Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
joining greenhouses
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by MyWifesBrassicas View PostIt did show an invalid attachment message.
I think the porch area could be a bridging gap between the two greenhouses in close proximity, say 5-6 ft or so and I can attach a few polycarbonate sheets over the top and back.
Alternatively, I could utilise the third green house for a T-shaped somehow or just make the porch T-piece and have each greenhouse on either side ??
Comment
-
Originally posted by nickdub View Posthow windy a site is it ? - plastic sheets of all sorts are brilliant but they do act like kites - I built some footings for a large poly-tunnel 2 years - a small wall - the site slopes - but before i put up the frame I knocked some 4' lengths of scrap aluminum angle I had into the ground and drilled and bolted trough into the wall than added some metal banding to tie the galvanized tunnel frame down with - it blows a hoouly up here on the hill some nights -I've got too old to be chasing stuff around the fields.
I have some 10ft aluminum poles and 8ft 3x3' treated timber i could use to assist securing the poly sheets. It doesn't have to be watertight, just somewhere to shelter or rest for a bit, have a cuppa and maybe a bit of storage.sigpic
Comment
-
Be me I'd look at use the aluminum bars as cross pieces perhaps to go from one side to another - the other thing which is cheap is roofing batten from the builders' merchants comes in 4m lengths from memory - easy enough to bring back on the top of a car if you want to fetch it - I stick some ranch paint on it use it 'short width up' for roofing with polycarb sheets, as you just drill down through the sheets from above - get a long screw with a metal then rubber washer (tap ones will do) and using a cordless drill just whop it in - not too tight adjust the clutch up to weak
If you go down this route check the "mushroom fixing" guidelines on a Polycarb sheet manufacturer's website for details on gaps - got to allow for thermal expansion and contraction as it moves a lot more than glass does when its warmed by the sum.Last edited by nickdub; 20-11-2019, 01:27 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by nickdub View PostBe me I'd look at use the aluminum bars as cross pieces perhaps to go from one side to another - the other thing which is cheap is roofing batten from the builders' merchants comes in 4m lengths from memory - easy enough to bring back on the top of a car if you want to fetch it - I stick some ranch paint on it use it 'short width up' for roofing with polycarb sheets, as you just drill down through the sheets from above - get a long screw with a metal then rubber washer (tap ones will do) and using a cordless drill just whop it in - not too tight adjust the clutch up to weak
If you go down this route check the "mushroom fixing" guidelines on a Polycarb sheet manufacturer's website for details on gaps - got to allow for thermal expansion and contraction as it moves a lot more than glass does when its warmed by the sum.
Food for thought, thank you very much.sigpic
Comment
-
Originally posted by MyWifesBrassicas View PostWonderful.
Food for thought, thank you very much.
no worries - you would not believe how many wrong ways I've tried when doing "make do and mend " building to hit on methods which are both simple and durable
BTW for anyone-else in a similar state of trying to produce a £1000 building for £75 plus some hard work always have a trawl around old stuff on Ebay or wherever a - an extra greenhouse with most of the glass gone can be had for £20 and give enough spare aluminum stock to help fix up another 2 - or sometimes people sell off old conservatories when they are having a new one put in - if you get one with polcarb sheets that are being disposed of, then the world's your lobster, in terms of what you can re-use it for when self building.
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment