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Low Prices Were Born Here, And Raised Elsewhere!
I Can Assemble Your Shed.
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This one costs $135, plus panels. For the panels, you can go cheap and use OSB (a form of chip board). Imagine that your foot crashes through the floor five years from now! You only fall two inches, so you don't get hurt. But you DESTROYED your floor! And how do you replace it? You'd better use pressure treated plywood, like I use on my Solid Floor. Figure $30 a sheet. So if you want 8x12, you need 3 sheets, or $90, for a total of $225. Anything bigger needs more than 3 sheets. Seems like a good enough floor, but it suffers from The SHOE BOX Problem! |
Some vinyl sheds come with a vinyl floor.
I remember once I helped a guy assemble a vinyl shed that came with a floor. The floor came in 8 panels.
Snapping two panels together was easy. And then another, and another. But the next step was IMPOSSIBLE!
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These are two 8x6 panels, each made up from four 2x6 panels. That long joint is eight feet long. The two panels are NOT rigid, like the picture suggests. Each one flexes. You CANNOT connect the two big panels unless that center line is ABSOLUTELY straight! They are UNFORGIVING! His ground was not absolutely perfect. Yours isn't either. We ended up taking all the panels down to his patio, which was a concrete slab. We WERE able to snap them together. But then we had to carry the entire floor in one big piece back to the work site. And then we discovered another problem! Once in a while, one of us would accidentally step on a crack and two panels would flex and make scary cracking sounds! I wonder if there could actually be a separation AFTER the shed was built! This is NOT a firm floor. I don't think it's moisture-proof. Those joints are not watertight. I swore that day that I would NEVER build a another shed on the ground. You will swear too if you try it. |
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Here's a page in the manual that we skipped. They actually suggest building a wooden floor! Imagine! You buy a shed with a floor, but it's not a floor you can assemble or even walk on! And you thought the floor was included! Even if you go to this trouble, you will still have The SHOE BOX Problem! |
Take a shoebox, without the lid. Push two opposite corners together. Notice how the other two corners pop out?
Sheds do that too!
None of those floors will be table-top flat! They all lie on the ground, which is not perfectly flat.
Your ground might look flat to the naked eye. You won't see the problem until it's too late:
The frame will be twisted. Hold a sheet of paper by three corners, and look at the other corner. Your ground won't sag that much, but it doesn't have to sag too much to get two predrilled holes to misalign.
The bottom footprint might be a perfect rectangle, but the top will NOT be! How will you install the roof?
Drill new holes? You're TRYING to build a crooked shed? It might not even be rain proof!
Ask a buddy to push in a corner to get the holes to line up? You will be asking that little screw to hold too much weight. So now the walls are square, but you lifted that low corner! Here come the bugs! And the rodents!
Want proof? Go read some customer reviews. Some people say their shed went up easily, and these people mention how they did their site prep. Some even poured a concrete slab!
And some say they would never do it again. One guy said, "Next time I will hire two guys to take the Lord's name in vain, rather than me." None of these people mention site prep. Apparently they just opened the box and got busy.
You can prop up a low corner with cement blocks and make your floor level. But don't do it with any of these floors.
Look at the floor kit again. Imagine a cement block under one corner. Now step on one of those beams. Yeah, I didn't think you'd actually do it.
Even with the wooden frame described with the vinyl floor, a 12-foot span is too long. That long 2x4 will flex. Stand on your floor at an edge. If you listen closely, you will hear your screws groan as you pull the floor away from the shed.
You can't build on a twisted frame. And you can't level a flimsy frame.
I use pressure treated wood throughout, even though it doesn't even TOUCH the ground. I start with two 4x4 posts, resting on concrete blocks. I level the posts, left to right and front to back. Then I build the 2x4 frame on top, and add a surface of pressure treated plywood. The result is a table-top flat frame. And it will not flex when you stand on it. It's SOLID! You could park a lawn tractor on this floor.
For sheds that come with a vinyl floor, it would be EASY to assemble that floor on this surface. And it won't flex as you walk on it. For other sheds, you won't need that floor kit! Screw your shed down onto this floor. |
How much? You could spend $225 on the floor frame above, and you'd be doing it wrong.
My Solid Floor costs $375 for the 8x12 size. It costs a few bucks more, but you will be doing it right. And YOU won't even be the one doing the work!
Prices vary with size, and on your building site. Call.
Once you have a Solid Floor, I can assemble whichever shed you buy, whether vinyl, steel, or wood. Or you can assemble your own shed.
But there ARE some "Shed Mistakes" to avoid. DON'T buy a shed that makes these mistakes! http://the-honey-do-man.com/sheds
And I hope you consider MY shed. I BEGIN with my Solid Floor! And I don't make those "Shed Mistakes."
I build a shed that's Bigger, Better, and CHEAPER!
Check it out: http://the-honey-do-man.com/sheds
Call for an appointment. We'll meet in person, and inspect your site.
Call 412-758-0912.