Well sir I can tell you that I’m very impressed and believe me, I don’t impress easily. I think you have more than a building here. I’d call it a labour of love. I tip my hat to you and pat you on the back for a job well done. You should be very proud of what you’ve accomplished here. All the best from Newfoundland,Canada. God bless.
I’m sure this was lots of hard work, however I’m impressed with your re-engineering the trusses to compensate both for damaged spots and to build in extra strength. I’m very impressed with your work. Well done
Hi Larry, back at it again...I remember you and the confirmation kids building that cabin, also tuning all of those car horns to amazing grace and entering in the State Fair, and never forget you and Mark K. putting all of that work in the airplane you guys built. Great job!
a fantastic looking barn.. here in quebec canada that would be strong when we get 4 feet of snow.. i have faith with all the construction adheasive n screws n OSB
I have a Quonset shed just like that built in 55, both of my great uncle's and Grandpa had one too, they were Rilco rafters and very unique, mine is 40x60 and I put cement with hot water heat and lined building with white metal, makes a nice shop
Did you put hot water tubing through the slab or radiator system? Iam thinking about 40'x60'steel Quonset but wondering if maybe should go go 40'x80' for my farm shop-
@@jacklowe3788 I put 2" styrofoam around perimeter and the foil/bubble radiant barrier under the cement with 1/2" tubing in the slab, I heat the water with an outdoor boiler and keep the building about 50 degrees all winter, I have a wood stove in one corner as an emergency heat source or if I need it 75 degrees to paint something, it's recommended to only run 90-120 degree water in the concrete to prevent damage to the floor, as for size 40x60 sounded big 25 years ago when I bought this place but it's not big enough for a farm shop especially since it's a quonset, when my combine is in the shop it takes up the whole building
Nice shop, I've read some comments and didn't see my thought. Did the old guy see shop after it was completed? That would have made this story have a happy ending.
That is the best kind of story!👍😎
What a fantastic workshop. You and your team did a fantastic job
Excellent!!!!!!!!!
A great way to save some very valuable and precious wood!!!!!
Amen
Retired, Veteran
Well sir I can tell you that I’m very impressed and believe me, I don’t impress easily. I think you have more than a building here. I’d call it a labour of love. I tip my hat to you and pat you on the back for a job well done. You should be very proud of what you’ve accomplished here. All the best from Newfoundland,Canada. God bless.
I’m sure this was lots of hard work, however I’m impressed with your re-engineering the trusses to compensate both for damaged spots and to build in extra strength. I’m very impressed with your work. Well done
What an amazing story. Thank you for sharing, and God Bless from Phoenix. Russ.
This is one hell of a job. Thumbs up.
Larry--Clinton Krause was my great-uncle, talked about you and your family fondly before he passed away. Thank you for looking out for him.
You have hard, work, great design, and creativity, along with ethic. Thanks for your good example.
Excellent video! Super to see how you solved what looked like a hopeless problem!
Good Job ..! Nice to see this video!
That's some nice work you got done. You should be proud.
Really nice work
Hi
Larry, back at it again...I remember you and the confirmation kids building that cabin, also tuning all of those car horns to amazing grace and entering in the State Fair, and never forget you and Mark K. putting all of that work in the airplane you guys built.
Great job!
Larry ~ Scott and I were way impressed. He always enjoyed working on projects with you! You done good :)
Absolutely beautiful!
NICE JOB DAD !!!!!!!!!!!!!
a fantastic looking barn.. here in quebec canada that would be strong when we get 4 feet of snow.. i have faith with all the construction adheasive n screws n OSB
Great job it actually looks like your reconstruction was similar to how the Old Zeppelin Hangers were built.
Yeah I was thinking about the old Zeppelin hangars as we'll... Nice work...
I have a Quonset shed just like that built in 55, both of my great uncle's and Grandpa had one too, they were Rilco rafters and very unique, mine is 40x60 and I put cement with hot water heat and lined building with white metal, makes a nice shop
Did you put hot water tubing through the slab or radiator system? Iam thinking about 40'x60'steel Quonset but wondering if maybe should go go 40'x80' for my farm shop-
@@jacklowe3788 I put 2" styrofoam around perimeter and the foil/bubble radiant barrier under the cement with 1/2" tubing in the slab, I heat the water with an outdoor boiler and keep the building about 50 degrees all winter, I have a wood stove in one corner as an emergency heat source or if I need it 75 degrees to paint something, it's recommended to only run 90-120 degree water in the concrete to prevent damage to the floor, as for size 40x60 sounded big 25 years ago when I bought this place but it's not big enough for a farm shop especially since it's a quonset, when my combine is in the shop it takes up the whole building
You are a king
Great video
great story!
Great story and I bet his neighbor that built it was happy the building was saved. Great work, love the curved roof.
Respect.
Great to see
what are the actual dimensions of the building.... any plans available?
Thats n awesome structure, but why the tar shingles? Id figure you would go with metal.
so many times I see those old buildings just sitting..esp those old barns a real shame
Can you talka bit about how you did the roof?
Nice shop, I've read some comments and didn't see my thought. Did the old guy see shop after it was completed? That would have made this story have a happy ending.
Clinton did get to see the finished project. He was pretty happy to see it get rebuilt. Thanks
@@larrycrowder439 Sweet
What is the size of this building?
It is 34x54
great
i would live in em, spay foam insulate em
When OSB was cheap, nice job.
Do you have tobacco in your mouth. Nice job otherwise.