Wow! This is even easier than the first video I watched. This is the project that I am going to try. Thank you so much for this extremely simplified video of how to DIY a compost tumbler.
You two work well together. A long time since this was posted but I hope you're well an still building! This is a neat design for sure. I'll add these features but look to get it / them wheelbarrow height. Best from BC.
Thank you so much for this - Agreeing with what others have said, I think yours is one of the best designs out there, so it's what I built, and have been using them for a month. They work great, and produce compost quickly! But I did make some changes: * Made a reinforced wooden frame (compost is heavy) which was high enough (75 cm) to fit a wheelbarrow under it (like Myles Standbridge below did) - The door can be rested on the frame while it's upside-down, making it easier to empty. * Added handles on one side of the barrel every quarter along its circumference, to make them easier to turn. * As well as the circular vent hole in the “lid” end of the barrel made using a jigsaw, I also added extra, smaller vent holes at the “bottom” end, using a saw hole drill attachment to make a dice pattern 4, keeping the barrel structure intact. I covered both holes with fine mesh to keep more compost in, wrapped around stronger, welded wire mesh. I thought that the extra air flow would probably help the composting process. * Larger 30cm x 35cm door. I re-used the plastic off-cuts from the vent holes, riveting them onto the door hole edge for extra reinforcement - It gives the door something else to rest against while the barrel is turning, rather than just the latches. * Big 125mm heavy duty fixed castors. * Stainless steel hardware where possible, even though I also built a little shelter over them to keep the sun off of them and stop it from cracking the plastic. * I could only find 200+ litre "sealed" type of barrel, instead of the smaller type with the removable lid. It was a little harder to convert them, but it's possible. I started by cutting out the side door. They're also missing a hard plastic "collar" at the "bottom" end - Mine sag and dent a little bit at the "bottom" end wheels 'cause of this, maybe because they're larger too, but can still be turned. If I were to build these again, I'd also try riveting a wide metal strip or rib to the outside circumference to distribute the weight a bit over where the “bottom” end wheels go, or use the smaller lidded barrel type like you did, which seem stronger. Once again, excellent design. :)
@@sophien117I'm in the UK. I made two composters and paid £75 for both of them together, but I reckon they'd have cost me £150 together or so if I hadn't already had the timber and some of the ironmongery. * £15 per barrel from eBay, collected from a local seller (total of £30) * £45 on ironmongery from Toolstation (including £30 on fixed castors) * The screws, bolts, rivets and wood preserver would've been worth an extra £25-£30, but I had them already and am using the remainder for other projects * I refurbished some used timber which I had already, cutting and planing old floor boards into 2x2, so I don't know how much that would have cost me. * I also already had the wire mesh. Commercial compost tumblers cost a lot more with less capacity, so it was well worth building these. In my case, I moved house last year, and rodents were entering the garden from the nearby river and starting to take an interest in the pallet box compost heap I made for kitchen waste. The tumblers were a logical step up from simply using static, rodent-proof containers.
Thanks for the tutorial, I used your ideas to build one last year since I already had a barrel and all of the needed material laying around the shop. The tumbler works great with one caveat. Be careful to not put too much material in the barrel as the weight will cause the plastic to start caving in where it rides on the casters, making it very difficult to roll. Great simple design.
Excellent video! Short introduction, well laid out & informative, and no time wasted. Your video should be the prime example for how to post an instructional video on RUclips! As for content - Another excellent rating from me. I will be building my tumblers soon. Did you make an instructional video on how to maintain a compost tumbler with should & shouldn't do's? Thanks for the great video.
Great video with lots of well thought out design. I just seen one that used a pvc pipe as a axle and the barrel was a working height. I will be using a combination of there axle your scopes and holes as I think the other had a bit to large a hole but I am not sure but can always make them bigger. Thanks for the time and effort you put into this project and sharing it with us :) Hugh
I am making two compost tumblers based on your excellent video. I bought my barrels from a local food wholesaler advertising on Craigslist. I recall 3x 55g black food grade (pickels) cost $20 and they had hundreds for sale. Note that all barrels are not the same size. I had to increase the length dimension to 43". Since I am using untreated wood, stainless hardware would be a waste as the wood will be unsupportive in 5 - 10 years. Stainless hardware welds itself together making disassembly impossible. I can still take apart rusty zinc-coated steel hardware from 30 years ago. These barrels will winter in my raised garden where any spillage or liquid drainage will go right into garden. Expected life of this system 5+ years in Michigan.
