good post here.....
@roaminoz Nothing better than spending a rainy day sorting through all that stuff cluttered away in boxes around the shed. Leave them long enough and when you get around to sorting them out, well, it's almost as good as Christmas,you know, when u get to open all those good xmas presents. And the really good thing about it, is it's better than Christmas presents, as you know there's going to be no socks or undies in there......unlike christmas presents.
@Trees........yea, relly cool idea about the logs and Galvo, I like it. I restore old farm machinary, currently have a couple of Ransomes MG5 crawlers on the go + a collection of Cooper type RV internal combustion engines, one set up as a firefighting pump unit,one mounted in an army gen-set, one as a washing machine power unit. With my collection of vintage tools and lamps I'm on the lookout for an old rustic slab-hut shed that I can re-locate to my property. Anyone who sees something, let us know.
@sierra Like you I have also got a 10m/10m American Barn. Can't beat them on price versus traditional block or brick construction. That's exactly the shed I was talking about with all the faults regarding size. They are never big enough. You ever hear the old saying about Mick Jagger with the Rolling Stones.....you know the one, from the 60's, "mother's, lock up your daughters"....or from the present, "daughters, lock up your mothers".........
Well , when it comes to big sheds there is another saying when you have sons that are into restoring cars.....and it's "Lock up your sheds". what can you do when your son takes over the shed for his resto prject???????? More problems with sheds. lol!
Anyway, not mine, but here's a look at a Cooper Type RV running.............