Personally I don't think a stove is a good idea for a shed. Usually it's venting smoke/smell at a low height to surrounding neighbours. I would be unhappy if my neighbours were constantly burning wood in their outbuildings
I think he's in his own private wood iirc...Personally I don't think a stove is a good idea for a shed. Usually it's venting smoke/smell at a low height to surrounding neighbours. I would be unhappy if my neighbours were constantly burning wood in their outbuildings
You mean the £100 quid one your daughter has with no issues? Would certainly opt for one of those over the £500 and up ones if the cheaper one works fine!I would get one of these we have one I a cabin on the farm where my daughter goes horse riding..
It produces ample heat for 16x8 cabin tbh.
I'd make a 8x8 shed out plywood big enough to live in and work in put a small kitchen area at the back with your stove and you still have enough room for a bed and workshop area in front of it?
Make the bed / sofa folding so that the whole are area is clear during the day?
Put a plywood sheet over your kitchen area so that it doubles up as a workbench?
I do not have any neighbours within about 1000 metres so should not be much of an issue there to bother people.Personally I don't think a stove is a good idea for a shed. Usually it's venting smoke/smell at a low height to surrounding neighbours. I would be unhappy if my neighbours were constantly burning wood in their outbuildings
Yes while no immediate neighbours, they are not a million miles away. Still a few residential properties dotted about.I think he's in his own private wood iirc...
Good tips for wooden shed, but you are complaining about a cheap shed lasting 'only' ten years? From what I have read that is fantastic value for money! Most say cheap sheds should only be expected to last a couple of years, though I think that is exaggerating somewhat.I didn't read through all these, so maybe I'm repeating myself; and my experience is with U.S. stuff, so perhaps irrelevant. But, for what it's worth, don't get a cheap metal shed. My bride talked me into getting one because "it will be easier than building a wooden shed." It wasn't: dozens of little screws had to go through holes in mating panels, but the holes didn't mate up when the panels did, and there was a lot of cursing. And, after maybe ten years of use, the roof has developed multiple rust holes; and the shed's not repairable. Were I building again, I'd definitely go with wood. And there's plentiful supplies about to properly protect a wooden shed from the heat from the stove.
One comment: don't store your firewood in the shed, or in a lean-to attached to the shed. You should have only the wood you're using for immediate needs in the shed, to minimize the chance that bugs will infest the shed (if it's wooden) or your lumber supply.
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