Good video. I liked most of it. To improve it, I will make the hatches larger to be shovel friendly and face the barrels all open to one side so as not to have to squeeze in between them to load.
The wheel section is included at the start of the video. For time's sake, we did speed up the time-lapse. We do have a full blog post here with more detailed instructions: www.dayswellspent.com/how-to-build-a-compost-tumbler/
Great design. I'm thinking of doing a tumbler for specific kinds of compost, that I don't want animals to have access too, and this is def the method I'd use.
Great video, Ive already made the tumbler following your design, and I have a question. How mich can I fill the tumbler wirh organic material? ive use a 160 liter barrel.
Good video. I built a very similar tumbler several years ago. Like other commenters I build a waist high U shaped stand that I can run my wheelbarrow under for my tumbler. If I have a complaint it's that the tumbler is to small. I empty it out twice or three times a year and I'm always disappointed about how much compost I end up with. Right next to the tumbler I have a three sided compost pile that gets a lot of use. I get a lot of satisfaction out of useing both.
So I had one of those blue barrels laying around from another project and decided to try my hand at it. I shop at Lowes and I didn't try to keep my costs to a minimum. I don't have a frugal bone in my body and refuse to let money get in the way of my successes (too many other things get in the way of my successes). I decided that stainless steel screws and hardware was the way to go. the screw size that I chose was an #8-32-various lengths with large fender washers where needed and vinyl lock nut. Depending on the application, I used a Pan headed Phillips or a flat headed Phillips with a finish washer. Bad choice of size though because a larger screw would have been easier to handle. Maybe a 1/4". The store didn't have stainless hardware so I settled on Zinc coated hinges and locks instead. This fellow is a better handyman than I am, better organized and I thought I was okay but while the video shows the guy just whipping thru the work (yeah, I know it's speeded up at times), I had to struggle with making adjustment to the door and reaching in to screw on the baffles required two people in some locations. I also attached short pieces of 1/2 inch schedule 40 conduit for grabbers every eighteen inches or so in a left side/right side pattern around the barrel so so you could grab on and spin the tub. What I also did was build a horse style support a couple of feet up in the air with four rollers at the base to support the tub. That was a whole lot of figuring out and redoing to get it right. The numerous holes that are drilled in this video are something that I am going to pass on for the time being because I just don't think that compost being too wet will be my problem but keeping the mass warm enough will be. And besides, the commercial varieties don't use all those holes in their design. These folks are in Texas and I am in NE NYS just south of the Canadian border. Maybe their composters overheat down in Texas. It is going into place today and I have lots of compostable material waiting in a can for a starter. Someone suggested a little yeast and sugar to speed things along. Who knows?
It gets really hot where we are! We hit 116 degrees f this summer. Having weeks with 100+ is not uncommon for us. You can buy bacteria for your compost bin to help it out. If it gets too wet just add more dead material like dead leaves. I know several people that put the cardboard egg cartons in theirs or brown paper bags.
I love this! We are going to make a double tumbler so we are using this and another video as I want to just crank/turn from the side. We have everything but the PVC pipe. I watched the video and went through the comments- I can’t tell what the diameter needs to be? Someone has one on marketplace that is 2” wide - is that wide enough? Really appreciate any info!!
I have the idea to make this object, but I wonder what to make and how the utile for grind the waste into small pieces, what can be used for that except the small choppers we have in the kitchen, I need something for a larger amount of food at once and stronger power to be able to grid the little branches! Thanks for the idea!
great vid, liked it. new to compost. wat do you put in there (egg shells, grass clippings,peels etc.?) also is there an acting agent u have to spray it or water? or even add soil to it?
