Last week in Part 3 we showed
the singlehanded errection of the framework for a 14 x 6 x 3 metre shed that
will become my new home workshop. This week it’s time to put on the cladding –
something that sounds really easy, right?
Wall Cladding
With the framework erected, all that is required
to clad the walls is to place the sheets of Colourbond vertically against the
wall framework then, using the supplied Teks, screw them to the frame.
Said that way it sounds really easy. But in fact
this was the process I followed for each sheet:
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Arrange ladder inside shed, resting against the
eave purlin at the location of the sheet to be worked on. Place vice grip clamp
high on ladder.
-
Place 1 metre long heavy steel beam against
outside wall of shed, adjacent to the sheet location.
-
Place electric drill within easy reach from
outside the shed.
-
Place timber packing on ground to roughly set the
correct sheet height.
-
Collect sheet, rest on timber and then lean
against shed frame. Prop sheet into position with heavy steel
beam.
-
Climb ladder, using one hand to hold onto sheet.
(The first sheet I installed blew away in a sudden gust of wind at this point,
so explaining the need for the hand.)
-
Reach top of ladder, collecting vice-grip clamp
along the way. Look over top of wall and assess level of sheet (needs to be
flush with top of eave purlin). Pull sheet upwards to correct position and clamp
with vicegrips.
-
Descend ladder and step outside shed framework.
Use bubble level to check that sheet is vertical. Push sheet against shed
framework and use electric drill to insert one Tek screw.
-
Climb ladder and check sheet height again. Insert
top Tek screws.
-
Descend ladder and measure position of bottom and
middle girt screws. Insert these screws (total of screws – 18).
-
Move ladder, drill, steel prop beam and timbers to
next location. Repeat above.
I didn’t ever time how long it took to do each
sheet, but it was considerable. For the end walls, where the sheets had to be
positioned (as per steps 1 – 7 above), marked and then taken down again to be
cut at the correct angle, before the whole installation process was again
undertaken, the time doubled.
In fact, while erecting the complete framework
took me 3 days, doing the wall cladding alone took 4.5 days. That time included
adding the trim pieces at each corner and around the two front roller door
openings. These trim pieces were pop riveted into place.
Spray
Galvanising
I
chose to spray every Tek screw - and every frame nut, bolt and washer - with
cold galvanising paint. These components are already galvanised, but inevitably
the galvanising gets knocked around a bit when spanners and screw guns are being
used. In my hot, wet climate I see unprotected stuff rusting very fast...
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Gutters
The gutters clip into brackets that are attached
to the wall sheeting. The instructions for the shed said to use Tek screws to
attach these brackets, but the ‘bite’ of a Tek screw into very thin sheeting
seemed to me to be poor design so I pop-riveted the brackets into place, using
two large pop rivets for each bracket. The brackets were placed at roughly 1
metre intervals.
A downhill slope was provided by mounting the
brackets at slightly lower heights in sequence towards the downpipes.
During installation the gutters needed to be
clipped into the brackets (easy!) and, where the 3.6 metre lengths joined,
‘nested’ into one another (not so easy!). These joins were secured with pop
rivets and sealed with silicone. The openings for the downpipes were made with a
metal nibbler and the downpipe adaptors siliconed and riveted into place. End
caps for the gutters were held in place in the same way.
I found the installation of the gutters fiddly and
time-consuming – to install the 28 metres of gutter took 1.5 days.
Number
of Teks
I
chose in most cases to use more screws to hold the wall and roof sheets in place
than were specified.
This
shed design gets a lot of its strength from the cladding – in effect, the
shed is a stressed skin structure. This could be most easily seen by grabbing
the bare, erected frame and shaking it. Despite being bolted to the concrete
slab, and despite the presence of diagonal knee braces that join the columns to
the rafters of the middle three frames, the frame of the shed could be quite
easily flexed in all directions.
However,
start to add sheets of cladding to the walls and roof, and the structure
immediately stiffened. Clearly, then, the better the cladding is attached to the
frame, the better the stiffness (and overall strength) of the structure.
Tek
screws are cheap and the additional few hours it took to insert the extra screws
seemed trivial in the overall scheme of things.
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Roof
Cladding the roof was also more difficult than it
first appeared. The problem wasn’t in singlehandedly getting the sheets onto the
roof – in fact, this was straightforward. What I did was to place a rug on the
gutter, lean a sheet against it, and then climb on top of my ~1 metre retaining
wall and slide the sheet onto the roof.
Nope, the main problem was to stop the sheets
‘fanning’ as they were screwed into place. This needs a bit of explanation. The
roof sheets overlap along their edge, and as they’re put into position you’d
expect that they would remain parallel to each other and at 90 degrees to the
long axis of the roof. However, what invariably happens is that they start to
‘fan’: to spread out more at one end than the other.
But surely to stop this fanning all it needs is a
bit of care? That’s what I initially thought but when, no matter how careful I
was, the fanning occurred, it was time to stop and think. And then I got
it – the reason that fanning was occurring.
Unlike the wall sheets, that are held in place
with screws inserted through the ‘valleys’ of the sheets, the screws on the roof
sheets are inserted through the ‘peaks’. As these screws are tightened, the
‘peaks’ get squeezed a little, and if the screws are inserted from (say) left to
right, the sheets can in fact get wider at that end than the other. And, the
closer these screws are positioned to the end of the sheet, the more likely that
fanning at that end will occur.
Once I’d worked out why it was occurring, it was
easy to address. If I wanted one end of the sheet to spread a little (ie to
correct fanning occurring at the other end), I’d insert the screws in sequence
to cause the slight spread. If I didn’t want any spread to occur, I’d put in the
last screw first and then work back towards the already installed sheets. Very
small corrections could then be easily made, keeping the sheets parallel and at
right-angle to the walls.
