Glad you mentioned how the beams go. I'm at that step right now in my build and am having trouble. My wife will have to help me. I had both beams dry fit and didn't realize they would be so unstable. Well one fell and broke one of the windows. Quit for the day and tried again today. Made it even worse... the screws for the front triangular piece ripped out so I'll have to rig that up. Everything went pretty well up until this.
Howdy. I am wondering if there are enough little gaps that would allow bugs to enter? I ask because I am going to use this as a back yard home office and will want to seal it best I can to protect from spiders and such. Any tips on how to do this?
7:08 I put up one of those cross bars, got down to try to figure out how it goes, opened the door and bam, the beam came crashing down and the end put a nice hole in the floor.
My Rubbermaid shed was a disaster. Nothing lined up. My dad and I assembled it. Over 80 combined years of home renovations. Shed was a nightmare. Finished it and the doors are way off and don’t shut properly. What a waste
One section I needed help with was the roof it was very complicated and I’m not sure how to do it I wanted to close up to see step-by-step of how to put the roof sections on but you didn’t you skipped right over and said I guess we’re almost done here is the roof and then before I knew it you said you’re done I didn’t even see how you put the roof on
Also it still has wood underneath it...so the water will sit around all that wood if it's on the ground and not sitting above it and yes, that means the plywood and wood even if it is pretreated underneath of it will rot even though the shed is plastic...the rain will splash all over it if it is flat on the ground
I am confident this is an worthy instructive video. HOWEVER, that background noise, that was as loud as your voice, drove me away at 2 minutes and 7 seconds. If you ever remove it, please let me know. I would love to see what you have here.