If you build another, would you recommend any different dimensions for the door/hatch, and what would you recommend, or keep the same 8.5" x 8.5" (0:49) ??
Very nice! I`m a beginner gardener-learning as much as I can- I would make the door opening bigger though! Q: Why cutting PVC pipe with a jigsaw? A skillsaw would zing right thru it! How often do the bins need to be rotated? Thanks for making the video!
The more you rotate the better, It keeps everything mixed up. We rotate a couple times a week. We actually tried the skill saw and the heat from blade started meting the plastic.
@@DaysWellSpent - melting PVC when cutting with skil saw? Hmm-that's interesting-I haven't experienced that-maybe type of sawblade used? Thanks for informing how often to rotate composter-being mechanically inclined I want to make composter with automatic rotate using old parts I have like an old 1/2" drill / bicycle gear parts etc....
Need handles to make the rotation easier. Where you bolted the blades on the inside, bolt a strip of wood or PVC on the outside. This also stiffens the barrel. Make the base higher so you can put a tub under the door to make emptying easier. Wheels/casters: the bigger and wider the better.
Getting ready to construct one myself following your instructions. You only showed adding a screen hole to one end of the Barrel. Do I need to create another screen hole on the opposite end of the barrel as well?
Hello, thank you for this video! Great idea!! Is there any way you can share a parts list? I know it’s years later so if not I understand ❤️ just hopeful 😜
Have you had any issues with flies? I love this design and like some of the other commenters' notes about making the frame higher so it's easier to unload into a wheelbarrow. I may try to line the inside with screen to keep flies out but would that impair the actual generation of compost?
great design........so i made one. had a major problem though............was filled with sheep manure, cabbage leaves and dry leaves. i added sulfate of ammonia...............which i do to all composts..........and the plastic went soft on the castors............and i was unable to rotate drum. went to a steel drum and no probs. a lot of ppl have problems composting properly. the secret is to load up in one go. i use manures and green and dry leaves and i add amonium sulfate or urea. this ensures the compost reaches optimum temperature range 49 to 77 c(120 to 170 f) this will kill all weed seeds and will produce finished product with ten days. as a commercial gardner i would see compost tumblers quarter to half full of food scraps. this never heats up and all you achieve is partial anerobic composting. happy gardening
These tumblers look perfect, great tutorial! How are they doing after 4 years? Really like your idea of using the wheels, are they easy to roll with a lot inside? Thanks
They are doing fine! We don't have an issue with the way they roll but we don't fill it more than 3/4 of the way. You need to make sure there is room for air circulation.
You can read more about the details here: www.dayswellspent.com/how-to-build-a-compost-tumbler/ and here: dayswellspent.thinkific.com/courses/how-to-build-a-compost-tubler
Hi thanks for the very useful video. I have downsized by making this composter out of an empty paint bucket. However when I fixed the bolts and hinges, I notice that due to improper spacing of the hinges, the plastic door tends to buckle at the hinges and it doesnt open and close easily. Is there a rule of thumb I should follow that would fix this issue?
Thanks for the editing and fast forwarding through the no brainer parts . All the important stuff in under 7 minutes . Great Job !
Really clever design with the wheels! Love the whole thing and how well you showed the construction process. Much gratitude!
Very straight forward no nonsense - this is how a diy video should be! Congratulations to you both 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤
Wow! This is even easier than the first video I watched. This is the project that I am going to try. Thank you so much for this extremely simplified video of how to DIY a compost tumbler.
Great job explaining with out a lot of talking!! Thank you for such a wonderful DIY video with ease of use!
Brilliant!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Great design!! I am making this today!!!!!!!
Wonderful!
I've viewed several designs video's and yours seems to be the best design I've seen.
Thanks for watching and commenting!
Just build your stand 32" in the air so that way you can put a wheelbarrow underneath your drop door. Makes it a little easier to empty the barrel.
ONE OF THE BEST INSTRUCTIONS ON YOU TUBE THANKS
Thank you
By far the best video I've seen so far. Very Detailed.
Thank you! I can’t wait to make one! Gotta keep my eye open for components from dumpsters to minimize costs.
