Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
greenhouse staging
Hello,
I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
I have used treated roofing slats and 75x20mm treated wood, availble cheap
from Wicks, to make simple benches. These can be taken out in the summer what I want to grow tomatoes and cucumbers etc. FWIW. -- Brian --------------------------------------------- www.ashnookplants.co.uk "KK" wrote in message ... Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
I have used treated roofing slats and 75x20mm treated wood, availble cheap
from Wicks, to make simple benches. These can be taken out in the summer what I want to grow tomatoes and cucumbers etc. I used the same for the staging in Joan's greenhouse. I used the same throughout, legs, bearers and slats. As I didn't fancy hammering in nails in the vicinity of all the glass ;-) and as I didn't fancy drilling and screwing all the shelf slats, I glued them down with an ordinary mastic :-)) 3 years later, no problem :-)) Mike |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
"KK" wrote in message ... Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK I have used those metal shelving units that were designed for storage in garages etc .......they were very cheap I have not seen them lately in likes of DIY stores but maybe they are available mail order of course you might also try E Bay |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Mike wrote:
I have used treated roofing slats and 75x20mm treated wood, availble cheap from Wicks, to make simple benches. These can be taken out in the summer what I want to grow tomatoes and cucumbers etc. I used the same for the staging in Joan's greenhouse. I used the same throughout, legs, bearers and slats. As I didn't fancy hammering in nails in the vicinity of all the glass ;-) and as I didn't fancy drilling and screwing all the shelf slats, I glued them down with an ordinary mastic :-)) 3 years later, no problem :-)) I wholeheartedly endorse the use of treated "two-be-one" sawn slater's battening for this and innumerable other things. Bang two together in an L-section, and you've got a surprisingly stiff chunk of timber: add a third, and it's as good as 4x2 for many jobs (the centre of a length of wood, I understand, serves little engineering purpose). This way you don't have to worry about how much of each size to order, and it comes out cheaper. Easy to handle, too. The last shed I built was on a flimsy 2x1 frame which went rock solid when skinned with exterior ply: good for fifty or a hundred years, I'd say, like a pump-house I built on the same principle but skinned with aluminium. Mike. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
When I moved into my second factory, I ordered the partitions and offices to
be built of 2 x 1 and clad in Fibre Board. "Won't be strong enough the joiners told me".. "DO IT" They ate their words and were quite happy to do the same in the third factory I fitted out :-)) The 8 x 4 fibre boards both sides provide the rigidity Sorry Sacha, just another case of I was right again. God don't you HATE me ;-)))))))))))) Mike |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
On Sun, 9 Jan 2005 13:01:02 -0000, "KK"
wrote: Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK The frame is a matter of finding what you can get strong enough and cheap enough. We got cheap galvanised angle iron from a scrapyard and welded up frames. The top is weldmesh and on top of that are 50mm thick polystyrene slabs sold for cavity wall insulation. Then polythene (to keep the polystryrene clean, capilliary matting covered with thin black perforated polythene sheet (to keep the matting relatively clean.) ================================================= Rod Weed my email address to reply. http://website.lineone.net/~rodcraddock/index.html |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
In article ,
Mike Lyle wrote: I wholeheartedly endorse the use of treated "two-be-one" sawn slater's battening for this and innumerable other things. Bang two together in an L-section, and you've got a surprisingly stiff chunk of timber: add a third, and it's as good as 4x2 for many jobs (the centre of a length of wood, I understand, serves little engineering purpose). This way you don't have to worry about how much of each size to order, and it comes out cheaper. Easy to handle, too. I disagree. Get PAR (planed all round). Just plain sawn tends to be poorer quality (i.e. lots of knots, some structural) and is the devil to clean - the roughness is an ideal place for pests to lay their eggs. Other than that, I agree. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Rod wrote in message . ..
