Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work.

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Nick Müller
 
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wrote:

The high side is on the right and the lower side on the left. The door
is in the middle? Is that bad?


Not, if the roof is on the top, and the middle on the back. You can also
have the lower left rear corner on the downhill side of the area. But
this might be forbidden by local regulations.
If you look at the barn from the other side, everything changes, expect
where the roof goes. But you already knew!

BTW: Do you know, why mirrors flip left/right sides but not bottom/top?


Nick

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  #42   Report Post  
Duane Bozarth
 
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Nick Müller wrote:

wrote:

The high side is on the right and the lower side on the left. The door
is in the middle? Is that bad?


Not, if the roof is on the top, and the middle on the back. You can also
have the lower left rear corner on the downhill side of the area. But
this might be forbidden by local regulations.
If you look at the barn from the other side, everything changes, expect
where the roof goes. But you already knew!

BTW: Do you know, why mirrors flip left/right sides but not bottom/top?


Sure! My 5-year old told me some years ago--"Why, they're made that
way, Daddy!" w/ the tone and additude only available at that age...
  #43   Report Post  
Lloyd E. Sponenburgh
 
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TROLL ALERT!!! TROLL ALERT!!!

LLoyd

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oups.com...
WOnt the string get in the way when you dump the material?



  #44   Report Post  
Lloyd E. Sponenburgh
 
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wrote in message
oups.com...
WOnt the string get in the way when you dump the material?


You don't dump it. You shovel it from the truck into the forms. It
shouldn't take you more than 30 or 40 hours of work to empty an 18-yard-er.

I'd suggest an easier way, though. Ask the hauling company to mix the dirt
up with lots of water before they load it. Mix it up to really loose mud.
Then you can have them just pour it from one end of the forms, and it'll
self-level. You won't even have to level it at all!

After it drys, you just compact it and build your barn.

Yeah! Call 'em up an ask them to do that. Make sure it's REAL loose mud,
not clumpy or sticky. It's gotta be wet enough to pour, and level itself
out.

LLoyd


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Outside in.



  #46   Report Post  
 
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Are you trying to be smart? if you dont like my questions then dont
respond.

  #48   Report Post  
Nick Müller
 
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wrote:

Are you trying to be smart?


what do you mean by try to be smart?


Nick
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