What a beautifully done book ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxo4aMFkUegBx-KHPIJlfwKPHu7kQXAR9N ! The text and the photographs are brilliant. It is thorough and genuinely informative. Joseph Truini got another winner! No one does it better! Love the Cape Cod Shed with the Blue door!
Wow! Thank you, James, for your video! I am 75 of age and hoping that I can do some of the work by myself. I did the floor frame yesterday and today I searched You Tube for a one-man video and there you were. I watched your video, I knew that I should watch it to learn some of the tips you used, to accomplish your one person build. Wow! Thank you for sharing! Great job! God bless!
Thank you for this video because I have to do mine by myself.. I'm grateful for you taking the time to help others like me.. never built a shed before..
Same. I won't have time to put up the walls today but I noticed how noisy and flimsy one sheet is. I like the trick where he temporarily screwed something to stop the panels from falling off the platform I don't have a floor kit so I'm just going to use scrap wood.
I am a 53-year-old woman I start on The gables today and I've done this by myself. I duck tape the railing on the inside wall to get my screws started. you cannot do this by yourself on a windy day without something supporting the little walls because they will crumple over like foil. So today I'm going to see if I can put the roof on by myself.
@@Emly121 Thanks. I didn't know it would be such a hit. I hope your kit hasn't been damaged in handling. Remember to save any damaged panels for the back.
Thank you so much for the tip on the hardware! This is the biggest take-away from the video, as well as your advice on making things absolutely level. FOLLOW HIS ADVICE, VIEWERS!!! My shed was a hair off level because of settling, as well as about an inch off square. (Guess I like making things harder than they need to be.) It would have been physically impossible to get the thing put together if it wasn't for your recommendation. If paleontologists looked at my shed hundreds of years from now, they wouldn't consider us to be a very advanced civilization. But it's a shed and you can put things in it.
Thank you, for your video. Anyone can do anything. When they have a good teacher. Just one subjection. You should, get yourself a head cam. So you can feel more comfortable. To use both hands. God Bless.
Thank you for the tips. I happen to have about twenty little cabinet close magnets and eight spring hand clamps as helpers. Almost no wind today was a plus.
Great hints fella' I got my shed months ago! but ended up ill and had to get my gallbladder out so on the road to recovery, i Have watched a few videos on utube, your seems to be most informative regarding the change of screw, I have wrote all your data down regarding the screws, Thanks.
I bought one of these off Ebay. Cheap Chinese crap from Guangzhou. Some parts of the instruction were a right old riddle, like the door runners / channels and door assembly of the doors. Got it all done using the supplied hardware did a few bits of redrilling where 3 or four parts met and holes didn't quite line. Up the floor frame is absolutely preposterous just like you I looked as it and thought: hell no. I wish they'd put that material cost into extra panel thickness! I'm keenly waiting for it to rain now as I want to see how waterproof I managed to make it. I used heavy polythene between the subfloor and floor of my shed to stop moisture evaporating up through my shed from the ground beneath. I already built mine then watched your vid after! Surprising how much time it takes to put these together but they are actually pretty solid if rather easy to dent!
I did the 10 by 12 by myself over the last 2 days. I used the screws it came with. For the ridge ones I put a large rock to hold it down while I put the nuts on and held them with a vise grips while i screwed it down.
Thanks so much for sharing this video It was extremely helpful to me I purchased the larger screws and bolts as suggested before I started the project You are correct They made all the difference in the world!
Built an 8×6 Arrow Shed by myself. First. It took about 12-13 hours. Best to go through parts list and create an order you like to avoid looking for pieces. Another tip. I used the floor frame with 3/4 in plywood. I drilled their frame into shed at edges because the little flimsy connections suck. Then screwed wood onto secure frame. Came out perfect with no squishing. You will have extra screws and nuts thankfully because theres a ton. Also, don't be afraid to drill your own holes if it doesn't quite line up. Instructions were very good and the product coems out sturdy.
I have 2 arrow10x14 to build. Thanks for the good ideas. I've built wood sheds , figured I can build everything at my new home less then a wooden shed right now. I will be building a wooden work shop later but need a few building to put gardening things in right now
What a super video. Great tips on use for the floor frame, and changing out the screws. I have this same shed in a box (for over 1 year) can't find help to put it together. Someone wanted to charge $500 to put it together, that's close to what the shed cost! So gonna attempt this on my own. I have a wood base already built. Pretty good that you were able to do this while filming. Thanks!
I had mine done last week. No experience and was my first shed, i did it on my own. Has few errors(like few holes dont line up, so i just drilled holes. Lol!) and a very squeaking doors! Im trying to modify it with rollers/sliding door wheels. No luck on finding the right wheels/rollers so far-
LMAO.. im about to do a video on one.. and LITERALLY.. i had already planned the floor with the exact flashing like you did.. AWESOME VIDEO.. i subbed thanks you for the heads up on the TRUE floor dimensions
I recently assembled one of these sheds and it took me and my son a few days to include building the wood foundation. I would agree that it needs to be perfectly level for screws to align and longer screws are a good idea for certain areas. This needs to be something that Arrow improves on in the future. Have a drill handle because I had some screws that didn't quite line up even after having a perfectly square base. Because there are hundreds of screws it is highly recommended to have power tools just being careful not to overtighten. It seems flimsy and weak at first but the finished product is sturdy and attractive.
