of that switch. That way, if there was an issue, the compressors would not be running until you got back..... 00:00 As to the doors, use piano hinges and a latch at the top and bottom. Those items will reduce the twisting/warping of the doors.
It sucks when a door doesn't hang straight. You can put a diagonal piece of 1/4 all thread and a turnbuckle in the door to help draw it in. You'd have to kinda mount it close to the siding on the bottom corner near the middle and then the upper left corner towards the inside to give it a bit of a twist. BTW have you had any trouble with mice getting into the insulation?
I wouldn't, unless you are truly paranoid about it freezing in the winter. I didn't have any issues with it freezing. But I am going to put some cheap plywood (I know, there is no such thing anymore) to better seal and protect the insulation.
Was there a reason you didn't just lower rafters down about an inch so you could have had the shething and shingles under the existing drip edge of the wall. Would have saved buying flashing and tar 🤷♂️
I was just trying to have a good slope to the roof. I wasn't really concerned with lining things up with the shop siding, probably gonna change out the old wood siding for something that seals better.
It gets plenty of airflow from around the doors. They are there to A) keep people and animals out and B) to keep weather off the compressors. Last summer we broke 100°F a few times and never had any issues with overheating. The compressors have a fan on the motor to move air. They seem to move enough for them to stay within operating temp.
So I've watched probably 20 lean-to shed videos and this is the first that recognized that there should be flashing between the house and the shed. I hadn't even remotely considered that. I'm really impressed. Well done!
I'm sorry for the late reply. It was alot is the short of it. I started with few bags I had left over from a fencing job, and then it ended with the cars rear suspension screaming for death till I got home with if I remeber 10 more 60lbs bags. So I really don't remember without scrubbing through alot of footage.
They have held up really well. Only had to replace one relief valve...... so far. But they are holding up really well. And they are the oiled version. I check the compressor oil monthly when I do the fire extinsher maintenance.
@@macstinkerhole That's even better. I haven't had much luck with oil-free compressors. The oil compressors are the better way to go. With having two compressors as you do, it one goes down, you still have one to get you by until you resolve the issue. My old 60 gallon oil-free compressor blew apart on me in the middle of a job and it was obsolete so I couldn't fix it. I had to buy a new one and bought a Quincy QT-54 60 gallon 2 stage. I am well pleased with it and it is reasonably quiet.
@@macstinkerhole I will get back to him on that. I will tell you like I do everyone else that asks me -If you can play a bass guitar with a glove made out of raw trout while huffing laquer thinner he might tour with you.
I should've filmed my garbage disposal swap. An unreal amount of colorful metaphors were used before during and after install. 3x the fun when moving the old piping a 1/4" and the down spout for the 2nd sink completely snapped. Oh LORD the good times. At least the disposal was a freebie to me. Thanks for the great vids man!