On Sun, 9 Jan 2005 13:01:02 -0000, "KK" wrote: Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK I tried this question on Rec.DIY because I thought they might have some good answers based on lateral thinking but no one answered. In terms of lateral ideas, I solved this problem extremely cheaply a number of years ago (10 to 15 ?) whan a B& Q superstore was opened in Edinburgh. They had in stock long plastic covered wire shelves, like dish racks; they were called 'laundry shelves' and have been ideal just suspended from the roof members with stout wire and hinged off the wall struts. Has anyone seen anything like these recently as they are no longer stocked as I could well do with a couple more ? Having trawled through this thread I really don't see anyone suggesting anything as cheap, totally effective and as flexible as this. Rob |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
"Rob Graham" wrote in message om... Rod wrote in message . .. On Sun, 9 Jan 2005 13:01:02 -0000, "KK" wrote: Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK I tried this question on Rec.DIY because I thought they might have some good answers based on lateral thinking but no one answered. In terms of lateral ideas, I solved this problem extremely cheaply a number of years ago (10 to 15 ?) whan a B& Q superstore was opened in Edinburgh. They had in stock long plastic covered wire shelves, like dish racks; they were called 'laundry shelves' and have been ideal just suspended from the roof members with stout wire and hinged off the wall struts. Has anyone seen anything like these recently as they are no longer stocked as I could well do with a couple more ? Having trawled through this thread I really don't see anyone suggesting anything as cheap, totally effective and as flexible as this. Rob I think Focus Do It all had some like that recently of course if you are going to the USA every DIY store sells them cheap |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
I have just recently made staging out of a wooden pallet.It was about 8ftx
3ft.I made the legs out of 3"x1/2" treated wood,but I only fixed them with one fixing so they can be twisted down so the staging can be easily taken out & tucked beside the shed.Giving space to grow toms in summer. I must admit it is not as sturdy as a permanent one I made for my orchid greenhouse but This was free,easy to make(10 minutes)and does the job. -- Thanks Keith,England,UK. "nambucca" wrote in message ... "Rob Graham" wrote in message om... Rod wrote in message . .. On Sun, 9 Jan 2005 13:01:02 -0000, "KK" wrote: Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK I tried this question on Rec.DIY because I thought they might have some good answers based on lateral thinking but no one answered. In terms of lateral ideas, I solved this problem extremely cheaply a number of years ago (10 to 15 ?) whan a B& Q superstore was opened in Edinburgh. They had in stock long plastic covered wire shelves, like dish racks; they were called 'laundry shelves' and have been ideal just suspended from the roof members with stout wire and hinged off the wall struts. Has anyone seen anything like these recently as they are no longer stocked as I could well do with a couple more ? Having trawled through this thread I really don't see anyone suggesting anything as cheap, totally effective and as flexible as this. Rob I think Focus Do It all had some like that recently of course if you are going to the USA every DIY store sells them cheap |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
"Rob Graham" wrote in message om... Rod wrote in message . .. On Sun, 9 Jan 2005 13:01:02 -0000, "KK" wrote: Hello, I have a small greenhouse and find the commercially available staging unsuitable & expensive. I want to design & build my own in order to optimise the available space. I am thinking of using aluminium tubing with with nylon/plastic corner fittings for the frame, and wire or steel mesh shelves. Has anyone tried this? Any advice or suggestions? Any recommendations for suppliers? Many Thanks KK I tried this question on Rec.DIY because I thought they might have some good answers based on lateral thinking but no one answered. In terms of lateral ideas, I solved this problem extremely cheaply a number of years ago (10 to 15 ?) whan a B& Q superstore was opened in Edinburgh. They had in stock long plastic covered wire shelves, like dish racks; they were called 'laundry shelves' and have been ideal just suspended from the roof members with stout wire and hinged off the wall struts. Has anyone seen anything like these recently as they are no longer stocked as I could well do with a couple more ? Having trawled through this thread I really don't see anyone suggesting anything as cheap, totally effective and as flexible as this. Rob You won't believe this but I have done just the same this afternoon. I got the shelf racks at B&Q as they were reduced to £1 each. I've got some where to put my new bedding plants etc now. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
On 14/2/05 17:09, in article ,
"Davy Murray" wrote: snip Which begs the obvious question - just which B&Q ? Ellen MacArthur's? ;-) Sorry... I'm going.... -- Sacha (remove the weeds for email) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Suitable material for greenhouse staging | United Kingdom | |||
greenhouse staging display in the Midlands | United Kingdom | |||
Greenhouse staging renewal | United Kingdom | |||
greenhouse staging side? | United Kingdom | |||
greenhouse frogs | Orchids |