Great video, no wasted time, just fast info!
I'm glad you liked it!
Very nicely done. Excellent work. Thanks for sharing with rest of the world.
Thanks for watching!
Love your design, function, and craftsmanship. Can hardly wait to build my own. Thank You for your instructional
You two work well together. A long time since this was posted but I hope you're well an still building!
This is a neat design for sure. I'll add these features but look to get it / them wheelbarrow height. Best from BC.
it's like you took a dryer and a grill design into one. i love this
Very practical and well explained video.
Thank you from Scotland.
I love watching the different build ideas
Thanks for watching
Thank you so much for this - Agreeing with what others have said, I think yours is one of the best designs out there, so it's what I built, and have been using them for a month. They work great, and produce compost quickly! But I did make some changes:
* Made a reinforced wooden frame (compost is heavy) which was high enough (75 cm) to fit a wheelbarrow under it (like Myles Standbridge below did) - The door can be rested on the frame while it's upside-down, making it easier to empty.
* Added handles on one side of the barrel every quarter along its circumference, to make them easier to turn.
* As well as the circular vent hole in the “lid” end of the barrel made using a jigsaw, I also added extra, smaller vent holes at the “bottom” end, using a saw hole drill attachment to make a dice pattern 4, keeping the barrel structure intact. I covered both holes with fine mesh to keep more compost in, wrapped around stronger, welded wire mesh. I thought that the extra air flow would probably help the composting process.
* Larger 30cm x 35cm door. I re-used the plastic off-cuts from the vent holes, riveting them onto the door hole edge for extra reinforcement - It gives the door something else to rest against while the barrel is turning, rather than just the latches.
* Big 125mm heavy duty fixed castors.
* Stainless steel hardware where possible, even though I also built a little shelter over them to keep the sun off of them and stop it from cracking the plastic.
* I could only find 200+ litre "sealed" type of barrel, instead of the smaller type with the removable lid. It was a little harder to convert them, but it's possible. I started by cutting out the side door. They're also missing a hard plastic "collar" at the "bottom" end - Mine sag and dent a little bit at the "bottom" end wheels 'cause of this, maybe because they're larger too, but can still be turned. If I were to build these again, I'd also try riveting a wide metal strip or rib to the outside circumference to distribute the weight a bit over where the “bottom” end wheels go, or use the smaller lidded barrel type like you did, which seem stronger.
Once again, excellent design. :)
How much did all of this cost you?
@@sophien117I'm in the UK. I made two composters and paid £75 for both of them together, but I reckon they'd have cost me £150 together or so if I hadn't already had the timber and some of the ironmongery.
* £15 per barrel from eBay, collected from a local seller (total of £30)
* £45 on ironmongery from Toolstation (including £30 on fixed castors)
* The screws, bolts, rivets and wood preserver would've been worth an extra £25-£30, but I had them already and am using the remainder for other projects
* I refurbished some used timber which I had already, cutting and planing old floor boards into 2x2, so I don't know how much that would have cost me.
* I also already had the wire mesh.
Commercial compost tumblers cost a lot more with less capacity, so it was well worth building these. In my case, I moved house last year, and rodents were entering the garden from the nearby river and starting to take an interest in the pallet box compost heap I made for kitchen waste. The tumblers were a logical step up from simply using static, rodent-proof containers.
Can you make a video with your modifications please??
I like the PVC scoops in the compost tumbler. Its a better design than I've seen
I'm glad you liked it!
Agrer very innovative idea
Why do you need the scoops in it ??
@@teresajohnson849 for proper mixing
@@undrachevr thanks
An excellent video. Step by step from start to end.
Fantastic design, simple design and easy to use. I will have a go at this.
I'm glad you like it. We are uploading several new videos this week and next so be sure to subscribe if you haven't already.
A clever and clean design. Nice!
thanks
Your design exceeded my expectations! Good work and a service to everyone. Thx
Thanks!
Great garden utility! Thanks for sharing!
Excellent, this will definitely be a winter project for me. Thank you.
