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Thread: Chance of a lifetime 3! Build a bike shed

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by bogan View Post
    yeh, that'd be the easiest way, any idea how much and where to get em from?
    shipping containers can be got for 3k or less if they have been decomissioned for transport uses. probably alot cheaper than the cost of building a shed, and fuckall legalities to comply with. running power to it is easy.

    to buy one, look up container rentals and sales. there are lots of companies out there that both rent and sell them.

    getting one delivered by swinglift to your place should cost around 300-400.

    Shipping container would be a great idea.

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by bogan View Post
    yeh, that'd be the easiest way, any idea how much and where to get em from?
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  3. #18
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    One thing about shipping containers: they are pretty well sealed, so if you keep stuff in them, and dont open the door regularly, there can be condensation, mould and rust problems. I had a client involved in litigation over that: a houselot of furniture allegedly went mouldy when in a container for a couple of years. Shouldnt be an issue in your application though.

    Please if you are running power out to it, use something with an RCD. wouldnt want to liven the whole thing up to 240V would we?
    I thought elections were decided by angry posts on social media. - F5 Dave

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Headbanger View Post
    Onkyo amp and Infinity speakers. Serious power.

    But I'm not joking, I converted half my shed into a home theatre, and the bike lives in there,anchored to the floor in front of a row of lazyboys.
    doesnt it get in the way of the screen?
    I thought elections were decided by angry posts on social media. - F5 Dave

  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by HenryDorsetCase View Post
    doesnt it get in the way of the screen?
    Not when its hard up against the wall.

    Luckily the slot car set is on a hinged platform to allow it to to be raised out of the way.


    35 going on 12......

  6. #21
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    25th April 2009 - 17:38
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    Quote Originally Posted by tigertim20 View Post
    I would have steel pipes buried in the concrete floor, all linked to each other, and figure a way of making the pipes to which you chain your bikes live when you close the place up, so anyone trying to steal your bikes gets a nice big shock. bet there are some heavy legal implications for such a set up though.
    camers would be a must, that feed to an external source, so that breaking the cameras would not destroy what they record.

    Cameras IN the shed, and at least one outside watching the entrance.
    also, two cameras outside the property, one facing each way up the road in case some cunning wanker decides to park a vehicle on the road to load stolen bikes into.

    four cameras wouldnt be too pricey i wouldnt think.
    true, I have investigated such a setup, but data logging four cameras takes up a lot of space, and motion detection takes up a lot of cpu, though my flatmate has just built a linux based server for the flat...
    "A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal

  7. #22
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    A shipping container is only as good as the padlock on the door, and freakin ugly.

    Damned if I would want one on my section, Not when the alternative is a shed.

    A shed/workshop is a life necessity, I pity anyone without one.

    If you do go with a shipping container then build a steel box around the padlock so the theiving fucks can't get to it with a set of bolt cutters.

  8. #23
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    A lot of shipping containers have a steel box around the padlock so thieves would have to gasaxe that off first. They are ugly though.

  9. #24
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    14th July 2006 - 21:39
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    What's the existing garage like - if it is freestanding and there is 4m or so free space on either end it would be a easy job to extend the existing garage - concrete pad, 3 walls and a roof. Wire up some lighting and presto - a dedicated bike area. Plus it will add actual value to the property. Everyone likes a big one to park in............

  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by AllanB View Post
    What's the existing garage like - if it is freestanding and there is 4m or so free space on either end it would be a easy job to extend the existing garage - concrete pad, 3 walls and a roof. Wire up some lighting and presto - a dedicated bike area. Plus it will add actual value to the property. Everyone likes a big one to park in............
    existing garage is a cheap as kitset one, so would be a decent amount of work to strengthen it up to cope with an addition, new one would be mainly for storage not workshop probly park my daily rider in the current shed. think he wants it portable to get round the whole building regs/consent thing too.
    "A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal

  11. #26
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    being builders we have had quite a few shipping containers over the years all with the box welded over the padlock ,the problem with them is they are made out of corten (spelling may be wrong) steel and any welding to or on the container needs a special welding technic which is not cheap , and if it not done this way in 6 months time you can hit the box or what ever you have welded on with a hammer and it will fall off , we lost alot of tools over the years before we found that out

  12. #27
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    25th November 2006 - 22:43
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    Quote Originally Posted by bogan View Post
    true, I have investigated such a setup, but data logging four cameras takes up a lot of space, and motion detection takes up a lot of cpu, though my flatmate has just built a linux based server for the flat...
    Shouldnt think so. 1. Wipe data daily or weekly every time nothing gets stolen. 2. Motion detection can be a <$10 electronic circuit wired to your camera, IR detects movement, camera switches on, records for fixed length of time or until movement stops.
    Cheap computer that can handle multiple feeds should be a few hundy, cameras shouldnt be too much either. Always made me laugh in jaycar when people spent 2000+ on a 'budget' security system!
    That being said, not sure how the law handles security tapes, would be far more interesting to just pump chloroform into the room...

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  13. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by ants67 View Post
    being builders we have had quite a few shipping containers over the years all with the box welded over the padlock ,the problem with them is they are made out of corten (spelling may be wrong) steel and any welding to or on the container needs a special welding technic which is not cheap , and if it not done this way in 6 months time you can hit the box or what ever you have welded on with a hammer and it will fall off , we lost alot of tools over the years before we found that out
    You weld the box to the locking mechanism, As you nip the door shut the box slides over the tab the padlock goes through.

    No special welding needed.

    and it sure as hell isn't going to fall off in six months due to a hammer blow.

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