Cheapest I could find after this was £131-145 so this is very cheap!
13 comments
dealerxxx
20 Jan 17#13
Oos
Meathotukdeals
19 Jan 17#11
I've had a Yardmaster for about 20 years and still in goods nick. Would be a shame if their quality isn't what it was.
ClougherNut
19 Jan 17#10
Is it possible to store mountain bikes in this? Door openings look a bit narrow.
The-Stranger to ClougherNut
20 Jan 17#12
i got 3 bikes in mine, pain to put up and if anyone wanted to rob it - a philips screwdriver and 6 screws removed would open it right up - not secure at all really
I_SHOULD_COCO
18 Jan 17#8
These do require some determination to assemble - better to have two people and expect 6 hours plus
Be ready to drill a few extra holes at the end - to get things to line up.
The screws are self tapping so a 2mm or 2.5mm HSS drill bit can be a life saver at thed end
COCo
SCOUSEKEVIN
18 Jan 17#7
They are a pain to put up but I and my lad did a fairly big one in about 5 hours and once it is built (properly) they are very sturdy. We put it on a base of concrete paving stones and bolted it to them. It has been through some fairly heavy weather over the last few years and is still as strong as first built.
Only one slight snag and that is the metal threshold, it is well galvanised but with things being taken in/out and boots etc it started to get the odd bit of rust so a couple of coats of silver hammerite and sorted. Basic maintenance, should think it will last minimum 12 -15 years if not more. Ah they have just had first child so maybe in about 6-7 years time it will develop a few problems LOL
wandaluzt
18 Jan 17#5
Well if his erection suffers from questionable stiffness I think that is of great interest to people reading this post.
ichayan
18 Jan 17#4
about screws!
scoobytawazara
18 Jan 172#2
agree with point about screws and his erection however not flimsy when assembled has withstood huge winds for many years with no sign of rust anywhere
Gollywood to scoobytawazara
18 Jan 172#3
Whats his erection got to do with anything? :man:
Turnip to scoobytawazara
18 Jan 17#6
Not a rusty erection? Wait til he's married a few more years then... :smile:
moob to scoobytawazara
19 Jan 17#9
These will blow away and end up a crumpled wreck - unless you anchor them down onto something strong like concrete slabs.
ScottishIndependence2018
18 Jan 177#1
My mate got one a few years back and to be honest it's not even worth 50 quid, they are flimsy metal sheets with loads of bloody tiny screws, plastic washers, bolts and nuts that require even the nimblest fingers, and def a two person team, frikin nightmare and i'm a dab hand at maintenance, best source a cheap wooden shed within the next Cpl months before they go up in price or one of those heavy duty plastic sheds that will last longer than this flimsy shed folks, just my opinion, don't say I never warned you's :wink:
Opening post
13 comments
Be ready to drill a few extra holes at the end - to get things to line up.
The screws are self tapping so a 2mm or 2.5mm HSS drill bit can be a life saver at thed end
COCo
Only one slight snag and that is the metal threshold, it is well galvanised but with things being taken in/out and boots etc it started to get the odd bit of rust so a couple of coats of silver hammerite and sorted. Basic maintenance, should think it will last minimum 12 -15 years if not more. Ah they have just had first child so maybe in about 6-7 years time it will develop a few problems LOL