Excellent video! Great instructions! Thanks for taking the time to make and share.
Thanks for watching; I'm glad you found it helpful!
I liked the idea, smart and easy
Very clever, thank you for sharing your practical knowledge.
Im watching your videos very thankful that gave me a another idea
Nice work
Alright. This is the best DIY composter I've seen on all of RUclips this far. Now if only there was a way to insulate it like the Jarro composters
Very nice design thank you so much
Nice job I'm going to make so soon
Awesome! Very nicely done! (the tumbler AND the video)
Thank you!
best DIY compost tumbler
Thanks for the tutorial, I used your ideas to build one last year since I already had a barrel and all of the needed material laying around the shop. The tumbler works great with one caveat. Be careful to not put too much material in the barrel as the weight will cause the plastic to start caving in where it rides on the casters, making it very difficult to roll. Great simple design.
How about a metal barrel?
@@safary582 A lined food-grade steel barrel would be stronger.
Excellent video! Short introduction, well laid out & informative, and no time wasted. Your video should be the prime example for how to post an instructional video on RUclips! As for content - Another excellent rating from me. I will be building my tumblers soon. Did you make an instructional video on how to maintain a compost tumbler with should & shouldn't do's? Thanks for the great video.
I did not make a video but I am working on a blog post that will cover it.
Great video with lots of well thought out design. I just seen one that used a pvc pipe as a axle and the barrel was a working height. I will be using a combination of there axle your scopes and holes as I think the other had a bit to large a hole but I am not sure but can always make them bigger. Thanks for the time and effort you put into this project and sharing it with us :) Hugh
Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
I am making two compost tumblers based on your excellent video. I bought my barrels from a local food wholesaler advertising on Craigslist. I recall 3x 55g black food grade (pickels) cost $20 and they had hundreds for sale. Note that all barrels are not the same size. I had to increase the length dimension to 43". Since I am using untreated wood, stainless hardware would be a waste as the wood will be unsupportive in 5 - 10 years. Stainless hardware welds itself together making disassembly impossible. I can still take apart rusty zinc-coated steel hardware from 30 years ago. These barrels will winter in my raised garden where any spillage or liquid drainage will go right into garden. Expected life of this system 5+ years in Michigan.
Great video.
Clear, concise and easy to do.Thank you.
That's the best i've seen yet! Thanks
Clever idea
I'm glad you liked it
What a great project! You guys are an awesome team :)
#gardening #homesteading #DIY
We just made ur compost tumbler work great so far 😍😍😍
That's awesome!
That is an amazing DIY project. Well done, I need to make one as it's too expensive to buy one.
Especially if you want 3.😊👍
Good work!
Thanks!
Good video. I liked most of it. To improve it, I will make the hatches larger to be shovel friendly and face the barrels all open to one side so as not to have to squeeze in between them to load.
Very good idea 👌🏼
Thanks a lot
Perfect
This is great.. thanks
Nice job. Perfect...
Wish I would have watched this first , gotta have those wheels. Great video
Just what I was looking for! Thanks for this
Thanks for watching!
Superb!
Thanks!
Its one of the best design I hav seen...pls make a video too, on under wheel...eager to know and make it at my home
The wheel section is included at the start of the video. For time's sake, we did speed up the time-lapse. We do have a full blog post here with more detailed instructions: www.dayswellspent.com/how-to-build-a-compost-tumbler/
Great design. I'm thinking of doing a tumbler for specific kinds of compost, that I don't want animals to have access too, and this is def the method I'd use.
To the point and very informative. Thanks!
You got me! I hope my girlfriend will apreciate this way with the wheels. It seem to be cheaper than the other ways.
@@haydentristian198 thank you so much for your help I guess
Great idea. Will have to make one to mix my potting soil.
Good idea, clean design, excellent video great job
thanks
Thank you ..Great video
Awesome idea. Keep them coming
Thank you for sharing your ideas.
Thanks for watching!
outstanding!
I agree with this is the best design I've seen so far as well. What do you think about making a stand?