@@riparianlife97701 Luckily, I found the manual on line. As long as all the pieces are there and with your video, we're good to go. Plan B is the shredder🤣
THIS WAS SO WELL DONE! I APPRECIATE THE TIPS/TRICKS.. I HV BN CONSIDERING PURCHASE OF AN ARROW 10x14; MAYB EVEN A 10x20; IF I CAN FIND ONE FOR TEMP LIVING IN THE FOREIGN COUNTRY I AM MOVING TO.THOUGH I HV PRICED A STEEL BLDG FROM CHINA DELIVERED FOR $6K. THIS SHEET METAL MAY DO AS A DWELLING UNTIL I AM ABLE TO BUILD A CEMENT BLOCK BLDG. THANKS FOR OPENING UP MY THOUGHTS FOR POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVES. RESPECT, MargoKansas City
Hi James Guy! I am dreading my hut build? I have watched three diferent sheds getting built of that desighn. a Nice tip though with the larger bolts. I will have to get my base done just as good as the one you have done. A good job too. bye..
I really appreciate this video. It's one of the best. I am just about to start this project and was thinking it may be possible to use the unused floor frame to reinforce the rest of the shed.
There are a hundred reasons not to, but they're so stinking cheap. I priced building it any other way, and was into it more for 3 walls than for a whole Arrow shed.
I lost a arm 12 years ago and i use duck or gorilla tape to hold the screws in and then put the nuts on and tighten i like the clamps and stuff to to hold it together good job i haven't started mine yet im gonna watch your video i don't have a camera
@@riparianlife97701 well wish me luck I’m gonna level out the soil and put the frame down and the floor kit and pore cement and level it out for my floor
James! This is the best video for these sheds that I've seen! I wish I found it before I finished my shed! lol Those short bolts and screws were a pain indeed.
@@shawngilbert5199 There are 4 locations in particular, where you have to put a machine screw through a seal, two ridge pieces, two roofing sheets, and the ridge beam, then try to get a nut on from beneath. Nearly impossible.
I wish I had seen this video before I started putting my shed together! Oh yeah, the hardware is a PAIN!!! I am still trying to figure out how I am going to get the last few screws in my last roof panel because I am just too short and I only have a 6' step ladder. May have to hire a tall skinny young man to finish it.
Just finished building one of these two days ago. It was a pain in the you know what. It took about 16 hours. The instruction manual isnt as clear as it should be in some of the steps. In some of the steps you are going to need two people. And also make sure its a nice cool day with no wind, it helps a lot.
Nice, nice!!! Wish me luck for I am going for it all by myself tomorrow March 1st 2021, my shed is smaller though 8x6, I took screenshots to follow the same exact steps. I think I can do it 😏🙄😏
@@riparianlife97701 I couldn't finish, shame on me 😌, still missing the roof and the doors. Some holes were completely off but I'm a tough fighter LOL 😃 Thanks for your great advice, I bought the extra screws you've suggested and sir let me tell you excellent idea, thank you thank you! By the way no disrespect to other UA-camrs posting videos about building sheds, but your experience made a big difference!
I put one of those arrow sheds together just like that over 10 years ago and used rubber roofing washers instead of those plastic things and they have lasted better than those plastic things which I used some of them at the end because i ran out of the rubber roofing washers and used plastic ones that came with the kit . The plastic ones have broken . The cheap door roller guides have broken also The roof is rusting out and is brown with rust 10 years and it is mostly garbage
I want to purchase the Arrow 10X8 shed from lowes (LW108), the base is 121 inches (Front) and the width 92-3/4, if I'm using 2X6X10 (Front) for my rim joist and 2X6X8 for my floor joist how would I cut my lumber to build the base of the shed around my foundation floor? In other words I don't want to build my foundation and come up short when building my shed around it, by the way awesome job on yours........
hello, hope you can reply to me. our previous owner has this shed in the backyard. i want to replace the roof. do you recall if those metal supports are enough to hold 1/2" plywood and then metal roofing?
Oh gosh, no. The shed is so incredibly flimsy, the included roof is about all it can hold up. Why don't you skin it with something light, like very thin Aluminum sheeting? Getting on it to attach anything is going to crush it instantly.
I use my impact driver for everything... except if I'm working with thin galvanized metal. The lack of a clutch can mess things up quick. Even with the newer Dewalt xr that has the 3 spd settings where the first speed gives an automatic torque option, ( it either doesn't give enough, or too much) it can become an issue. I like the hex head idea though. I just bought a ton of them in different sizes on Amazon prime day. The Hillman were all 70% off and I threw $120 at it to get pretty much everything I'll need for hardware, for the rest of my life. (I'm in Florida, so stainless is the only way. And if you buy a Wera Magnetizer for your bits, it'll make everything stick to your bits.) And a great tool is one of the cheap flexible extenders. They're like 12 inches long, but they do really well. Now with all that said, any way works. A cordless screw gun is the best since it's perfection in its clutch makes it a great tool for things like this, plus it's lightweight. All in all... great video. Nice to see someone else that switches out the horrible hardware. Lol
What kind of screws did you use to screw your floor frame down with and would that be considered as anchoring? Any type of help would be appreciated.......
Hey! Great video and tips. Do you need to put silicone anywhere? I was wondering about the roof ridge. Seems like water could get in there underneath. Tell me what you can and thanks ...
This job was far more tedious, than difficult. I made a level pad out of crushed concrete, tamped flat, then staked down, wood floor as if 7/21 would double the price of project.
