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#1
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Plastic Garden Sheds - Does Anyone Have Experience of Them ?
I'm looking to purchase a new garden shed as my wooden one is past it.
I was thinking of buying a plastic one as a replacement. Does anyone have a plastic shed, & if so what are your thoughts on them ? TIA, Colin... |
#2
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Plastic Garden Sheds - Does Anyone Have Experience of Them ?
On Sat, 11 Jul 2015 11:19:58 +0100, "CocoGibbo"
wrote: I'm looking to purchase a new garden shed as my wooden one is past it. I was thinking of buying a plastic one as a replacement. Does anyone have a plastic shed, & if so what are your thoughts on them ? TIA, Colin... I had a plastic shed at my last but one house. I remember it being a bit difficult to assemble and looked "out of place" until it got weathered. It cost less than a similar sized wooden shed. So far as I know it's still at the same place I left it. Steve -- Neural Network Software for Windows http://www.npsnn.com EasyNN-plus More than just a neural network http://www.easynn.com |
#3
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Plastic Garden Sheds - Does Anyone Have Experience of Them ?
On Sat, 11 Jul 2015 11:19:58 +0100, "CocoGibbo"
wrote: I'm looking to purchase a new garden shed as my wooden one is past it. I was thinking of buying a plastic one as a replacement. Does anyone have a plastic shed, & if so what are your thoughts on them ? I bought a Keter 4ft x 6ft one about 6 years ago as an overflow shed , seems the nearest is now called the Factor 4 x 6 http://www.keter.com/products/factor-46 and has some steel strengthening which my model (Apex?) did not have. Assemby was easy. Build quality seems reasonable and it has survived being moved three times with both partial dismantling and moving it whole methods being used. You do need a firm foundation as the plastic floor is thin and needs firm support everywheren. the shed will lean over eventually if there is a weakness in support. As bought there is limited capacity for shelfs etc and heavy items can cause problems. I solved this with some wooden framing inside that took loads straight to the floor which in my case is a foundation of plastic pallets so that too is rot proof. The present model may not need this. When I bought it was on offer , the price now for one may be a bit expensive but it doesn't have too be painted,though when new it did look a bit too much like a Portaloo so toned it down with some green fence paint, the trees it lives under have finished the job nicely since and it blends in well. I have looked at some other plastic sheds out of curiosity in DIY places and some do seem very flimsy. G.Harman |
#4
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Plastic Garden Sheds - Does Anyone Have Experience of Them ?
On 11/07/2015 11:30, Stephen Wolstenholme wrote:
I had a plastic shed at my last but one house. I remember it being a bit difficult to assemble and looked "out of place" until it got weathered. It cost less than a similar sized wooden shed. So far as I know it's still at the same place I left it. I purchased a small one around 15+ years ago. It is the type with corrugated plastic green sheet bolted with nylon bolts to an internal aluminium angle frame. It's around 2 metres long x 1 metre wide x 2 metres high. It came as a flat pack and as mentioned above it was very 'fiddly' and time consuming to erect. It has served well but now the plastic is becoming brittle and any knock will puncture it. It now has a few repairs with waterproof duct tape. I was concerned that it was light weight and a strong gale may have dislodged it so after I had erected it I put down a thick plastic sheet (as used for a damp membrane under solid floors) and poured in a couple of inches of concrete which holds down the bottom edge of the aluminium frame and provides a solid floor. Its also worth considering putting in some wooden battens while being constructed so that you have something into which you can install wall hooks for tool storage etc. -- mailto: news {at} admac {dot] myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#5
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Plastic Garden Sheds - Does Anyone Have Experience of Them ?
wrote in message ... On Sat, 11 Jul 2015 11:19:58 +0100, "CocoGibbo" wrote: I'm looking to purchase a new garden shed as my wooden one is past it. I was thinking of buying a plastic one as a replacement. Does anyone have a plastic shed, & if so what are your thoughts on them ? I bought a Keter 4ft x 6ft one about 6 years ago as an overflow shed , seems the nearest is now called the Factor 4 x 6 http://www.keter.com/products/factor-46 and has some steel strengthening which my model (Apex?) did not have. Assemby was easy. Build quality seems reasonable and it has survived being moved three times with both partial dismantling and moving it whole methods being used. You do need a firm foundation as the plastic floor is thin and needs firm support everywheren. the shed will lean over eventually if there is a weakness in support. As bought there is limited capacity for shelfs etc and heavy items can cause problems. I solved this with some wooden framing inside that took loads straight to the floor which in my case is a foundation of plastic pallets so that too is rot proof. The present model may not need this. When I bought it was on offer , the price now for one may be a bit expensive but it doesn't have too be painted,though when new it did look a bit too much like a Portaloo so toned it down with some green fence paint, the trees it lives under have finished the job nicely since and it blends in well. I have looked at some other plastic sheds out of curiosity in DIY places and some do seem very flimsy. G.Harman Thanks for everyone's comments - much appreciated ! :-) Colin... |
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