Best one I c so far
top notch design
nice,
thanks
Great video, Ive already made the tumbler following your design, and I have a question. How mich can I fill the tumbler wirh organic material? ive use a 160 liter barrel.
Good video. I built a very similar tumbler several years ago. Like other commenters I build a waist high U shaped stand that I can run my wheelbarrow under for my tumbler. If I have a complaint it's that the tumbler is to small. I empty it out twice or three times a year and I'm always disappointed about how much compost I end up with. Right next to the tumbler I have a three sided compost pile that gets a lot of use. I get a lot of satisfaction out of useing both.
So I had one of those blue barrels laying around from another project and decided to try my hand at it. I shop at Lowes and I didn't try to keep my costs to a minimum. I don't have a frugal bone in my body and refuse to let money get in the way of my successes (too many other things get in the way of my successes).
I decided that stainless steel screws and hardware was the way to go. the screw size that I chose was an #8-32-various lengths with large fender washers where needed and vinyl lock nut. Depending on the application, I used a Pan headed Phillips or a flat headed Phillips with a finish washer. Bad choice of size though because a larger screw would have been easier to handle. Maybe a 1/4". The store didn't have stainless hardware so I settled on Zinc coated hinges and locks instead.
This fellow is a better handyman than I am, better organized and I thought I was okay but while the video shows the guy just whipping thru the work (yeah, I know it's speeded up at times), I had to struggle with making adjustment to the door and reaching in to screw on the baffles required two people in some locations. I also attached short pieces of 1/2 inch schedule 40 conduit for grabbers every eighteen inches or so in a left side/right side pattern around the barrel so so you could grab on and spin the tub. What I also did was build a horse style support a couple of feet up in the air with four rollers at the base to support the tub. That was a whole lot of figuring out and redoing to get it right. The numerous holes that are drilled in this video are something that I am going to pass on for the time being because I just don't think that compost being too wet will be my problem but keeping the mass warm enough will be. And besides, the commercial varieties don't use all those holes in their design. These folks are in Texas and I am in NE NYS just south of the Canadian border. Maybe their composters overheat down in Texas.
It is going into place today and I have lots of compostable material waiting in a can for a starter. Someone suggested a little yeast and sugar to speed things along. Who knows?
It gets really hot where we are! We hit 116 degrees f this summer. Having weeks with 100+ is not uncommon for us.
You can buy bacteria for your compost bin to help it out. If it gets too wet just add more dead material like dead leaves. I know several people that put the cardboard egg cartons in theirs or brown paper bags.
How much did you end up spending on the entire project?
You could also use (sawdust pellets) horse bedding. No chemicals, is very absorbent, and breaks down well too.
Thank you! I so want to do this!
I love this! We are going to make a double tumbler so we are using this and another video as I want to just crank/turn from the side. We have everything but the PVC pipe. I watched the video and went through the comments- I can’t tell what the diameter needs to be? Someone has one on marketplace that is 2” wide - is that wide enough? Really appreciate any info!!
I just finished making one. I have to go back in and install some PVC pipe that's a great idea.
The pvc really makes a difference
Awesome! Thank you for sharing :)
My pleasure!
I have the idea to make this object, but I wonder what to make and how the utile for grind the waste into small pieces, what can be used for that except the small choppers we have in the kitchen, I need something for a larger amount of food at once and stronger power to be able to grid the little branches! Thanks for the idea!
Great VID
What do the cut PVC pieces do? What all do you put in it and how do you decide to transfer?
I am trying to make this proyect. Do you have the list of materials, please and thank you ?!!!
Everything should be listed here
dayswellspent.com/how-to-build-a-compost-tumbler/
Cool... where do I get a barrel
We got ours at the local feed store.
can the opening be made larger? i want to make something to mix soil in and would need a larger door to pour dirts in and remove
great vid, liked it. new to compost. wat do you put in there (egg shells, grass clippings,peels etc.?) also is there an acting agent u have to spray it or water? or even add soil to it?
How well did your barrel hold up over the years? That plastic breaks down in the sunlight, but it looks like your compost spot gets a bit of shade.
Ours is holding up fine but yes it is in some shade
If you build another, would you recommend any different dimensions for the door/hatch, and what would you recommend, or keep the same 8.5" x 8.5" (0:49) ??
I'd keep it the same because it works for us.
Excellent !!
Nice design, I suggest that you use large washers on the outside of the barrel when mounting your scoops. Otherwise they may tear out in time
Great job. Where did you get the food safe barrel and the latching top?
They said the barrel came from a feed store
Very nice! I`m a beginner gardener-learning as much as I can- I would make the door opening bigger though! Q: Why cutting PVC pipe with a jigsaw? A skillsaw would zing right thru it!
How often do the bins need to be rotated? Thanks for making the video!
The more you rotate the better, It keeps everything mixed up. We rotate a couple times a week.
We actually tried the skill saw and the heat from blade started meting the plastic.
@@DaysWellSpent - melting PVC when cutting with skil saw? Hmm-that's interesting-I haven't experienced that-maybe type of sawblade used? Thanks for informing how often to rotate composter-being mechanically inclined I want to make composter with automatic rotate using old parts I have like an old 1/2" drill / bicycle gear parts etc....
Need handles to make the rotation easier.
Where you bolted the blades on the inside, bolt a strip of wood or PVC on the outside. This also stiffens the barrel.
Make the base higher so you can put a tub under the door to make emptying easier.
Wheels/casters: the bigger and wider the better.
good suggestions!
Getting ready to construct one myself following your instructions. You only showed adding a screen hole to one end of the Barrel. Do I need to create another screen hole on the opposite end of the barrel as well?
No, because that's the lid end
Any link for update video showing rolling a FULL barrel?
Hello, thank you for this video!
Great idea!!
Is there any way you can share a parts list? I know it’s years later so if not I understand ❤️ just hopeful 😜
We have it up on ou website and a longer more detailed video is available. www.dayswellspent.com/how-to-build-a-compost-tumbler/
Days Well Spent Thank you!!
Have you had any issues with flies? I love this design and like some of the other commenters' notes about making the frame higher so it's easier to unload into a wheelbarrow. I may try to line the inside with screen to keep flies out but would that impair the actual generation of compost?
We have not had an issue with flies.
Love the idea cool, does it produce fast? Any idea how long to produce safe soil?
Yes it does! It takes about 3 months.
Any updates on how well these did? And improvements you might make
These work great, no improvements needed so far.
How many days did it take to make compost?
great design........so i made one. had a major problem though............was filled with sheep manure, cabbage leaves and dry leaves. i added sulfate of ammonia...............which i do to all composts..........and the plastic went soft on the castors............and i was unable to rotate drum. went to a steel drum and no probs. a lot of ppl have problems composting properly. the secret is to load up in one go. i use manures and green and dry leaves and i add amonium sulfate or urea. this ensures the compost reaches optimum temperature range 49 to 77 c(120 to 170 f) this will kill all weed seeds and will produce finished product with ten days. as a commercial gardner i would see compost tumblers quarter to half full of food scraps. this never heats up and all you achieve is partial anerobic composting. happy gardening
These tumblers look perfect, great tutorial! How are they doing after 4 years? Really like your idea of using the wheels, are they easy to roll with a lot inside? Thanks
They are doing fine! We don't have an issue with the way they roll but we don't fill it more than 3/4 of the way.
You need to make sure there is room for air circulation.
That's great, sounds like they will last you many years to come! Thanks for the 3/4 info, I'll make our set asap!
Seems great. I'm always wondering what picky details I am missing. Costs?
You can read more about the details here: www.dayswellspent.com/how-to-build-a-compost-tumbler/ and here: dayswellspent.thinkific.com/courses/how-to-build-a-compost-tubler
Hi thanks for the very useful video. I have downsized by making this composter out of an empty paint bucket. However when I fixed the bolts and hinges, I notice that due to improper spacing of the hinges, the plastic door tends to buckle at the hinges and it doesnt open and close easily. Is there a rule of thumb I should follow that would fix this issue?
I think that's why they marked the holes and installed the hinges before cutting it all the way out.