The other problem I had was in denting the sheets.
When I’d bought the shed, I’d asked the supplier if it was fine to walk on the
roof. “Sure” he’d said confidently, just adding that you needed to walk in the
valleys rather than on the narrow peaks of each sheet. When he’d delivered the
roller doors and screws, he’d added a further point – be very careful when
turning around that the heel of a foot didn’t put extra weight on the peaks.
Maybe the fact that he was fairly small and light
man had something to do with it – I dented a sheet within moments of walking on
the roof. Furthermore, despite taking enormous care, during the installation of
the roof sheets, I put in another two dents! I weigh about 90kg and I kid you
not, less than a quarter of that weight placed incorrectly caused a crimp in a
sheet.
To check for fanning and to mark the locations of
the upper screws, I made a simple wooden gauge. This improved accuracy and
speeded installation up a lot.
Installing the roof cladding took me 2.5 days, not
including trim prices like the roof capping.
Gloves
I
didn’t wear gloves when installing the wall cladding and the gutters, and had no
problems. But the roof sheeting proved to have much sharper edges – on the first
day, I sliced my hand in three places.
After that, I wore thin leather gloves
when carrying and positioned the sheeting, taking the gloves off when doing
other tasks.
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Roller Doors
The roller doors came with their own instructions
– and looked quite straightforward. But again, as a beginner, I found their
installation complex and time-consuming.
Here are two examples of the difficulties I
experienced. When I did the wall cladding, I installed the trim bits around the
door opening. But, to install the doors, all these trim pieces had to come off
again!
Secondly, the doors – that arrive wrapped in
plastic – are installed with the plastic in place. It’s only in step 5 (of about
8) that the plastic is removed. The doors need to be positioned so that the door
unrolls in the correct direction - but when the door is wrapped in plastic, it’s
hard for a novice to determine what is the right direction! Inevitably, I installed one door backwards before realising that a band of orange
tape on one end of the axle indicated the right-hand end of the door...
As anyone who has ever installed a roller door
will well know, getting the door to work correctly requires that:
-
The door is correctly positioned laterally within
the opening
-
The guide tracks are correctly positioned and then
adjusted
-
The door is centred on its floating axle
-
The door is level
-
The opening is ‘square’
If any of these are wrong, the door will jam, it
will roll up and down making awful crunching noises, and it will assume odd
angles! Ask me how I know...
Furthermore, despite their apparent depth, I found
the instructions missed important steps. Steps like having to cut the locking
bars to the required length... I spent perhaps half an hour puzzling over why
the locking bars were so long, wondering how I’d installed the lock incorrectly.
Then it was out with the hacksaw...
Installing a 2.7 x 2.2 metre roller door normally
requires two people, but again I did it by myself. I used my engine crane
equipped with the jib extension to lift one end of the door, while I manually
lifted the other. This process worked quite well.
It took about 1.5 days to install the two doors.
Trim Pieces, Roof Capping &
Whirligigs
The roof capping and whirligigs (rotating
ventilators) were installed next. These were (once again!) straightforward but
fiddly, the roof capping requiring cutting with snips to accommodate each ridge
in the roof sheets. The holes for the whirligigs were cut with a power nibbler.
Finally, the end trim pieces that cover the gap
between the top of the walls and roof sheets were installed.
Doing these tasks took 1.5 days.
The
Drill
After
looking at commercially available – and expensive – battery-powered and
mains-powered electric drills, I decided to rig up by own. It was initially
going to be used to just insert all the cladding Tek screws, but in the end I
also used it to drill holes for the installation of the roller doors and pop
rivets on the trim pieces.
The
drill consisted of an old cordless drill (salvaged from the tip minus the
battery), a length of twin core cable, and two 12V sealed lead acid (SLA)
batteries salvaged from a PC uninterupptable power
supply (also from the tip). The batteries were wired in series, providing a
nominal 24V to the 18V rated drill.
This
system worked very well but I found that over time, the internal wires adjacent
to the variable trigger switch frayed and then burnt out.
Since
I found myself only ever using the drill at full power, I replaced the variable
trigger with a high current microswitch that I’d previously salvaged from a
photocopier (they’re used in photocopiers as safety switches to detect when the
machine is open).
This
drill worked extremely well – powerful, very lightweight in the hand, safe (no
mains power cords over sharp edges) and durable (I charged the batteries just
twice in the whole construction!).
And
of course it cost me nothing...
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Finished!
So after 14.5 days of work (spread over 3 weeks)
the shed was finished. So was I exultant? Well, not really. More like:
relieved!
To be completely honest, I was happy for about the
first 10 days of work, but after that I got bored and irritated. It was all the
fiddly stuff that was tedious – the gutters, trim pieces, roof capping and
whirligigs. These seemed to take forever and were easy to stuff up.
However, here’s something to think about. The
professional errection of the shed was going to cost AUD$3650. By doing it
myself, I was effectively being paid $252 a day!
And I’ll tell you something else.
At this stage the shed was not actually finished.
Before it was finished it had to be inspected and signed-off by the local
council, and they’d want to see where the rainfall caught on the roof went, and
how effective the drainage was around the shed...
I actually debated whether or not to include these
aspects in the series – but it’s being done because it’s required, not because I
like organising downpipes and drains... So, next week – downpipes, drains and a
council inspection!
Go here for the next in this series.
Interested in home workshop projects and techniques? You’re sure then to be interested in the Home Workshop Sourcebook, available now.
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