I'm doing a terrible job on mine. I'm on roof panels some one hole will line up and the next hole right beside it doesn't come close. I got so frustrated, and it's about to storm. I just started sinking holes with self tappers.😭 I'm just gonna hope for the best and caulk the rest
BTDT once. Never again. If building a good floor like yours might as well just spend twice as much on lumber and have it all wood, I have a 10x10 wooden shed. Going to add 12 feet to back and change to gambrel style roof (for loft space). Think will be able to do it for 900ish dollars. Been gathering wood for year or so. Next month I start assembling.
Forgot to mention, all of your advice is spot on tho. If I were doing another, I would build footish tall walls to set shed on. They too low for me. Made my head hurt!🤕
Mine leaks … after a hard rain we have puddles of water to the left of the door and in front of the right side door. Trying to come up with some way to seal the doors when there shut.
Well Done, I'll going to put a wooden 4ft wooden wall around the floor/deck & put the steel shed on top. That's give me a 4ft attic space. Also insulate the inside with 1/2inch foam-broad sheets & put shelving all the way around the inside. Let me know what you think.
@@riparianlife97701 The pair of doors hang on top plastic sliders. I might just extend them down or do a flip up&down gate/ramp or something. Really I have got that far yet. But since it doesn't really cost that much more (ex: $, time, resources, etc) ; sheds should be 1&half to 2 stories and topped-off with solar panels too. Steel shell sheds are cheapest & easiest to raise up. Thks again www.lowes.com/pd/Arrow-Common-10-ft-x-14-ft-Interior-Dimensions-9-85-ft-x-13-125-ft-Lexington-Galvanized-Steel-Storage-Shed/1001417650
I got the 10x8 it said 189 pounds but it feel like 300 pounds> Its really heavy I got it on sale today. So i went a head a bought it. Going to use it for a well house and storage. I hope i can get a riding lawn mower in there, and some shelves and some things in there. Yep i going to have to do it all myself to! But i want a cement floor ect That another 5 days to it. Waiting for the concert to cure
OSB plywood is not a match for damp conditions. The moisture coming from underneath is going deteriorate the flooring in about 5 yrs. or less depending on exposure to rain water.
Or you can also paint the roof (or spot paint the screw heads with spray paint/rustoleum)) or cover the roof with rubber roof sealant like they use on Rv's
I like the flashing idea. But is that aluminum coil and treated lumber? That aluminum coil will corrode if there is nothing between the two separating them.
Great base info, especially the alteration you made to the base on the 12' length to fit the shed more exactly. Will you tell me the Arrow model that you bought? Thanks.
At 17:04 I think your back wall beam is upside down. Not that it makes a difference but from what I read in my instruction book the open channel is supposed to face down.
Even with the flashing around the shed floor, do you find that rain water makes it's way under the edge via the lip all around the shed? I built a platform very similar, then the first rain, the water comes under the sides because of the platform that sticks out all around the sides. No leaks in the roof or sides, but a lot of water from under the edge. Do you have the same issue?
I had the same problem with miner after building it. I ran a heavy bead of caulking around the bottom outside edge of the frame rails. It seems to have fixed it.
Thank you for doing this. One question I have is I noticed you mention #10 screws whereas the manual states #8 are the holes bug enough for #10 or have they changed the screw size in the newest model? I am building an 8x10. I pulled the instructions for the size you refer to and it says #8. Should I therefore get #8 screws?
I am planning to buy the arrow 8x6 sheds, on the manual it shows 266pcs of #8Ax5/6 screws, do you think I should still get the 10x3/8 as you recommended?
Yes. Hex head screws driven with a magnetic socket in a cordless drill or impact driver will vastly improve the experience. Match the count in your manual.
Docktor Jim sorry to be a pest, but I was just curious if screwing down floor frame to the foundation before shed was complete caused any issues? I only ask because I started on my frame tonight and the instructions state to hold off until shed is fully erected.
@@tygould2474 The reason they say to hold off is that if your foundation isn't dead flat and square, you will need to pry your base frame up and down to get the holes to line up. If your floor is flat, screw it down.
Hey Jim, thanks for the very helpful post. I built a 10x10 probably 30years ago and I'm about to do a 10x12. With the old one...which by the way, the roof is rusting quite badly, I did a gravel/sand/road base foundation and it worked out fine. I'm going to do the same with this one and I'll use the floor kit laid down on several countersunk cement blocks for support. I don't really recall but I believe I can put together the floor kit get it level then surround the base pieces then proceed with the walls, roof, etc...as you did. Does that make sense?
in one day?? start building at 4 am.. the biggest obstacle is time... it took me 3 days to build the floor base and the shed.. good thing I had taken the week off.
Did you watch the video? It took me 4 hours to build the floor, and 8 hours to build the shed on it. I bought 2, and learned a lot from the first one. That's why I made this, my only how-to video.
@@riparianlife97701 thank you. I already set the shed up now though lol. That’s what I did too. I figured I could take the screws out if I needed to adjust it for some reason. I also used the longer screws and bolts like you did, that was a big help. The build went alright, the hardest part was getting the edge screws into the roof panels on the last side I started from. The holes were just not lining up, I had to really pull and manipulate the panels but I got it in the end. Thank you for the video and tips.
I am going to be building one of these over the next couple of weeks with my father in law. Can you tell me how you did the base? The wood lengths and the metal edge you added? How did you put the base together?
I placed 8 pier blocks on grade. I framed the floor with 2x6 pressure treated, screwed together with 3" deck screws. The floor can be 3/4" plywood or OSB. The metal edging is galvanized 6"X6" steel.
@@riparianlife97701 yea, I have the same model. I’ve just never framed a floor before. So I’m trying to get an idea of how the framing actually worked. You said to use 2x6’s, but did you use a longer piece of wood for the left and right side and then a slightly shorter piece of wood at the front and back? Or did you just put (2) 2x6’s for the edge of the framing?
What a beautifully done book ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxo4aMFkUegBx-KHPIJlfwKPHu7kQXAR9N ! The text and the photographs are brilliant. It is thorough and genuinely informative. Joseph Truini got another winner! No one does it better! Love the Cape Cod Shed with the Blue door!
Wow! Thank you, James, for your video! I am 75 of age and hoping that I can do some of the work by myself. I did the floor frame yesterday and today I searched You Tube for a one-man video and there you were. I watched your video, I knew that I should watch it to learn some of the tips you used, to accomplish your one person build. Wow! Thank you for sharing! Great job! God bless!
Being able to use a magnetic screw holder changes everything.
Exceptional is an understatment, thank you for sharing your experience and advice.
Thank you for this video because I have to do mine by myself.. I'm grateful for you taking the time to help others like me.. never built a shed before..
Same. I won't have time to put up the walls today but I noticed how noisy and flimsy one sheet is. I like the trick where he temporarily screwed something to stop the panels from falling off the platform I don't have a floor kit so I'm just going to use scrap wood.
I am a 53-year-old woman I start on The gables today and I've done this by myself. I duck tape the railing on the inside wall to get my screws started. you cannot do this by yourself on a windy day without something supporting the little walls because they will crumple over like foil. So today I'm going to see if I can put the roof on by myself.
I love that the deer just seem to walk up and keep eating as if you are one of the herd 😊 Absolutely no fear or concern in their faces💛
I've built three and I've learned something from your video thanks man
Happy to say ive completed putting my 10ft x 8ft steel shed together, even had its rain test all good
Replacing the cheap Phillips screws with longer head screws is the best idea ever, thanks
I drove one of the included screws, on the first of two sheds, then went to the hardware store.
I am so glad I saw this. Big Thanks to Norm McDonald for making this video. I miss you on Saturday Night Live.
I've been told many times, by many people, that I sound like Norm McDonald. I'm good with that.
@@riparianlife97701 I love him!! Played Poker in CT with him and he's a cool dude..Norms voice and yours are very similar.. meant as complement.
Rip
Know how sometimes, when a person dies, people get sad and cry and stuff? I want that. - Norm MacDonald
Fantastic! Thanks for All your Hard work!
Thank you so much for the in-depth and detailed video! This will help out tremendously.
@@Emly121 Thanks. I didn't know it would be such a hit. I hope your kit hasn't been damaged in handling. Remember to save any damaged panels for the back.
Thank you for this video and all the tips you gave to us. I'm ready to get all tge extra supplies you recommend and start my shed.
God bless
Best video on this specific shed I've seen so far.
Thanks. After my difficulties with the first, and the absence of a good tips video on the shed, I felt I needed to make this.
Thank you so much for the tip on the hardware! This is the biggest take-away from the video, as well as your advice on making things absolutely level. FOLLOW HIS ADVICE, VIEWERS!!! My shed was a hair off level because of settling, as well as about an inch off square. (Guess I like making things harder than they need to be.) It would have been physically impossible to get the thing put together if it wasn't for your recommendation. If paleontologists looked at my shed hundreds of years from now, they wouldn't consider us to be a very advanced civilization. But it's a shed and you can put things in it.
I'm glad I could make your experience more pleasant, Ben. My first, 20 feet away, was an aggravating mess, and there was no good help on UA-cam, so...
Thank you, for your video. Anyone can do anything. When they have a good teacher. Just one subjection. You should, get yourself a head cam. So you can feel more comfortable. To use both hands. God Bless.
Thank you for the tips. I happen to have about twenty little cabinet close magnets and eight spring hand clamps as helpers. Almost no wind today was a plus.
Great hints fella' I got my shed months ago! but ended up ill and had to get my gallbladder out so on the road to recovery, i Have watched a few videos on utube, your seems to be most informative regarding the change of screw, I have wrote all your data down regarding the screws, Thanks.
This build video
Applies most to my situation. My backyard also has a slope to it and I am also interested in the ramp.
I bought one of these off Ebay. Cheap Chinese crap from Guangzhou. Some parts of the instruction were a right old riddle, like the door runners / channels and door assembly of the doors. Got it all done using the supplied hardware did a few bits of redrilling where 3 or four parts met and holes didn't quite line. Up the floor frame is absolutely preposterous just like you I looked as it and thought: hell no. I wish they'd put that material cost into extra panel thickness! I'm keenly waiting for it to rain now as I want to see how waterproof I managed to make it. I used heavy polythene between the subfloor and floor of my shed to stop moisture evaporating up through my shed from the ground beneath. I already built mine then watched your vid after! Surprising how much time it takes to put these together but they are actually pretty solid if rather easy to dent!
I did the 10 by 12 by myself over the last 2 days. I used the screws it came with. For the ridge ones I put a large rock to hold it down while I put the nuts on and held them with a vise grips while i screwed it down.
Thanks so much for sharing this video
It was extremely helpful to me
I purchased the larger screws and bolts as suggested before I started the project
You are correct
They made all the difference in the world!
It would be nice if the manufacturer figured that out.
Built an 8×6 Arrow Shed by myself. First. It took about 12-13 hours. Best to go through parts list and create an order you like to avoid looking for pieces. Another tip. I used the floor frame with 3/4 in plywood. I drilled their frame into shed at edges because the little flimsy connections suck. Then screwed wood onto secure frame. Came out perfect with no squishing. You will have extra screws and nuts thankfully because theres a ton. Also, don't be afraid to drill your own holes if it doesn't quite line up. Instructions were very good and the product coems out sturdy.
Is there any source for the plastic washers?
I have 2 arrow10x14 to build. Thanks for the good ideas. I've built wood sheds , figured I can build everything at my new home less then a wooden shed right now. I will be building a wooden work shop later but need a few building to put gardening things in right now
What a super video. Great tips on use for the floor frame, and changing out the screws. I have this same shed in a box (for over 1 year) can't find help to put it together. Someone wanted to charge $500 to put it together, that's close to what the shed cost! So gonna attempt this on my own. I have a wood base already built. Pretty good that you were able to do this while filming. Thanks!
I had mine done last week. No experience and was my first shed, i did it on my own. Has few errors(like few holes dont line up, so i just drilled holes. Lol!) and a very squeaking doors! Im trying to modify it with rollers/sliding door wheels. No luck on finding the right wheels/rollers so far-
Great video - love those little changes n tricks to make it easier to assemble - thank you
thanks for an actual useful video with real tips
Great video. Thank you for the tips. Starting mine this weekend.
Get your fasteners and magnetic bits. If your holes aren't lining up, check square and level.
Excellent video. Good detailed, helpful information. This will save a good bit of time. Thank you!
Thanks! I made it because I needed it, and it didn't exist.
LMAO.. im about to do a video on one.. and LITERALLY.. i had already planned the floor with the exact flashing like you did.. AWESOME VIDEO.. i subbed thanks you for the heads up on the TRUE floor dimensions
I recently assembled one of these sheds and it took me and my son a few days to include building the wood foundation. I would agree that it needs to be perfectly level for screws to align and longer screws are a good idea for certain areas. This needs to be something that Arrow improves on in the future. Have a drill handle because I had some screws that didn't quite line up even after having a perfectly square base. Because there are hundreds of screws it is highly recommended to have power tools just being careful not to overtighten. It seems flimsy and weak at first but the finished product is sturdy and attractive.
All my holes lined up on both sheds I built, and I didn't strip any screws, but I have a lot of background in metal fabrication.
Thank you for making this video. I just acquired the same shed all in pieces, it was used. It looks like a jigsaw puzzle at the moment. Andy 🇨🇦
Wow, Andy. I can't imagine what a mess that must be!
@@riparianlife97701 Luckily, I found the manual on line. As long as all the pieces are there and with your video, we're good to go. Plan B is the shredder🤣
Helpful for big picture and details! Thanks for your great efforts to put this video together!
THIS WAS SO WELL DONE! I APPRECIATE THE TIPS/TRICKS.. I HV BN CONSIDERING PURCHASE OF AN ARROW 10x14; MAYB EVEN A 10x20; IF I CAN FIND ONE FOR TEMP LIVING IN THE FOREIGN COUNTRY I AM MOVING TO.THOUGH I HV PRICED A STEEL BLDG FROM CHINA DELIVERED FOR $6K. THIS SHEET METAL MAY DO AS A DWELLING UNTIL I AM ABLE TO BUILD A CEMENT BLOCK BLDG. THANKS FOR OPENING UP MY THOUGHTS FOR POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVES. RESPECT, MargoKansas City
Hi James Guy! I am dreading my hut build? I have watched three diferent sheds getting built of that desighn. a Nice tip though with the larger bolts. I will have to get my base done just as good as the one you have done. A good job too. bye..
I really appreciate this video. It's one of the best. I am just about to start this project and was thinking it may be possible to use the unused floor frame to reinforce the rest of the shed.
sweet im thinking about getting this shed, your video made it seem a lot easier than the manual
There are a hundred reasons not to, but they're so stinking cheap. I priced building it any other way, and was into it more for 3 walls than for a whole Arrow shed.
Thks for ur speedy Reply.
Much Obliged
Nice video. I have a 6x8 unit to build in the next few days, Love the deer hanging out !
You passed the test! If you mentioned the deer, you actually watched it.
@@riparianlife97701 Yep all of it. Thanks for the tips and tricks. Duly noted.
@@riparianlife97701 btw what exactly is the blue (?) flashing and where did you get it ?
@@joeanderson3423 It's available at lumber yards.
Thanks for the heads up. Well appreciated . Thank You .
I lost a arm 12 years ago and i use duck or gorilla tape to hold the screws in and then put the nuts on and tighten i like the clamps and stuff to to hold it together good job i haven't started mine yet im gonna watch your video i don't have a camera
@@rockeystone3525 I essentially shot this video with one hand while building the shed with another.
@@riparianlife97701 well wish me luck I’m gonna level out the soil and put the frame down and the floor kit and pore cement and level it out for my floor
@@rockeystone3525 Did you get hex head screws and a magnetic bit?
James! This is the best video for these sheds that I've seen! I wish I found it before I finished my shed! lol Those short bolts and screws were a pain indeed.
@@shawngilbert5199 There are 4 locations in particular, where you have to put a machine screw through a seal, two ridge pieces, two roofing sheets, and the ridge beam, then try to get a nut on from beneath. Nearly impossible.
Would love to see a video on how you made this base.
I wish I had seen this video before I started putting my shed together! Oh yeah, the hardware is a PAIN!!! I am still trying to figure out how I am going to get the last few screws in my last roof panel because I am just too short and I only have a 6' step ladder. May have to hire a tall skinny young man to finish it.
Just finished building one of these two days ago. It was a pain in the you know what. It took about 16 hours. The instruction manual isnt as clear as it should be in some of the steps. In some of the steps you are going to need two people. And also make sure its a nice cool day with no wind, it helps a lot.
If you watch this video, you can see me building one alone in 8 hours. I had a phone recording video in one hand a lot of the time.
Thanks for the help.I needed it.
After suffering through the first, I felt I had some tricks to share for my second.
Nice, nice!!! Wish me luck for I am going for it all by myself tomorrow March 1st 2021, my shed is smaller though 8x6, I took screenshots to follow the same exact steps. I think I can do it 😏🙄😏
Let us know how it goes!
@@riparianlife97701 I couldn't finish, shame on me 😌, still missing the roof and the doors. Some holes were completely off but I'm a tough fighter LOL 😃 Thanks for your great advice, I bought the extra screws you've suggested and sir let me tell you excellent idea, thank you thank you! By the way no disrespect to other UA-camrs posting videos about building sheds, but your experience made a big difference!
I put one of those arrow sheds together just like that over 10 years ago and used rubber roofing washers instead of those plastic things and they have lasted better than those plastic things which I used some of them at the end because i ran out of the rubber roofing washers and used plastic ones that came with the kit . The plastic ones have broken . The cheap door roller guides have broken also The roof is rusting out and is brown with rust 10 years and it is mostly garbage
Thank you. I'm preparing to get supplies for me shed. Still in box in garage
What size flashing did you use? Looks great and flat. Mine came in a roll and had to bend it. Not a fan of how mine turned out.
@@Mike-202 I believe it was 6". It was readily available at the local lumberyard in 10' lengths.
@@riparianlife97701 thank you
I want to purchase the Arrow 10X8 shed from lowes (LW108), the base is 121 inches (Front) and the width 92-3/4, if I'm using 2X6X10 (Front) for my rim joist and 2X6X8 for my floor joist how would I cut my lumber to build the base of the shed around my foundation floor? In other words I don't want to build my foundation and come up short when building my shed around it, by the way awesome job on yours........
I'll post an edit if anyone reports encountering a shed that runs long.
hello, hope you can reply to me. our previous owner has this shed in the backyard. i want to replace the roof. do you recall if those metal supports are enough to hold 1/2" plywood and then metal roofing?
Oh gosh, no. The shed is so incredibly flimsy, the included roof is about all it can hold up. Why don't you skin it with something light, like very thin Aluminum sheeting? Getting on it to attach anything is going to crush it instantly.
I use my impact driver for everything... except if I'm working with thin galvanized metal. The lack of a clutch can mess things up quick. Even with the newer Dewalt xr that has the 3 spd settings where the first speed gives an automatic torque option, ( it either doesn't give enough, or too much) it can become an issue.
I like the hex head idea though. I just bought a ton of them in different sizes on Amazon prime day. The Hillman were all 70% off and I threw $120 at it to get pretty much everything I'll need for hardware, for the rest of my life. (I'm in Florida, so stainless is the only way. And if you buy a Wera Magnetizer for your bits, it'll make everything stick to your bits.)
And a great tool is one of the cheap flexible extenders. They're like 12 inches long, but they do really well.
Now with all that said, any way works. A cordless screw gun is the best since it's perfection in its clutch makes it a great tool for things like this, plus it's lightweight.
All in all... great video. Nice to see someone else that switches out the horrible hardware. Lol
I spent so much time in manufacturing and construction, I'm able to finesse an impact very well.
@@riparianlife97701 hey... that's the best answer you could've given me.
Good video😊
Thanks for the video and pointers on hardware etc. You make it look easy but I`m sure this isn’t your first rodeo.👍
It was my second. I made all the mistakes on the first 20 feet away.
It help by building one 1st. Make the 2nd 1 easier
Great video brotha I appreciate all the useful information!
So are you going to build an Arrow shed?
@@riparianlife97701 yes I’m starting to build and wood foundation now.
@@riparianlife97701 so you built the foundation 142”x120” correct?
@@Savage-cy5gv If you want to verify, replay that moment.
Thanks for tips on hardware upgrade. Any suggestions on using. OSB VS Pressure treated plywood vs regular plywood for floor.
If the shed and flashing work, it will never get wet. OSB is more consistent, in my opinion. Modern plywood sucks. Too many blows and irregularities.
@@riparianlife97701 thanks for your input.
What kind of screws did you use to screw your floor frame down with and would that be considered as anchoring? Any type of help would be appreciated.......
2" ceramic coated deck screws.
@@riparianlife97701 Thanks man.....
Hey! Great video and tips. Do you need to put silicone anywhere? I was wondering about the roof ridge. Seems like water could get in there underneath. Tell me what you can and thanks ...
