Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123
Results 21 to 30 of 30
  1. #21
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Posts
    1,882
    Location
    Mostly East Central Oklahoma
    Tractor
    JD cut

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    Footage taken from a news helicopter of the last tornado in this neck of the woods showed the house blown away, and the family coming out of their underground shelter with a propane tank spewing it's contents just a few feet away. Something to think about.

  2. #22
    Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    25
    Location
    Flint Hills of Kansas
    Tractor
    Challenger 295

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    I have had a 20 ft. container sitting on 12" of concrete pavers in each corner (to keep the critters from digging underneath) that doesn't have any tie downs on it. In the last 20 years here in Kansas it has been through many storms, including a straight line wind of 105 mph which brought down a 16" cottonwood limb across the top of it. It has never budged an inch and still looks pretty good. I probably have 2-3 tons of stuff in it. We have a basement but if I was ever caught out needing a place to get to it would be the first place I would go. With an inside latching system like others have mentioned, it should be pretty safe for the money.

  3. #23
    Gold Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Posts
    440

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    Shipping containers and semi trailers aren't even in the same neighborhood as far as strength. Since we are talking Tornadoes, the biggest difference is one is sitting flush on the ground and the other is elevated 3' to make it easy for the wind to get under it. The steel in the walls of a container is much thicker than the aluminum in the walls of a 53' van trailer.Shipping containers are meant to be abused and be stacked 12 high. Semi trailers are intended to be a light as possible without buckling when they hit a pot-hole.

    That said, I'd feel much better about my family riding out a F5 in a shipping container if dirt was mounded up and around it.

  4. #24
    Veteran Member Redneck in training's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Posts
    2,306
    Location
    South Central Iowa
    Tractor
    TYM 330 HST with FEL

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    Shipping container is strong enough to take the wind but it can be penetrated by flying objects. The sheetmetal is quite thin.
    Ladia

    TYM 330 HST with FEL, box blade, rotary mower, post digger, three point sprayer, homemade backhoe, Jinma chipper, Leinbach rake and Lincoln 255XT MIG.
    Tasker harrow disc, PTO driven 5 cuft concrete mixer. My wife Julie has Grasshopper 725K.
    We live in a barn (aircraft hanger) converted into a house. Our PV system: https://enlighten.enphaseenergy.com/...ems/h2eX136588
    http://pvoutput.org/intraday.jsp?id=20209&sid=18073

  5. #25
    Elite Member Gary Fowler's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Posts
    4,735
    Location
    Bismarck Arkansas
    Tractor
    2009 Kubota RTV 900, 2009 Kubota B26 TLB & 2010 model LS P7010

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    The sheet metal is about 2 mm thick on a shipping container, not the 5mm recommended for flying object protection but not roofing tin either. You do need to have at least 6 feet of the 8 foot height below ground so flying objects is not that big a deal since if anything did come thru it would be above head height. I would not trust one anchored above ground for complete tornado protection, although if cable strapped down with earth augers for anchors it would be better than being inside a house . I dont believe the walls would collapse but large objects hitting at 200 mph could damage the walls for sure. Bury it with a good bitumastic (tar) coating on the outside for corrosion protection would make it last many years and you would be as safe as any other shelter.
    PS. The do make them in aluminum also.
    2010 LS P-7010C 20F/20R gear tractor & FEL, 2009 Kubota B 26 TLB, RTV 900 Kubota, 2012-20 ft 12k GVW trailer, 2011- 52" Craftsman ZTR mower, 54" John Deere 332 lawn tractor, 5.5HP rear tined walk behind tiller, 7 foot bush hog, 8 foot landscape rake , 8 foot 3 PH disc, 2 row cultivator, 350 amp CC/CV AC/DC welding machine and a shop full of tools that I spend more time looking for than using.

  6. #26
    Gold Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Posts
    339
    Location
    Tauranga NZ
    Tractor
    Kubota BX2350

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    If you're burying these containers in the ground wouldn't you also have to be cautious of the sides collapsing from the weight if the earth piled up along each side??
    ISTR a while ago seeing a TV program, might have been Mythbusters, where they got the container half buried and the sides, or was it the roof, collapsed. Just how much pressure can the sides sustain?

  7. #27
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Posts
    1,229
    Location
    Ontario
    Tractor
    CT235

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    I'm thinking a largish concrete culvert buried in a mound would be what I would do, over a shipping container. Lower profile, no maintenance, penetration improbable.
    Tim.

  8. #28
    bcp
    bcp is online now
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    2,244
    Location
    SW WA
    Tractor
    Kubota BX2360

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    I wonder why tornado country is not filed with underground homes.

    Bruce

  9. #29
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Posts
    1,882
    Location
    Mostly East Central Oklahoma
    Tractor
    JD cut

    Default Re: Shipping Containers and Tornadoes

    Bruce, the answer to your question is one of the many enigma's of Tornado Alley. We are in the heart of the Bible Belt with one the highest unwed teenage mother rates in the nation. Then there is the old adage:

    Know what an Oklahoma tornado and Oklahoma divorce have in common? You know somebody is going to lose a trailer house.

  10. #30

Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
© 2013 TractorByNet.com. TractorByNet is a registered trademark of IMC Digital Universe, Inc. Other trademarks on this page are the property of their respective owners.