Moving a shed!
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Discussion

NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
We have a shed in the garden that needs moving. It's not in the best condition and I'm not sure it will survive, but I want to try anyway! The base is on a few wooden battens (or maybe they are part of it) on some slabs, and we want to move it over to the other side of the garden. The sides are bolted together but there are all sorts of shelves inside that would need to be taken down if we were going to dismantle it, and I think the roof is nailed on - can't see any bolts anywhere.

As a result I want to try and shift it in one go. Current thinking is to procure 3 or 4 scaffolding poles from somewhere, lever it up onto the first one, and then roll it across the not particularly level grass eek

Even if it works it means trying to find a few scaff poles that are short enough to fit in the car but long enough to go under the shed...

Anybody got any better ideas or tried this before?

V8mate

45,899 posts

205 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
HIAB.


HTH.

R5GTTGAZ

7,897 posts

236 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
Good idea with the scaff poles, thats how I moved mine.

V8mate

45,899 posts

205 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
How big is the shed?

Could you arrange four scaffold poles around it - sedan chair style - and then have four chaps deadlift it and carry it?

JamesNotJim

755 posts

202 months

Monday 25th May 2009
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two traps under the shed at either end, four decent sized blokes,get a good grip and move. Have shifted several for family and friends this way and always goes smooth.


NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
V8mate said:
How big is the shed?

Could you arrange four scaffold poles around it - sedan chair style - and then have four chaps deadlift it and carry it?
Normal shed size wink Not huge, but bigger than the small tool store ones. Not sure where the scaff poles would go - under the eves and it would probably just rip the roof off hehe

Other problem is the lack of four chaps - more likely going to be me on my own frown

HIAB may be overkill and might be a problem getting it into the back garden wink

V8mate

45,899 posts

205 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
NiceCupOfTea said:
V8mate said:
How big is the shed?

Could you arrange four scaffold poles around it - sedan chair style - and then have four chaps deadlift it and carry it?
Normal shed size wink Not huge, but bigger than the small tool store ones. Not sure where the scaff poles would go - under the eves and it would probably just rip the roof off hehe

Other problem is the lack of four chaps - more likely going to be me on my own frown

HIAB may be overkill and might be a problem getting it into the back garden wink
I doubt very much that there's any solution you can achieve working alone.

No friends or family at all?

NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
Not locally who I could call on to help really frown

V8mate

45,899 posts

205 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
It doesn't look that bad where it is.

Maybe a lick of paint and a nice climbing rose and it'll be fine where it is for another 10 years biggrin

NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
V8mate said:
It doesn't look that bad where it is.

Maybe a lick of paint and a nice climbing rose and it'll be fine where it is for another 10 years biggrin
It won't look quite so good whan it's had the new garage built on top of it hehe

Chrisgr31

14,068 posts

271 months

Monday 25th May 2009
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Rather than scaffold poles, what about using wooden fence posts (needless to say round ones!). With a larger diameter would they roll better?

V8mate

45,899 posts

205 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
Unless he's built like Giant Haystacks, the OP will never move it alone without it twisting.

NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
Will look into the fence posts.

V8, I can't believe it will be that heavy once it's empty. If I can use a fulcrum to raise one end and get a roller underneath, surely it's just a case of pushing it along?

mgtony

4,134 posts

206 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
Instead of rolling straight on the grass, lay a piece of scrap timber either end of the rollers across the garden so that it all rolls along these. Should make for an easier job.
Otherwise the offer of a few drink should see a few local phers on your doorstep!smile

R5GTTGAZ

7,897 posts

236 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
This guy is trying to move a shed also.....

http://pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&f...



NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Monday 25th May 2009
quotequote all
mgtony said:
Instead of rolling straight on the grass, lay a piece of scrap timber either end of the rollers across the garden so that it all rolls along these. Should make for an easier job.
Otherwise the offer of a few drink should see a few local phers on your doorstep!smile
Good thinking (on both points!)

R5GTT> hehe

Any thoughts on where I could procure scaff poles / round fence posts legally & cheaply? scratchchin

eliot

11,909 posts

270 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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Got a similar problem - was considering borrowing a pallet truck.
Will probably have a shed-move-a-q instead, as free food and beer will get me mates round pronto under false pretences!

Eggle

3,609 posts

252 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
quotequote all
R5GTTGAZ said:
This guy is trying to move a shed also.....

http://pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&f...
laugh

NiceCupOfTea

Original Poster:

25,424 posts

267 months

Thursday 9th July 2009
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Update!

Many thanks to PHer ncs to helped me get hold of a couple of timber rounds!

Sawed them in half and here's what I did this morning!:

Firstly, used one pole is a fulcrum and a bit of wood off a rotten corner seat I am pulling apart to lever it up high enough to get a trolley jack under the middle of it (one of the wooden battens that runs down the length of the shed)



Jacked it up high enough to get one of the rounds half way down the shed underneath, remove jack, and use timber as fulcrum to pull the front back down onto a second bit of timber:



Now start rolling!















Piece of cake! biggrin All done on my own!

Thanks for all the advice smile

Edited by NiceCupOfTea on Thursday 9th July 15:01

V8mate

45,899 posts

205 months

Thursday 9th July 2009
quotequote all
Now you need to get it off those logs wink