This is incredible way to secure stability! I’m having the same problem with my shed! I sure wish you guys were in East Texas. I can’t find anyone to help me.
Thank you so much for watching the video and leaving such a nice comment. I hope that you can find someone in your area that is willing to help you. Have you called any of the mobile home dealers in your area? They should know of a few good contractors that can level up your building for you, as they are required to level their mobile homes on the client's property. Hope this information was helpful 👍
Bravo! Excellent video. Great job on camera work, instruction, explanations, and all around visual clarity. Exactly what I needed to see in order to help me raise and stabilize my shed foundation. Thank you so much!
Thank you so much for watching the video and leaving such a great comment! I'm so glad we were able to help you with your project, and I'm sure, save you a ton of money 💰 by doing it yourself 🎉
So do you have a link for the jscks ? And also i built a shed into a tiny home and the runner beams seem to be bowed where the center is higher than the outside how do i fix that will just jacking up the outside edge fix it?
Hi! Thank you for watching the video. I revised the description to include the link to the exact Jack's that we purchased for this project. As far as the bow ...you might be able to adjust that by pushing the outer edges upward with the jack stands...not sure about that. I wish you the best with your project.
That's awesome!!! Always makes me feel good when a video can actually benefit someone else. Thanks so much for watching and leaving a comment. Always appreciated 👍
Good question! You are correct...the larger the surface area, the better the weight distribution...which will help with overall stability of the structure. Hope that this information answers your question 👍.
Hi! Question for you. I have a shed that's on blocks and may need to be leveled in the future. I have electricity running to the shed from the nearest pole, the wire is run through a conduit 18" under the ground and comes up and attaches to the shed where the breaker box is. What's the process for leveling a shed in a situation like this? I'm concerned that leveling the shed will put stress on either the conduit or the wire coming from the pole.
Hi. Thank you for watching this video. This shed was the exact same situation as you are describing. I ended up digging around the conduit that was coming up into the shed. It took some time, but I dug several feet of it out so that as I lifted the shed the conduit could reposition itself. This was somewhat lengthy in time, but helped to ensure that the conduit would not crack or the wire pull away from the panel. After the shed was leveled I filled the trench back in. Hope this information helps 👍
We are about to do a 10x20 building. My son is a plumber so he said I obviously gotta get it off the ground for him to plumb it.. I wasn’t sure if we could do the footers or hire it out- I’m hiring it out. 😂
I just found out about your channel. So beautifully done job. I wish you where here in Atlanta so I could use you for my project 18×18 detached storage that I want to turn it to new studio. If you know someone in Atlanta, please refer to me. 🙏🙏
Thank you so much for watching the video and leaving such a nice comment, always appreciated 👍. I wish you the best with finding someone to do this for your project.
Could you tell me about how much this project costed this person for labor? I'm asking because I'm about to tackle the exact same project and was very curious. Also great video
Hi Justin, thanks for watching and leaving a comment. We did this project and charged $3,000. Half was material and half was labor. There was quite a bit of hand digging involved as I had to dig several feet down and the building was in the way while doing it. The materials are not cheap anymore. Rebar, cement, house jacks, etc all seem to have gone up in the last year. If you are planning on bidding out this job, I would price out materials first. In just the last few months materials have almost doubled in cost and some are very hard to come by. Hope this helps 👍
@@YouCanDoIt2 super helpful actually! Thank you for taking the time to reply I do appreciate it. Half in materials really? Wowsers I need to revisit this indeed, as I hadn't considered it anywhere near that much. Was a majority of it the jacks??
@@RobertKrummel jacks were pricey and we used 8. I had a slight loss on that as I only charged for seven but ended up using eight. I used an entire pallet of concrete. There's quite a bit underneath this tiny house. Of course, the rebar and 2x4s aren't cheap either these days.
Great video! I need to level my portable garage up so I can finish the little things and the big thing...the floor. It was tuff to build a 16x32 building mostly by myself. I am not a young fellow and it was painful at times. I got the fat little jack and I have a self leveling laser. I will be following your examples as I get it leveled back up. Its not your typical shed design as I built it in a lean too style and with 2x6 studs and 2x10 rafters as these were cheaper at the time than the smaller stuff. lol. So its heavy and strong. But again...thank you! Much needed help in how to do it.
Hi! Thank you for watching the video. The jacks were purchased off of Amazon. Make sure to purchase the jack stands that have manual adjusting and not hydraulic. Over time, the hydraulic jack stands will bleed off. Also, make sure to purchase the appropriate number and load-bearing weight for your particular tiny house/shed. I hope this information helps 👍.
It's not bringing the green line down, it's bringing the building up. The green line is the self-leveling stationary reference point, not the building. The green line is not moving in reference to the earth, the building is.
This is incredible way to secure stability! I’m having the same problem with my shed! I sure wish you guys were in East Texas. I can’t find anyone to help me.
Thank you so much for watching the video and leaving such a nice comment. I hope that you can find someone in your area that is willing to help you. Have you called any of the mobile home dealers in your area? They should know of a few good contractors that can level up your building for you, as they are required to level their mobile homes on the client's property. Hope this information was helpful 👍
@@YouCanDoIt2 no, but I will give it a try! You have been very helpful!
Bravo! Excellent video. Great job on camera work, instruction, explanations, and all around visual clarity. Exactly what I needed to see in order to help me raise and stabilize my shed foundation. Thank you so much!
