Giant Shed for a fraction of the price!!! 12x16 with a Loft!!!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2022
  • Prices of sheds are astronomical!!!! I built this DIY shed 12x16 large shed with loft for under $2000. Prices of lumber have dropped again since making this, so price to build could be even less! Cheap Shed!
    Affiliate link to some really good shed and chicken coop plans:
    shedplans.org/?ref=7
    TOOLS I USE:
    Compressor and guns
    amzn.to/3V1YPRF
    Roofing Brackets
    amzn.to/3LqnfkA
    Cold Steel Knives
    amzn.to/3Hg5xxM
    amzn.to/445lVeA
    Best Paintbrush!!! PURDY
    amzn.to/3r1Sdbm
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @rundoetx
    @rundoetx Год назад +135

    Watching your build reminds me of how my Dad taught me to build, "There's a right way, There's a wrong way, then there's my way, and that's how I'll get it done." And you know what, we always got it done. Thanks for sharing.

  • @OVHabitats
    @OVHabitats Год назад +267

    As a home builder for more years than I care to mention, I could list dozens of things done "wrong" or should have been done better however, I have to give you an A+ for effort and luck. LOL No one can question your fearlessness and willingness to overcome and adapt.
    Congrats!

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +12

      Thank you!

    • @kennethshew1681
      @kennethshew1681 Год назад +3

      Yup

    • @joesinakandid528
      @joesinakandid528 Год назад +5

      Yeah, DOZENS just about sums it all up. Half way though and I'm giving up - 'Nuffa Dis, I gotta go.

    • @matthewjones615
      @matthewjones615 Год назад +16

      Can you give this guy a video tip on how to put up a side wall without crushing himself, his neighbor's fence, or his girlfriend+ dog? I was seriously insanely worried when he was putting up that first wall. Not only not thinking ahead to have the nailer ready to go and in reach, but not having his girlfriend be ready to help him, not having a bracing wood or mechanism to make it easier for him to do it as a duo/solo. Super scary shit.

    • @willytodd2750
      @willytodd2750 Год назад

      @@joesinakandid528 you would have called an inspector to have a look inside your bunghole before you drove your first nail.

  • @frankortolano5886
    @frankortolano5886 7 месяцев назад +13

    Don't feel bad, I have to build stuff and there's no one to help me ,not to carry, not to hold, story of my life

  • @bewbathis_3211
    @bewbathis_3211 Год назад +65

    As a framer watching you fight to plywood that roof was both entertaining and frightening. You got it done though and I'm proud of you! Me personally, I'd have started the plywood from the bottom and walked it up a small extension ladder and then just hopped up into the trusses

    • @phaylon
      @phaylon Год назад +3

      Exactly when I came to comment... at least he learned not to plywood the walls and attach stickers before raising the other 3!

    • @texaswilson80
      @texaswilson80 Год назад +4

      @@phaylon Pretty sure he did the one wall because it was so close to the fence that attempting to do it after the wall was up would have been a different struggle.

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 Год назад

      My thought exactly. I built a pitched roof on my old flattop house, and I never considered doing it any other way but to use an extension ladder and do the bottom sheet first.

    • @CherrieMcKenzie
      @CherrieMcKenzie 6 месяцев назад

      Yes at times it was funny but because he was sooo determined you HAD to root for him. All in all he did a decent job and probably learned a lot along the way (you could tell that at the end when he seems proud and humbled at the same time). I for one am also proud of him that he kept going even though he was alone on a very difficult project.

  • @RockPolitics
    @RockPolitics Год назад +47

    Well I've never seen anything like it. There was a moment when your GF was off camera, and your dog ran into the picture. You turned and said, "Can you hand me that nailer?"... and the dog turned and ran toward the nailer. And for just a split second, I actually thought the dog was going to bring it to you. Don't ask how I thought that was going to happen. It makes almost as much sense as you being able to build that whole shed by yourself.
    Nice job getting it done. I've been thinking about doing something similar, and you just convinced me that I'm too old to do it. I saw at least 4-5 places where the money I would save on the shed would go straight toward hospital bills (or funeral expenses). But my compliment to you is that when the video was over, I didn't think, "Well there's 45 minutes of my life I'll never get back."

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +7

      Thank you! He’s a good dog but not quite that handy!

    • @brentwiley3330
      @brentwiley3330 Год назад +6

      You are not the only one that thought the dog was going to get the nail gun, lol.

    • @leptitbuggy885
      @leptitbuggy885 Год назад +3

      I though the same . lol

    • @dbf1dware
      @dbf1dware 8 месяцев назад +3

      I'll grant I did NOT think the dog was going to get the nailer, but I was not surprised that the dog went to where you pointed looking for "something." "Sir, I'm trying to help, but I don't know what I am supposed to be doing over here!"