Only use silicone where the wall base and door track extrusions meet the flashing. It's wasted anywhere else.
Thanks for the info , very good advice!!
This job was far more tedious, than difficult. I made a level pad out of crushed concrete, tamped flat, then staked down, wood floor as if 7/21 would double the price of project.
How big should the foundation be ? Exactly 10x8 or slightly bigger
I don't know. My only experience is with the 10'x12' kit.
@@riparianlife97701 ok so for the 10x12 did you build it slightly bigger or exact
@@alex81815 1 It's in the video.
2 If you have a different-sized shed, it's irrelevant, as I've never even seen one, let alone measured it.
LIVE FROM NEW YORK,ITS SATURDAY NIGHT!
I'm doing a terrible job on mine. I'm on roof panels some one hole will line up and the next hole right beside it doesn't come close. I got so frustrated, and it's about to storm. I just started sinking holes with self tappers.😭 I'm just gonna hope for the best and caulk the rest
Yeah, any problems from the base up will multiply on the roof. I'm sorry you've had a rough time. 😔
I'm interested in knowing how you installed your first Shed
My ancient dad helped me hold pieces up. I think it was the hardest thing he ever did.
@@riparianlife97701 wich wood did you use
@@mojoje8191 pressure treated framing. Oriented strand board decking.
@@riparianlife97701 Thank you very much
thank you!!! very helpful
BTDT once. Never again. If building a good floor like yours might as well just spend twice as much on lumber and have it all wood, I have a 10x10 wooden shed. Going to add 12 feet to back and change to gambrel style roof (for loft space). Think will be able to do it for 900ish dollars. Been gathering wood for year or so. Next month I start assembling.
Forgot to mention, all of your advice is spot on tho. If I were doing another, I would build footish tall walls to set shed on. They too low for me. Made my head hurt!🤕
I did put drip edge around the plywood before I put up the metal shed
Mine leaks … after a hard rain we have puddles of water to the left of the door and in front of the right side door. Trying to come up with some way to seal the doors when there shut.
Went to Home Depot to buy suggested list of screws and guy wanted to know the lengths. Anyway any body can add that info please?
Well Done, I'll going to put a wooden 4ft wooden wall around the floor/deck & put the steel shed on top. That's give me a 4ft attic space. Also insulate the inside with 1/2inch foam-broad sheets & put shelving all the way around the inside. Let me know what you think.
Sounds good. How will you modify the door for the added height?
@@riparianlife97701 The pair of doors hang on top plastic sliders. I might just extend them down or do a flip up&down gate/ramp or something. Really I have got that far yet.
But since it doesn't really cost that much more (ex: $, time, resources, etc) ; sheds should be 1&half to 2 stories and topped-off with solar panels too. Steel shell sheds are cheapest & easiest to raise up. Thks again
www.lowes.com/pd/Arrow-Common-10-ft-x-14-ft-Interior-Dimensions-9-85-ft-x-13-125-ft-Lexington-Galvanized-Steel-Storage-Shed/1001417650
I got the 10x8 it said 189 pounds but it feel like 300 pounds> Its really heavy I got it on sale today. So i went a head a bought it. Going to use it for a well house and storage. I hope i can get a riding lawn mower in there, and some shelves and some things in there. Yep i going to have to do it all myself to! But i want a cement floor ect That another 5 days to it. Waiting for the concert to cure
Wish I would have watched this a week ago. WHAT A NIGHTMARE🤬
OSB plywood is not a match for damp conditions. The moisture coming from underneath is going deteriorate the flooring in about 5 yrs. or less depending on exposure to rain water.
The OSB won't ever get wet. Spend $200 a sheet on marine plywood is you want. If the floor of your shed is wet, your shed isn't shedding.
Arrow are one of the few companies out there who still produce quality storage sheds. They're so pricey though ...
Probably why they include cheap fasteners. They're trying to keep the price point low.
The company should pay you for this video
I haven't heard from them.
Ty brie
Put the 1/4 round on the back to prevent the rain catching effect
FYI. Zinc coated screws will rust outside, and very quickly. They should be covered with silicone calk immediately after the project is finished.
Or you can also paint the roof (or spot paint the screw heads with spray paint/rustoleum)) or cover the roof with rubber roof sealant like they use on Rv's
I wish I had seen this video a few days back, before I had installed all the wall panels, as per the instructions.
THAT'S WHY I MADE THE VIDEO! The instructions were maddening.
@@riparianlife97701 Yeah, mine are compounded by a missing part as well (the liner for the gables.)
@@JLThisisMe By liner, you mean the plastic seal? I didn't even use mine, as the whole shed is so far from airtight.
@@riparianlife97701 it’s the plastic purple insulation that covers the sharp edges of the gables
@@JLThisisMe You don't need it.
I like the flashing idea. But is that aluminum coil and treated lumber? That aluminum coil will corrode if there is nothing between the two separating them.
Painted steel flashing. No Aluminum anywhere.
@@riparianlife97701 nice!
Great base info, especially the alteration you made to the base on the 12' length to fit the shed more exactly. Will you tell me the Arrow model that you bought? Thanks.
10x12
just ordered the *WoodBlueprints. Com* guide for step-by-step videos and different plans to. BUILD A SHED. they have some awesome plans in there
S22
At 17:04 I think your back wall beam is upside down. Not that it makes a difference but from what I read in my instruction book the open channel is supposed to face down.
