Hi all,
I have a shed (this one: Montana Barn in the 12x8 size). I'm going to be making it longer to extend into the dead space currently behind it and add about two meters of length. So I'll be taking the back wall off, extending the sides, floor and roof and then re-attaching the rear wall.
My question is; should I build my new wall and roof panels (Using the same size 38mm x 50mm framing and 16mm shiplap as the original) completely before standing them up and fixing them in place, or should I build the framing upright attached to the existing shed and then clad it once in place?
When the shed was erected it obviously came on the back of a lorry with the panels all prefabricated. The installers simply stood them up in place, screwed them together and then plonked the roof panels on top. Is this a good way to do it or simply done for the convenience of the installation? It was certainly fast. They had the thing done within 40 minutes of arriving!
All the guides I see on youtube have people doing the framing and then cladding in place. However I'm leaning towards prefabbing the panels as that would reduce the amount of time the shed spends with one end exposed to weather (given it's currently full of all my woodworking bits!)
Currently shared space with the motorbike so a few extra metres would allow me to have a workbench that didn't need to fold down constantly!
Does it matter?
I have a shed (this one: Montana Barn in the 12x8 size). I'm going to be making it longer to extend into the dead space currently behind it and add about two meters of length. So I'll be taking the back wall off, extending the sides, floor and roof and then re-attaching the rear wall.
My question is; should I build my new wall and roof panels (Using the same size 38mm x 50mm framing and 16mm shiplap as the original) completely before standing them up and fixing them in place, or should I build the framing upright attached to the existing shed and then clad it once in place?
When the shed was erected it obviously came on the back of a lorry with the panels all prefabricated. The installers simply stood them up in place, screwed them together and then plonked the roof panels on top. Is this a good way to do it or simply done for the convenience of the installation? It was certainly fast. They had the thing done within 40 minutes of arriving!
All the guides I see on youtube have people doing the framing and then cladding in place. However I'm leaning towards prefabbing the panels as that would reduce the amount of time the shed spends with one end exposed to weather (given it's currently full of all my woodworking bits!)
Currently shared space with the motorbike so a few extra metres would allow me to have a workbench that didn't need to fold down constantly!
Does it matter?
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