    • @tobymeade3222
      @tobymeade3222 7 месяцев назад +1

      Very , Impressive 👍 A lot of Hard work doing by yourself 💪 Must of saved Alot of Money 🤑 Your Dog is very smart , Good Listener 👍🤞✌️🙌🙏🇺🇸💟✝️🌅🌄🌞🌟💫✨🤩🍂🍁

  • @anon5027
    @anon5027 Год назад +52

    I'm female, 60 next birthday. I have a hobby wood working workshop that I'd like to extend and whilst looking for tips etc I came across your shed build. I have to do most things myself so you have my utmost respect for all your efforts.
    I have to say though, I was shocked to see your girlfriend's apathy. The least she could have done was to balance one end of the first wall you put up. She doesn't need to have an interest in diy just to hold something for you!

    • @littlefarmerette123
      @littlefarmerette123 Год назад +15

      Ditch that selfish gf. Find your dream girl at a lumber store!

    • @GETTINREAL123
      @GETTINREAL123 Год назад +15

      Wow gf or wife is to busy on phone/? or just doesn't give a sh.. if the wall falls and crushes him. My wife watched with me and was like what the hell is she not gonna grab the other end of that wall. If I was his neighbor I would've at least helped with the heavy work. Someone was looking out for him more than a few times on that build. Great determination glad he wasn't hurt.

    • @GETTINREAL123
      @GETTINREAL123 Год назад +6

      @@littlefarmerette123 You got that right!!

    • @simonem.3092
      @simonem.3092 Год назад +5

      USELESS girlfriend. 🙄

    • @bobbg9041
      @bobbg9041 Год назад +4

      Yes she is about useless might have been better if the first wall fell on her.
      You put up a wall thats 16' long get some dam help and be ready to brace it once its standing upright with temporary bracing.
      That or make 2- 8' sections and screw them togather once they are up also the top plate will hold the if the seames are different you can run one side exterior siding as a flap no 2x4" raise that side first brace it then raise the other side and
      Brace it and nail off the siding and add any missing studs. As for the roof
      You should have made a pocket for a top beam to drop in as you were putting up the trusses.

  • @philr2664
    @philr2664 Год назад +12

    I don't think there is any of this I would repeat. I will give you determination, but it is amazing you did not get hurt. I did enjoy watching. There were a few times I was expecting paramedics to show up in the video. You got it done. Good job.

  • @electriclife7851
    @electriclife7851 Год назад +12

    Shows you how much profit companies make. Even when there is a 50% discount at the store, the company is still making a profit. Great Job.

    • @chuckfinley5206
      @chuckfinley5206 Год назад

      May not have sold him a shed but did sell him lumber. I think that may be way it works there.

  • @johnburks3569
    @johnburks3569 Год назад +5

    This video answers SO many life questions:
    Can you do anything if you put your mind to it?
    How was the modern world built?
    Why do women live longer than men?
    Why is it important to have buddies?
    Seriously though, great job. It looks really good.

  • @Amber-mv8wz
    @Amber-mv8wz Год назад +4

    Well, you're alive. Over the years I've done a lot of two-man jobs as a solo woman & I think I've mastered the art of finding ways to do things you can't do alone, alone. The first rule of that though is to do it in such a way that you don't injure or kill yourself in the process. You need to work on that bit because sooner or later luck will fail you. Work smarter not harder.

    • @terryharris3393
      @terryharris3393 Год назад +1

      Work smarter not harder. Words to LIVE by. Please remember men don’t like to stop and ask directions.

  • @LoveYahquita
    @LoveYahquita Год назад +2

    😂😂😂 I don’t wanna play anymore I just wanna go home thx 4 the Laugh 😆

  • @scmom745
    @scmom745 Год назад +2

    YOU needed some help!!! But what an amazing job! Well done and so thankful you weren’t hurt!

  • @RnRSouthRimRanch
    @RnRSouthRimRanch Год назад +4

    Great Job...not killing yourself. Thanks for sharing, this was, as you stated, very entertaining.

  • @MarrioP
    @MarrioP Год назад +3

    this dudes personal commentary is fucking hilarious!

  • @jkh417
    @jkh417 Год назад +2

    This was exciting to watch!
    A little bit of comedy, suspense, and horror! 😂 Happy ending, though!!

  • @bobharris6095
    @bobharris6095 7 месяцев назад +2

    "Girlfriend about to be squished in... 3...2...1" HAHA!! I'm 65 and as I look back over the construction projects that I have tackled over the years, for myself and others, it is truly amazing that no friends or relatives ended up in the ER!

  • @alvarohernandezEVO
    @alvarohernandezEVO Год назад +4

    After watching your video I learned the difference between 4 words: Stubborn vs Resilient & Lucky vs Resourceful. I'm glad your alive though

  • @brucedecker5398
    @brucedecker5398 Год назад +6

    Oh man I haven’t laughed so hard out loud watching you do this. You did so much wrong but who cares. My mom told me when I was a kid that with hard work and believe in your self you can do anything. You are the man.

  • @DownLink
    @DownLink Год назад +264

    PLEASE Please Please install some cross bracing (Joists) between your rafters and brace the corners at 45 degrees to each other above the top plates. That 3/4 particle board decking is too heavy for the way you built the roof and structure. Everything looks like you are in Texas as am I and eventually those 60+mph bursts are going to roll thru and collapse that structure. The loft flooring is acting somewhat like joists but the way its nailed to 2x4 king studs it is just not enough. When we get those squall lines coming thru the horizontal wind loading on those walls that are not tied together properly with that kind of vertical weight this structure will collapse. Sorry to be such a downer on your project, a little more thought and structural support tying things together will keep a major accident from happening. This is the first time I have ever commented, ever, on a social media posting, and I am concerned for you and yours.

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +124

      I appreciate the advice! I have since added bracing to the ceiling and lag bolted the loft joists. I will add the bracing above the corners as well. Thank you again for the advice, I am definitely not a professional.

    • @bigshaggy6163
      @bigshaggy6163 Год назад +10

      I'm in Texas, I would've done a barn style roof..

    • @corysturgis6660
      @corysturgis6660 Год назад +11

      I would imagine the hurricane clips would have kept it together. Support for the truss is always good. I guess corner bracing since he didn't over lap the top sill. We have high winds on occasion buyt not all the time. Great work keeping it square on the foundation. You did a great for not doing it all the time.

    • @corysturgis6660
      @corysturgis6660 Год назад +4

      Your awesome for building that play area for your son. It's exactly why I watched you video. Im surprised you didn't need a Ridgeback to keep it sturdy. My 8x14x8 needed it with a 4/12 pitch.

    • @John-sn4hl
      @John-sn4hl Год назад +3

      Do you have a shed build plan to do it properly?

  • @spicemasterii6775
    @spicemasterii6775 Месяц назад +2

    "Thingamaboppers"
    I checked. This is the correct, scientific and official name.
    Well done sir.

  • @keithplumley2054
    @keithplumley2054 Год назад +4

    I did this same thing when I built my first workshop. In 1995 I built a 12x24x12 shop with windows, attic ventilation, 100 amp power and A/C for $1400. About half of what a pre-built would cost me.

  • @glogu8021
    @glogu8021 Год назад +13

    Omg get rid of that woman lol … 😂

  • @86RAggie
    @86RAggie Год назад +3

    I appreciate all the positive comments and constructive criticism. Good on you for not paying the inflated price, the things you missed you can add and your still saving thousands.

  • @gsus3918
    @gsus3918 Год назад +10

    Great video and great build. Its rare to see people have the balls to do anything these days.

  • @grandmasterchody
    @grandmasterchody Год назад +3

    I've been in the process of doing the exact same thing it's my first time I have ever even tried to to build something it been a very rewarding experience

  • @christopherdanjou
    @christopherdanjou Год назад +2

    It’s always fun to watch someone build in sandals lol

  • @gracielagarza9999
    @gracielagarza9999 Год назад +5

    I remember my Dad built the house I grew up in from 6 years and it still stands today! I am 64 now so it sounds to me that he did a really good job! You seem about the same age as he was back then. I applaud you for your amazing determination but I did brace myself during the roofing part because you really could have ended up getting hurt. Good Bless Your determination. It is commendable and inspiring! I will pray for you going forward, that you accomplish all your projects incident free. Never stop doing what feels right for you! Thanks for sharing!

  • @joeyboy611
    @joeyboy611 11 месяцев назад +5

    man your crazy, windy, no boots, sandals... lifting those walls up is like benching 300 lbs man....

  • @grilledcheese7200
    @grilledcheese7200 6 месяцев назад +2

    Finally, a project that looks like the kind of trouble i'm always getting myself into. we are not alone!

  • @fivefatcats
    @fivefatcats Год назад +12

    I just built a 12x20 chicken coop/shed. I was doing well alone until it came time to roof. I almost tried your method (between the rafters) but I'm too old and not enough upper body strength - I never gave it a try. The husband and teenage kids finished up the roof. Chickens move in this week!! Next spring we are building a 12x12 playhouse with loft and I finally figured out how I want the loft thanks to your video. I will build 10 foot walls and put the loft 3 feet below the top plate - that will save me from having such a steep roof grade. Thanks for the inspiration!! Great job on your shed!

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +2

      Thank you! The roof sheathing was definitely the most difficult part… and the loft is great! Made mine just tall enough to walk under.

    • @GWBarker
      @GWBarker Год назад

      I would like to know what plans you used. that sounds like just what I am wanting to do!

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +3

      @@GWBarker No plans…. Just measured it and built it… 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @GWBarker
      @GWBarker Год назад

      @@fixingspencer you can color me jealous.
      I want to do what @fivefatcats did as well. Combine your cool shed with the chicken coop.

    • @GWBarker
      @GWBarker Год назад

      Hey @fivefatcats! You have any pictures or plans of what you did? I am very curious to see your setup!

  • @paulturner8801
    @paulturner8801 Год назад +7

    So glad you didn't get hurt. Awesome maximum effort! We're building a shed right now, this helped motivate me to keep going.

  • @davidraamiah3435
    @davidraamiah3435 Год назад +44

    Pretty good job!! I would have put in flashing outside the base of the walls to protect the floors and made the walls a little shorter so the siding covered the floor. Also needs an overhang on the roof so water doesn't get in the walls. Even metal roofing with a 6" overhang would have helped. But what a huge project to take on alone!! Good job!!

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +5

      Thank you for the comment and advice!

    • @corysturgis6660
      @corysturgis6660 Год назад +3

      I made that same mistake. I painted it really well to keep moisture from splashing and sticking. Adding one overhang is also a good idea all the way around. I did on 2 walls but my man door was on a wall without it so I built one and tucked the flashing under the siding. Huge pain going back and doing it.

    • @dbf1dware
      @dbf1dware 8 месяцев назад

      Hi @davidraamiah3435. I have a few honest questions. Is it actually safe and effective to overhang metal roofing 6" (or more?) at the gables and over the sides? One, is that "allowed?" Two, is that safe? Three, is that going to hold up even against wind?

    • @goinggoinggone17
      @goinggoinggone17 4 месяца назад +1

      @@dbf1dware yes 6 inches on gale ends and depending on how heavy the gauge of tin you can go 16 inches over on sides. If metal isn’t thick gauge, it’s better not to go more than 12 inches on sides. However you can extend the rafters and go 24 or even more.

    • @dbf1dware
      @dbf1dware 4 месяца назад +1

      @@goinggoinggone17 Cool. Thx.

  • @reggiemcdaniel1802
    @reggiemcdaniel1802 8 месяцев назад +2

    Every construction classroom should have this project shown in their course. My way or the highway.

  • @lawman95b1987
    @lawman95b1987 Год назад +10

    That 3/4 TG Flooring will serve you well. One thing I did to my floor was to add 1" Blue Foam Board and through 3/8" Sanded on one side Plywood on top of that. It makes one hell of a difference in the floor temp, when the outside temp drops. I don't know what part of Texas you're in, but I am in Missouri and it gets a bit colder for longer periods up here, so there's that. Great job, you didn't kill yourself while doing it, I call that a success!

  • @robertstewart9658
    @robertstewart9658 Год назад +4

    Just a tip for raising sidewalls- nail a brace along the outer edge and then tack it in as soon as that end is up. Good job overall.

  • @ryanking23
    @ryanking23 Год назад +19

    If you have to sheet a roof again by yourself prop up a couple of 2x4s attached to the roof line and the ground. You can slide the sheet up without the risk of injury and gravity helps you keep the sheet in the air. Nice job getting twice the shed for half the cost!

    • @informer3evans797
      @informer3evans797 Год назад +4

      Could have also added a few temporary screws at the bottom edge and let the OSB rest on it just to get it up there. But with most things he seemed to adapt and figure out ways to get it done. Might I add--by himself.

    • @longtallsambo
      @longtallsambo Год назад +2

      It would have been much easier to start at the eave instead of the ridge with the roof sheathing!. I don't see the point in starting at the top.

  • @elliepar9447
    @elliepar9447 2 месяца назад +1

    It's amazing what we can do when we are doing it for our kids to enjoy... When you said this is comedy, that took me back years ago in some of the things i've built , seeing you do a lot of the same things I did back in the day and almost knocking myself out , like the first sheet on the roof . I'm sure your kids will appreciate all your hard work even more when they watch everything you went through just to give them a cool club house ! All in all, The Great work of a loving Dad! Nothing but RESPECT to you!!!

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  2 месяца назад

      I appreciate it! Thanks for the support!

  • @griffgriffiths9982
    @griffgriffiths9982 9 месяцев назад +3

    Really impressive. A lot of people were really scathing about it, but you built, ON YOUR OWN, without a crew, a really good shed for your tools and for your children. Excellent! I learned a lot from your video. Thanks for doing this.

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks! Hope you enjoyed the video!

  • @STho205
    @STho205 Год назад +4

    Interesting to watch. Thanks.
    Installing roof decking is very hard for a solo DIY...then you have to shingle it 15 to twenty feet off the ground. That's why I always did sheds with steel roof panels over stringers. I knew my strength and balance limits...even when I was 30.

  • @renshaw5darlene1519
    @renshaw5darlene1519 8 месяцев назад +3

    Great shed. Glad you survived. Some of your footage was a nail biter! Stay safe 😀

  • @johnlosey2248
    @johnlosey2248 Год назад +2

    I see you built a shed? Without watching One RUclips video or reading one book on framing! Thanks for the excitement and laughs. It was like a video of someone going over Niagara Falls in a barrel on purpose wow!

  • @handyman1310
    @handyman1310 Год назад +2

    nice. the best part was putting plywood up, just makes me wanna jump through the screen and help. funny too.

  • @rufelestrada9791
    @rufelestrada9791 Год назад +9

    Great effort! Suggest adding verticle 2x4's under the 2x6's that support the loft, just like they do for window supports, because the loft is HEAVY and only nails are holding it up. Woudn't trust just nails.

  • @jefflove3049
    @jefflove3049 Год назад +6

    My Dad had a Tough Shed built/installed at his summer getaway. The price of the shed includes delivery, building the shed, 8 hours of labor (2 persons, 4 hours each), and the fact that they persons that built the shed knew what they were doing.

    • @wvp07
      @wvp07 Год назад

      That’s great info!

    • @WackyMatt91
      @WackyMatt91 Год назад

      Came here to post this. Yeah, you can build the shed yourself for "half the price", but that's only if your time is worthless. I'd personally be willing to pay the premium just to not have to do it myself....and to have someone to point the finger at if something is fucky 😂

    • @AmbientShades
      @AmbientShades Год назад

      @@WackyMatt91 A lot of those pre-built sheds rot before you ever finish paying it off, as what happened to my brother. They use sub-par materials and charge 3 times what it's worth. And good luck getting them to repair or replace anything, you're sol. Better pay that bill tho or they'll come take it and everything you got in it. Better to buy a good set of plans and build your own with materials you pick.

  • @dalemettee1147
    @dalemettee1147 8 месяцев назад +2

    When I was thinking of a shed for my mower and other outdoor tools, I decided to build my own. The prices at the time were just as crazy as they are now. I put up an eight by twelve unit for about a third of the cost of a prebuilt one. Used T1-11 siding. Also built my own roofing trusses. My brother in-law installed the shingles. My father in-law had bought three basement thermal windows with the wrong sizes and gave them to me for the shed. I did something a little different for access to the areas. On the left side, doors for the lawn equipment and double doors on the front side for my other things including an air compressor, speaker hookups and phone line hookup. Power was installed from the house and an air line put down for a feed to the basement.

  • @rbrock00
    @rbrock00 8 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for showing us the good, the bad, and the ugly. Been there, done that.

  • @07slowbalt
    @07slowbalt Год назад +12

    Im in construction but not a carpenter by trade. This looks better than half the carpenters work on job sites so take this as a compliment. Watching you work solo and mentioning the struggles of doing big projects on your own resonate with me. I hate asking friends for help so i always take on jobs on my own some of which get overwhelming. But kudos to you for powering through it. Building looks good.
    Fyi Fast2k is quick/easy pour product instead of mixing concrete. Instead of leveling blocks maybe consider piers for your next project down the line and you mix this small 2lb bag of liquid thats equivalent to roughly 40lbs of concrete "if i recall the numbers correctly". It wont rot out lumber, sets fast, expands in a hole. Might of been easier and then structurally tied to the ground. Im going to use it to take on a deck project all on my own next year. Itll be my first!

  • @GreggPolicari
    @GreggPolicari Год назад +3

    That was one of the funniest things I have ever seen. He installs the roof like I would!

  • @fiskfarm
    @fiskfarm Год назад +2

    This just could become an OSHA training flick of what not to do 😕😜🤣👀 But I bet you slept well. Anyone else stick it out just to see if he survived? BUT the shed came out great so it was worth every sore muscle. Those samples at Lowes are just there for shock value. No real diy would ever pay those prices👍😎👌🇺🇸

  • @davidward8578
    @davidward8578 Год назад +8

    You done good my friend. I remember my first outbuilding I built by myself. I used rough lumber from the local sawmill which back then only cost $400. with me ripping my own 2x4s. lol The building you built looks nicer and bigger plus you made a playhouse for your kids which was awesome.

  • @solarfluxman8810
    @solarfluxman8810 7 месяцев назад +12

    I noticed your wall top plates weren't interlocked or overlapping in the corners. It would help to tie the two walls together. The roof is pushing outward on the walls with a lot of force and it's important to lock the top plates together to help prevent the walls from pushing outwards. Also, the little gusset plates in the top of the roof aren't enough when the roof gets loaded with snow. It looks like you live in a dry climate though. More horizontal cross bracing would help, part way down the roof line, like the letter "A". I'll give you an "A" for effort and determination though. Edit: I just finished watching and I heard you say the same thing about the top plates, so I know you are aware. The loft helps tie the walls together. Maybe add a loft to the other end to help.

    • @erikkrumm2910
      @erikkrumm2910 5 месяцев назад +1

      I think a loft on the other side might help pull it together if the joist run stud to stud.

  • @tbuc2920
    @tbuc2920 Год назад +2

    Good for you Spencer you hit the price market at the right time. I read today that lumber prices are up 14% since the start of 2023. I was going to do a 9x8 walk in closet and then a 10x12 shed at my house. Pisses me off with these price hikes.

  • @ronfults3844
    @ronfults3844 Год назад +2

    Permit for a shed? That's nuts! That's why I love where I live. I had a 12x16 she'd and a 26x32 barn built behind my house. No permit required.
    And from the looks of your project I do not believe you had near enough alcohol available for a project of that size. 😎

  • @colinstace1758
    @colinstace1758 Год назад +2

    Honestly, that was hard to watch, I'm glad you made it out in one piece, all limbs intact. Pity you didn't have an experienced buddy to help. 🙂👍

  • @juancarlosmunoz7177
    @juancarlosmunoz7177 6 месяцев назад +1

    Sometimes I see people putting a shed together much less built the thing from scratch but I just can't help to notices that you have smart people and they can't get a piece of wood in the roof by themselves without causing some veins to pop. Hahaha.. entertaining as hell and you my friend has the potential. The day that you think you know it all will be the day that you stop learning!!

  • @aday1637
    @aday1637 Год назад +4

    I recently priced out the materials for a 12x16 shed...total came to $2200.

  • @jereyesjr
    @jereyesjr Год назад +5

    That was absolutely brilliant how you used the floor to make a jig for the rafters!

  • @CruzFamilyAdevntures
    @CruzFamilyAdevntures 2 месяца назад +2

    As i watch you struggle by urself and get it done…. I feel youu 💯

  • @stevengoetzlmusic
    @stevengoetzlmusic Год назад +2

    I love how you did all of this by yourself… Nearly at the expense of breaking your back. Reminds me a little of myself. This video was a pleasure. Great work man!

  • @sharonnorvell3397
    @sharonnorvell3397 Год назад +4

    Thanks for sharing this build...you did a great job!

  • @8ducks269
    @8ducks269 Год назад +2

    Best shed building video on the net!! I laughed my a$$ off! Thank you🤣

  • @inmyfreetyme
    @inmyfreetyme 9 месяцев назад +2

    For you to have built that by yourself...WOW !! My hats off to you buddy. Lots of HARD work for sure. Now go and get that well deserved nap. Cheers to you !!😎😎

  • @richardthomas1566
    @richardthomas1566 Год назад +5

    You need some 4 ft long 2x4s collar ties so it dose not start to spread out on you . The walls will start to push out just google collar ties framing . Other than that it’s fantastic !

  • @dgeo0392
    @dgeo0392 Год назад +3

    I give you credit for doing it yourself. Most would not bother or pay $$$. Good video. Unlike the others I wouldn't know what was fine wrong unless I researched. It's amazing to watch it all come together!

  • @rsf1105
    @rsf1105 2 месяца назад +1

    Just wanted to say attaboy!! Haven't laughed so hard in awhile when you put up the first wall and first roof sheeting, thanks for that! 🤠😂

  • @att2976
    @att2976 Год назад +1

    Look good for DIY. Now time to fix the back neighbor's fence. lol

  • @LookUpTheKalergiPlanWhitePeeps
    @LookUpTheKalergiPlanWhitePeeps Год назад +12

    What a great build and wonderful dad for his kids too. I COMPLETELY know what it's like to build something like this on your own.

  • @davidkingsley4449
    @davidkingsley4449 Год назад +5

    😂😂😂😂 I've been building houses for 20+ years, I've never seen someone almost die more times than you building a shed, I'm impressed 😂

    • @deucalion26
      @deucalion26 Год назад

      The ladder work alone was enough to get an inspector's OSHA senses tingling...

  • @stacyspooner3572
    @stacyspooner3572 Год назад +1

    This is pure gold!!! Thank you for the laughs!! " Use that belly power"

  • @EstimateguardAcademy
    @EstimateguardAcademy Год назад +3

    Beautiful job. Thanks for sharing!

  • @adamgaddis8808
    @adamgaddis8808 Год назад +4

    Thanks for sharing. I'm gonna be doing this same project soon.

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +1

      It’s a lot of work… but very satisfying!!!

  • @niallmacdonald2710
    @niallmacdonald2710 Год назад +1

    The climbing wall to the clubhouse for the kids was the extra I'd have never thought of before your video. Thanks for a great idea.

  • @jimtownsend7899
    @jimtownsend7899 Месяц назад +1

    I'm wore out just watching you! I wouldn't try it now since I'm old, but when I was your age, I did all kinds of crazy stuff like you. God bless you, and let's hope by the time you get to be my age, you'll still be able to walk and stand up straight, and will have all that nonsense out of your system! 🤣

  • @michaelrodman4672
    @michaelrodman4672 Год назад +23

    What a great video. Glad you finally figured out using diagonal braces to help keep the walls erect and safe prior to nailing off. What no skylight up in the loft? Just a thought. Question why the roof was started from Top down vs Bottom up to help supporting things. Over all it got done and it looks great. That's what counts! Looking forward to seeing the insulation and final inside sheetrock work. Under $2K was a huge accomplishment. Looking forward to seeing future videos.

    • @deucalion26
      @deucalion26 Год назад

      When you cut corners, your price goes down.
      Between the rafters and the loft, that's a lawsuit waiting to happen.
      You always pay, either before or after...

  • @Some1special
    @Some1special Год назад +4

    2 tools I highly recommend are a straight speed square and a level. Doesn't have to be perfect but the roof and foundation are the most important parts. If the foundation isn't flat and level the entire structure will be crooked and if the roof is poorly made the entire structure won't last long.

  • @cwolf8841
    @cwolf8841 Год назад +1

    I finished my shed interior with that Gladiator poly slat wall.
    Gives you adjustable tool hangers, shelving, etc.

  • @denisewilson8367
    @denisewilson8367 3 месяца назад +1

    I think you did well for never building a larger building before. I enjoyed watching.
    I see the comments have the safety issues covered so I won't add my 2 cents.

  • @delandbrooks3291
    @delandbrooks3291 Год назад +5

    One nail in a temp brace on each end of that wall makes it much easier to stand up. It will usually hold from friction while you change your grip. Then when it's upright one nail at the bottom until you can plumb it.

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +2

      Thanks for the advice! I think I just got too excited to get that first wall up! LoL

    • @colinstace1758
      @colinstace1758 Год назад +2

      @@fixingspencer and gf wasn't ANY help, I was like "don't run away, grab it anywhere" 🤣👍

  • @brianr101010
    @brianr101010 Год назад +7

    For your floor/base frame I think you should have flipped the middle rail the other way so the "scabbed" joints are alternated to keep from having a potential frame failure point all the way across in line on the same end of the shed and also put blocks under the "scabbed" joints with shims to add extra support and strength. Not knocking, you just my opinion which may be totally wrong.

  • @goldenboyproductions7229
    @goldenboyproductions7229 7 месяцев назад +1

    Have to say... you're the first I've seen build a shed in flip-flops.

  • @jaypeerobot3745
    @jaypeerobot3745 8 месяцев назад +2

    I'm so glad you were able to maintain a 3 point contact while on that ladder, lol! What was wrong with using that perfectly setup scaffold? More stable than a ladder.

  • @kaydring2630
    @kaydring2630 Год назад +6

    Well done, massive job but you nailed it !

  • @rudyrivera7426
    @rudyrivera7426 Год назад +3

    Great video! Thanks for sharing! 👍

  • @robertwilliams-wd6cp
    @robertwilliams-wd6cp Год назад +1

    I bought a shed kit from Wolahan Lumber back in 1994 12x16 with a gambrel roof delivered and built in 2 days my neighbor and I bought two one for me and one for him $1,400 each . My man cave at 72 years old , fridge computer stereo 32"tv microwave 8 foot 220 v. electric heat 6,000 btu air conditioner . Eight inch ceiling insulation r-13 in walls ,wish had insulated the floor , but is nice summer and winter in Ohio .

  • @charliecaltagarone9234
    @charliecaltagarone9234 3 месяца назад

    Thank you...I now feel like a genius after watching you try to put the first sheet on the roof. 😂

  • @nathancarranza9860
    @nathancarranza9860 Год назад +4

    Bro -- great job. I'm going to build a shed here in the Chicago suburbs and I'm sure I'll do some things wrong too, but your video shows that if someone is willing, it's possible. Definitely inspiring.

  • @todddunn945
    @todddunn945 Год назад +4

    Not a bad result. Now you know how to build the next one better. I did more or less the same thing when I decided I needed a shed. I was stunned by the low quality and high prices at the big box stores so I built my own 12'x16' "shed". I ended up spending about $3K back in 2006, but for that price I built a fully insulated shed with electricity, double 2x4 walls, double pane windows, insulated door and fully finished interior (gyprock, painted, etc.). The outside of mine is cedar shingled. The hardest part of the entire project was digging the 50' long trench for the electrical line since out "top soil" includes rocks up to about 18".

    • @MrSteeDoo
      @MrSteeDoo Год назад +1

      who in the world still calls it "gyprock"?

  • @PV96
    @PV96 Год назад +1

    I love your use of the technical jargon of construction work!!! 😂😂😂 Truthfully, you did good!!!

  • @aaronwagner8904
    @aaronwagner8904 11 месяцев назад +1

    Mad respect! It's how doers get things done. I look at those books on the shelf at Lowe's and think "I could buy the book or I could buy some beer for when I'm done."

  • @backyardgardeningwithchefb2304
    @backyardgardeningwithchefb2304 Год назад +7

    Me thinks you will come to regret having your shed that close to the fence

  • @garyandrhoda
    @garyandrhoda Год назад +13

    Nice build! At 15:40 what went crawling underneath the floor on the left edge?

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +9

      That is my son’s pet tortoise named Oogway!! LOL

    • @larrykbrew
      @larrykbrew Год назад

      I thought it was a groundhog

  • @carbs66
    @carbs66 Год назад +1

    no way... I mean... no way!!... that would happen here without a permit. That thing is huge!
    Hope your neighbors don't freak out. Good accomplishment man!

  • @tomruth9487
    @tomruth9487 Год назад +1

    There's something very satisfying and basic, like building a fire to keep yourself warm, or growing your own food, when it comes to making a structure that is bigger than you. Nice work.

  • @rgbking488
    @rgbking488 Год назад +20

    This is awesome man - wanting to do the same thing. Nicely done! I'm around the Austin area; glad the weather is chilling out. That pricing is great, and thank you so much for making the video...I know it was a lot of work, on top of the "LOT OF WORK" you were already doing for the project. Love to see you getting after it. Make some more vids, haha - 'post-shed-build' video or something, with tips, thoughts, how it went, what you would do differently. I'm sure people would watch them! I would. Cheers,

    • @fixingspencer
      @fixingspencer  Год назад +6

      Thanks for the comment! About to put in some windows and will definitely make a video about the shed after living with it for awhile.

    • @rgbking488
      @rgbking488 Год назад +5

      @@fixingspencer that's awesome. Haa, I read that as "living in it" 😂 and had to re-read that one. Good deal!

    • @stacyspooner3572
      @stacyspooner3572 Год назад +1

      @@rgbking488 , same. I was thinking "dang, he must have pissed the Missus off" lol

    • @rgbking488
      @rgbking488 Год назад

      @@stacyspooner3572 hahaha hilarious that you thought that also...must be loads of people, ha. A good laugh for sure

  • @Mixwell1983
    @Mixwell1983 Год назад +3

    When you were trying to get the roof sheeting on top I was thinking a scrap piece of 2x4 screwed on top of the rafters near where the birds mout would sit on the top plate. the base woulda gave you a lip to stack a few sheets by pushing em up on it from outside. Even just feeding the 4x8 sheets from the ladder outside woulda been way easier than trying to feed it between the rafters.. glad you got it done and didn't injure yourself.
    I want to make a cabin someday in my woods so ive been watching tons of videos and ran across yours in the mix. Its making me question if I really want to build one, my problem is my baclyard slopes down into a ravine and then back uphill where i want to build so hauling in material will be a pain in the ass . Id have to use my ATV but I think i may need a bridge 1st possibly

  • @dialdude
    @dialdude 2 месяца назад +1

    I am in awe that you did this by yourself. But even more so that you didnt hurt yourself. Please, little more planning before doing !! Put braces on walls before lifting them up. Put stops end of ridge beams before lifting the panels. Great job, and without hospital bills !!

  • @paulcast6557
    @paulcast6557 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am very impressed. But I thought you were freaking crazy on that first sheet of the roof!

  • @geraldpatrick9463
    @geraldpatrick9463 Год назад +3

    Standing that first wall would have been so much easier if you had tacked brace to each end with a single screw loosely so it could pivot. ( Long part away from the wall) Then as you lifted it, the 2x would have caught part of the weight so you could get a better grip. They also would have allowed you to nail them off to support the wall so that you could then nail the wall down to the deck.

  • @dannyspencer6211
    @dannyspencer6211 Год назад +4

    Great job!!! You just about gave me a heart attack several times tho!!

  • @imagineitagain558
    @imagineitagain558 Год назад +2

    This is cool I drew up plans for a 12x16 Lodge type getaway shed. I think it’s the perfect size for a hangout area plus somewhere you could be able to sleep in. I’ve wanted for a long time to document when I build it.