Thank you so much for watching the video and leaving such a great comment! I'm so glad we were able to help you with your project, and I'm sure, save you a ton of money 💰 by doing it yourself 🎉
Can you please give us a tool and supply list for this job?
Oh my god thank you for this video! The other videos have way too much extra! This is perfect
Lots of great information and explained very well. Helpful. Thanks for sharing.
I am so excited to watch the progress. You two make things look so easy. Thanks for always sharing‼️
Nice job, I have a shed in my back yard I need to do the same thing soon.
Great job guys!✌️👍👍👍👍
So do you have a link for the jscks ? And also i built a shed into a tiny home and the runner beams seem to be bowed where the center is higher than the outside how do i fix that will just jacking up the outside edge fix it?
Hi! Thank you for watching the video. I revised the description to include the link to the exact Jack's that we purchased for this project. As far as the bow ...you might be able to adjust that by pushing the outer edges upward with the jack stands...not sure about that. I wish you the best with your project.
Saved my day, and my home. Thank you 😊
That's awesome!!! Always makes me feel good when a video can actually benefit someone else. Thanks so much for watching and leaving a comment. Always appreciated 👍
Thank you guys for leveling this for me!!! Wow!
What does the platform add that just resting on the concrete pour doesn't? Is it more for weight/force distribution?
Good question! You are correct...the larger the surface area, the better the weight distribution...which will help with overall stability of the structure. Hope that this information answers your question 👍.
Hi! Question for you. I have a shed that's on blocks and may need to be leveled in the future. I have electricity running to the shed from the nearest pole, the wire is run through a conduit 18" under the ground and comes up and attaches to the shed where the breaker box is. What's the process for leveling a shed in a situation like this? I'm concerned that leveling the shed will put stress on either the conduit or the wire coming from the pole.
Hi. Thank you for watching this video. This shed was the exact same situation as you are describing. I ended up digging around the conduit that was coming up into the shed. It took some time, but I dug several feet of it out so that as I lifted the shed the conduit could reposition itself. This was somewhat lengthy in time, but helped to ensure that the conduit would not crack or the wire pull away from the panel. After the shed was leveled I filled the trench back in. Hope this information helps 👍
@YouCanDoIt2 that's actually very useful! I've been trying to figure out this problem for a good bit and had not considered doing that. TY!!!
We are about to do a 10x20 building. My son is a plumber so he said I obviously gotta get it off the ground for him to plumb it.. I wasn’t sure if we could do the footers or hire it out- I’m hiring it out. 😂
I just found out about your channel. So beautifully done job. I wish you where here in Atlanta so I could use you for my project 18×18 detached storage that I want to turn it to new studio. If you know someone in Atlanta, please refer to me.
🙏🙏
Thank you so much for watching the video and leaving such a nice comment, always appreciated 👍. I wish you the best with finding someone to do this for your project.
Could you tell me about how much this project costed this person for labor? I'm asking because I'm about to tackle the exact same project and was very curious. Also great video
Hi Justin, thanks for watching and leaving a comment. We did this project and charged $3,000. Half was material and half was labor. There was quite a bit of hand digging involved as I had to dig several feet down and the building was in the way while doing it. The materials are not cheap anymore. Rebar, cement, house jacks, etc all seem to have gone up in the last year. If you are planning on bidding out this job, I would price out materials first. In just the last few months materials have almost doubled in cost and some are very hard to come by. Hope this helps 👍
@@YouCanDoIt2 super helpful actually! Thank you for taking the time to reply I do appreciate it. Half in materials really? Wowsers I need to revisit this indeed, as I hadn't considered it anywhere near that much. Was a majority of it the jacks??
@@RobertKrummel jacks were pricey and we used 8. I had a slight loss on that as I only charged for seven but ended up using eight. I used an entire pallet of concrete. There's quite a bit underneath this tiny house. Of course, the rebar and 2x4s aren't cheap either these days.
Great video! I need to level my portable garage up so I can finish the little things and the big thing...the floor. It was tuff to build a 16x32 building mostly by myself. I am not a young fellow and it was painful at times. I got the fat little jack and I have a self leveling laser. I will be following your examples as I get it leveled back up. Its not your typical shed design as I built it in a lean too style and with 2x6 studs and 2x10 rafters as these were cheaper at the time than the smaller stuff. lol. So its heavy and strong. But again...thank you! Much needed help in how to do it.
Thank you for watching the video. Slow and steady will get the job done! You Can Do It!! 👍
Where'd you buy those screw jacks you placed under the shed permanently?
Hi! Thank you for watching the video. The jacks were purchased off of Amazon. Make sure to purchase the jack stands that have manual adjusting and not hydraulic. Over time, the hydraulic jack stands will bleed off. Also, make sure to purchase the appropriate number and load-bearing weight for your particular tiny house/shed. I hope this information helps 👍.
50 ton? Wouldn’t 10 or 20 be good? And every summer it needs re leveled? But lazer isn’t the most accurate way right? Lasers isn’t accurate
It's not bringing the green line down, it's bringing the building up. The green line is the self-leveling stationary reference point, not the building. The green line is not moving in reference to the earth, the building is.
Your so pretty missy🤍🤍
39k
@@reliefmango6 39K thank you for watching 🎉🥳🎉
Why does Chris look familiar?
🤷 he must have a familiar face 😊
@@YouCanDoIt2 He looks like an actor. I believe it is CSI Miami or something like that.
@@stevendiffy768 Wish I got paid for the acting career😂...must be a long lost relative.
lol
@@YouCanDoIt2