The holes all lined up. I didn't need to poke any new ones. A lot of the parts are reversible.
Even with the flashing around the shed floor, do you find that rain water makes it's way under the edge via the lip all around the shed? I built a platform very similar, then the first rain, the water comes under the sides because of the platform that sticks out all around the sides. No leaks in the roof or sides, but a lot of water from under the edge. Do you have the same issue?
I siliconed the shed to the deck, and it hasn't leaked.
I had the same problem with miner after building it. I ran a heavy bead of caulking around the bottom outside edge of the frame rails. It seems to have fixed it.
Thanks
I hope it helped.
What size and length flashing did you use on floor edge? Also where did you buy it?
6" galvanized steel flashing. I bought it at the lumber yard.
How did you secure flashing to floor?
Thank you for doing this. One question I have is I noticed you mention #10 screws whereas the manual states #8 are the holes bug enough for #10 or have they changed the screw size in the newest model? I am building an 8x10. I pulled the instructions for the size you refer to and it says #8.
Should I therefore get #8 screws?
#10. The included screws are some metric size in between.
I am planning to buy the arrow 8x6 sheds, on the manual it shows 266pcs of #8Ax5/6 screws, do you think I should still get the 10x3/8 as you recommended?
Yes. Hex head screws driven with a magnetic socket in a cordless drill or impact driver will vastly improve the experience. Match the count in your manual.
What to do when the roof panels don’t match the holes like they don’t reach the center???
If the holes don't line up, the base isn't square or isn't flat. You need to square up, and maybe shim your base frame.
Where did you get your screws and bolts?
A True Value hardware store.
hey James, would it be possible to install the door on the 6 feet side, thanks
No, the door header integrates with a gable.
@@riparianlife97701 thank you, just subscribed!
Thanks made me decide to just buy a wood shed on a skid
Lol
Great vid, thanks for sharing. What type of flashing/drip edge did you use for the foundation?
It's anodized 6" steel.
Docktor Jim sorry to be a pest, but I was just curious if screwing down floor frame to the foundation before shed was complete caused any issues? I only ask because I started on my frame tonight and the instructions state to hold off until shed is fully erected.
@@tygould2474 The reason they say to hold off is that if your foundation isn't dead flat and square, you will need to pry your base frame up and down to get the holes to line up. If your floor is flat, screw it down.
Hey Jim, thanks for the very helpful post. I built a 10x10 probably 30years ago and I'm about to do a 10x12. With the old one...which by the way, the roof is rusting quite badly, I did a gravel/sand/road base foundation and it worked out fine. I'm going to do the same with this one and I'll use the floor kit laid down on several countersunk cement blocks for support. I don't really recall but I believe I can put together the floor kit get it level then surround the base pieces then proceed with the walls, roof, etc...as you did. Does that make sense?
Yes, you'll build the floor frame first. Keep a flat bar handy to raise the shed a bit to get the holes to line up.
Sir can you tell me how big the box is that the pieces come in?
And what kind of flashing did you use?
@jamesguyphotography
The box dimensions and weight should be available online at the Arrow website. For flashing, I used 6" galvanized, painted angle.
How long do you think it will take 2 people to build the 10x12 shed? Thank you
No more than 8 hours if you have hex head screws, an electric driver, and a flat floor.
in one day?? start building at 4 am.. the biggest obstacle is time... it took me 3 days to build the floor base and the shed.. good thing I had taken the week off.
Did you watch the video? It took me 4 hours to build the floor, and 8 hours to build the shed on it. I bought 2, and learned a lot from the first one. That's why I made this, my only how-to video.
heh.. we did a completely custom built shed and it took over two years!!
I have a 8x6 arrow elite shed. I'm having trouble with the roof panel holes aligning. Would prying up on the base help?
Yes. That's all you can do. See if you have a low corner. You can lift it by the corners fairly easily.
@@riparianlife97701 Thanks! I'm going to add shims as needed.
Did you screw down your base frame before you started putting on the corners?
Sorry for the slow reply. Yes, I screwed it down first thing.
@@riparianlife97701 thank you. I already set the shed up now though lol. That’s what I did too. I figured I could take the screws out if I needed to adjust it for some reason. I also used the longer screws and bolts like you did, that was a big help. The build went alright, the hardest part was getting the edge screws into the roof panels on the last side I started from. The holes were just not lining up, I had to really pull and manipulate the panels but I got it in the end. Thank you for the video and tips.
I am going to be building one of these over the next couple of weeks with my father in law. Can you tell me how you did the base? The wood lengths and the metal edge you added? How did you put the base together?
I placed 8 pier blocks on grade. I framed the floor with 2x6 pressure treated, screwed together with 3" deck screws. The floor can be 3/4" plywood or OSB. The metal edging is galvanized 6"X6" steel.
@@riparianlife97701 so did you basically make a 12x12 square (using 2 2x6’s on each side) then frame the middle with a bunch of the 2x6’s for support?
@@andrewdavitz6873 I built the 10'x12' model.
@@riparianlife97701 yea, I have the same model. I’ve just never framed a floor before. So I’m trying to get an idea of how the framing actually worked. You said to use 2x6’s, but did you use a longer piece of wood for the left and right side and then a slightly shorter piece of wood at the front and back? Or did you just put (2) 2x6’s for the edge of the framing?
@@andrewdavitz6873 I went 24" on center, with the boards running the short way.