• Hi all and welcome to TheWoodHaven2 brought into the 21st Century, kicking and screaming! We all have Alasdair to thank for the vast bulk of the heavy lifting to get us here, no more so than me because he's taken away a huge burden of responsibility from my shoulders and brought us to this new shiny home, with all your previous content (hopefully) still intact! Please peruse and feed back. There is still plenty to do, like changing the colour scheme, adding the banner graphic, tweaking the odd setting here and there so I have added a new thread in the 'Technical Issues, Bugs and Feature Requests' forum for you to add any issues you find, any missing settings or just anything you'd like to see added/removed from the feature set that Xenforo offers. We will get to everything over the coming weeks so please be patient, but add anything at all to the thread I mention above and we promise to get to them over the next few days/weeks/months. In the meantime, please enjoy!

Ian’s new workshop. The Wonky Donkey. Insulated side dooor.

58 60 years ago the screws and methods of putting them in where very different to today.
I don’t want to imagine trying to screw a floor down with slot head screws unless you use a London screwdriver.
Good point! I suppose it would have been time for a Yankie, were Philips screws out then? Tried one with slotted screws and it most often slipped off and chewed up the wood.
 
The guy that taught me was an old school coffin maker, be hated the modern yankey screwdriver, I understood why when it slipped off whilst hanging a mahogany door with polished brass hinges.
I remember when Philips and Pozi screws where first available to us, went out and bought a 7.2 volt makita, saved so much time!
 
So back to the us and back to work, minus 6c but I was well wrapped up, I had realised that the vertical blocks I had added to the end (very wonky) wall would be difficult to hit with the 7” screws through all the insulation so I have had to sacrifice an inch and a half off the workshop length and add horizontal 2x4’s.

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Forgot to mention in the what tools I got for Xmas that son Ben bought me a small level, just like a dozen others but with the added bonus of coloured lights to tell you when it’s level. Now I did think that it was just a gimmick but for a job like this it was very handy indeed, not super accurate about 3mm over 6feet, so you wouldn’t want to be doing anything critical but for a job like this it was ideal with a driver in one hand and levelling up the 2x4 and squinting at the bubble or not in this case! Lift the wood till the level turns green and screw it down.

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Then it was on with the Kingspan type insulation, you may remember I was finding it difficult to cut? Well out came a very useful tool, long wavy edged cutters that fit onto a multi tool. Noisy yes but so quick and easy, even better than a hot knife through butter!

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In reference to the insulation cutters above I’m sorry to report that they are totally unfit for purpose and sincere apologies to anyone who followed my recommendation and bought one.
They cut very well with very little dust or mess but the weld gives up after very little use and the blade drops off the Multitool fitment, I was hoping it was just that blade but trying the second I bought it lasted less than a minute!
Again apologies Ian
 
The wall insulation has been going really well, I only have a bit to do on the last wall and that’s that phase finished. It’s the wall that has two windows and a door to the garden, the door won’t be used much but better we keep it than board it up. So I decided to insulate it This involved adding a box to the inside of the door 6” deep for the insulation and moving the hinges to the room side of the box.
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This job has taken me far far longer than I anticipated as my first attempt wasn’t very good at all, the reinforced ply edge where the hinges were flexed far too much and coupled with the door being twisted I was forced to scrap it and start again.
This time I used a it of 1 1/2” pine for the hinge side and it was a huge improvement. The door was an old barn door with three horizontal ledges, no brace, but well made with clenched over nails and no sag.

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I added some of that thin shiny stuff (Radiant barrier?) between the ledges and covered it over with two layers of rigid foam then a lid of 1/2” ply, all I had was two long thin bits and it needed fastening together, this went much better than I’d feared.

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The piece of wood going across the door is to fasten a locking bar to. Will be doing this next, it involves a BIG nut and bolt.
 
Just an update, the insulation has gone well, just two sheets to do but they are around the windows and side door so nothing like as quick as the bish bash full sheets around the rest of the room.
Here’s a pic to show the cutouts around the first window.
After that the Furring strips go on then it’s the big heavy headers Coach screwed to the Barns 2x4’s followed by the joist hangers and joists, then lots of insulation on top and the thing is almost done! I really can’t wait!!!

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Oh yes I remember now , I guess my wife is right in that I am getting forgetful.
A 4'x8' sheet of drywall will have a tapered edge on the long sides and square edge on the ends. When taping pull the butt joints to twice the width as the tapered edges and you will be fine.
 
Ian when I built my shed I lined the internals with white faced melamine, just put a small v on the joints to stop the sharp edge. It give a nice bright finish and harder than drywall
 
Here is an example. Butt joints top and sides, tapered joints in the middle. This was the finish coat I did today. View attachment 54314
Now you see Scott, that just proves that I don’t know what I’m doing lol.
I was going to have the 8’ length horizontal with 2 boards resting on the top of each other, so that there was only one line of mud around the room. It would have meant that the square ends were butted up against each other and I was wondering what to do about that!
Ian
 
It's coming on well Ian.

I don't fancy doing the drywall and 'mudding' thing so wish you well in doing it.

I used 1.5mm~2mm (forget which) white plastic wall sheeting. They came as 8'x4'... stuck to the OSB lining fixed to the concrete block walls. Bit of a wobble when cutting to height as my place isn't 8ft high - same when I had to reduce for the widths around doors/windows... I was going to butt joint but they do a joint strip so used that. Saves me having to paint the walls. T&g soffit boards for the ceiling.
 
It's coming on well Ian.

I don't fancy doing the drywall and 'mudding' thing so wish you well in doing it.

I used 1.5mm~2mm (forget which) white plastic wall sheeting. They came as 8'x4'... stuck to the OSB lining fixed to the concrete block walls. Bit of a wobble when cutting to height as my place isn't 8ft high - same when I had to reduce for the widths around doors/windows... I was going to butt joint but they do a joint strip so used that. Saves me having to paint the walls. T&g soffit boards for the ceiling.
Oh yes I know the stuff, I’ve used it as a backing in built in wardrobes in the past, that’s not a bad idea Frank, I shall see if
Ian it’s cost effective over here, I hate dealing with plasterboard so that might be a good alternative!
 
Just did a check for prices here Ian... gone up quite a bit since I got mine.

May still be worth considering though as once up there's no maintenance, just a wipe over or put the hoover (or point a blower) on/at it to remove dust. Doesn't get damaged like plasterboard would if you bang a piece of wood (or metal?) in to it.

Additional *bonus*: makes for a good "whiteboard" for notes etc. 😎
 
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