Guest joshdonlan Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 I am needing to build the base for my new loft to be erected upon. I was planning to use 9 x 3 inch timbers screwed to post sunken into the ground. The sourcing of the 9 x 3s is seeming hard and i need to do this asap. Can anyone reccomend any other ways or what thewy have done as a base for their loft to be erected upon? Thanks in advance
hepste Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 Josh, I think 9x3 s' are over the top. 4x2 s' should be ok as long as you have enough of them adequately spaced. If I were doing a base again, I would do the same as many Belgians, ie sink plastic drainage pipes into concrete, and filled with concrete, and lay the cross joints on these. Of course if time is short this may not be an option. Worth taking your time over though cos' once the loft's up it's up!
Guest joshdonlan Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 i think the posts which i was going to sink into the ground maybe a similar idea. I may take this idea and just use a smaller spec of timber instead of the 9 x 3s. Thanks
alex wight Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 Breeze blocks with 3" x 3" x 7ft posts lying on top. I,ve just done it this way and it was done quickly as the loft was coming earlier than planned. As long as you spread the wait all over, and its firm, you cant go wrong.
Guest joshdonlan Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 i am planning on driving posts into the ground to make a level base as the ground isnt completely flat. I will make enquiries into 7 x 2 or something similar tomorrow. does everyone think this will be suitable?
Guest surfer Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 Like the idea of the posts ,but if I was doing it I would do it this way. For a 16foot x 8 foot base I would have 3 posts front and 3 posts at the back. Use a 7x2 along the length front and back , and then use 4x2 joist at 16 inch centres front to back, hold an elephant. Hope this helps Surfer.
DOVEScot Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 I am needing to build the base for my new loft to be erected upon. I was planning to use 9 x 3 inch timbers screwed to post sunken into the ground. The sourcing of the 9 x 3s is seeming hard and i need to do this asap. Can anyone reccomend any other ways or what thewy have done as a base for their loft to be erected upon? Thanks in advance 9x3 is way too heavy, that would do a single span, you could use 4x2 if supported every 2 or 3 feet or 6x2 every 3 or 4 feet, I used 8x2 because it was as cheap as 6x2 at the time, get the support foundations right and the rest is easy, I like the idea of the tube pillars as it would be really easy to level your foundations, just watch the height compared to the width. The higher the pillar the wider the tube Chickadee's
Guest TAMMY_1 Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 railway sleepers that is what we used on the new loft we recently erected
jimmy white Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 that is what we used on the new loft we recently erected theres one thing about these ,,,theyll last
Guest TAMMY_1 Posted September 30, 2008 Report Posted September 30, 2008 theres one thing about these ,,,theyll last well they will certainly see you and I out ;D ;D
Guest joshdonlan Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 Thanks for the help. I have decided to go with 7 x 2 timbers to build my loft frame from. The loft is 16 x 6 so should i build a 16 x 6 frame or should this be smallet say 15 x 5 or something? Any help is appreciated
tippler1 Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 i make my base 6 inch smaller so water running off loft dont rot it
DOVEScot Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 Thanks for the help. I have decided to go with 7 x 2 timbers to build my loft frame from. The loft is 16 x 6 so should i build a 16 x 6 frame or should this be smallet say 15 x 5 or something? Any help is appreciated Build the base frame 16 x 6 and make your framing the same size, then lip your sheeting or weather boarding over the joint between framing and base by about 25 mm this stops any dampness if you are ling it do the inside first, make the roof as least 6" overhang all the way round
DOVEScot Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 your loft looks cracking mate Cheers, I made the mistake of making it one big aviary, splitting in three sections this week :'(
Guest Grasshopper Lofts Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 DOVEScot where would you say the cheapest place for timber would be
OLDYELLOW Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 well it does grown on trees Damian lol , plenty of timberyards Damian i use MKM GOOGLE TIMBERYARDS/ builders merchants or saw mills depends what your looking for
Guest joshdonlan Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 I would say your local timber yard as price variations are usually negated with transport costs. Just look in the yellow pages under timber merchants and call round the local ones.
BLACK W F Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 ask any of your mates who work on building sites they will get it cheep and it will be best of gear
BLACK W F Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 Damian ask any mates you have who work in the building trade they will get what you want fo next to nothing that is if they are mates
DOVEScot Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 DOVEScot where would you say the cheapest place for timber would be I use both Jewson and MKM as I get good deals through my account and using them a lot, they are merchants so will profit and loss products, they may give great deals on some things to keep you sweet and get you on other things to balance it up. Also look for deals or special offers if you can, Wicks have great deals from time to time
pjc Posted October 2, 2008 Report Posted October 2, 2008 I always make pillars from concrete blocks and use 4x2 timbers accross them then sit the floor on top. They are always high enough of the ground to allow the dogs to get underneath that way nothing can live under the loft, mice, rats etc. Phil
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