Deere Dude
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2011
- Messages
- 3,886
- Tractor
- John Deere 3720
Summertown Metals
This is from a middle Tennessee builder of pole barns and upon reading some of this it seems 29 ga. is suggested for residential and 26 ga. for commercial. I recall once upon a time thinner gauge can be used if it has a higher tensile strength.
I would have the builder do it all. You would be surprised at how fast they can throw a building up compared to the average DIYer.
A word of caution. I had a 36x54 building put up and looked okay. I went to my other property and studied my other pole barn and notice that the new one I just had put up did NOT have any diagonal cross bracing on the walls or on the roof. I squawked at the builder adjuster and he basically said it is up to the actual builder to put wood in as needed. Besides he said, this is not a commercial building. I stewed on it for a while and went through many hard storms and it stood for 10 years.
Then after some complaining about pole barns on this forum someone was bad mouthing a particular pole barn company. I chimed in with my same perceived issues and it got the companies attention. After 10 years they came out and stuck all kinds of bracing up like they should have previously.
This is from a middle Tennessee builder of pole barns and upon reading some of this it seems 29 ga. is suggested for residential and 26 ga. for commercial. I recall once upon a time thinner gauge can be used if it has a higher tensile strength.
I would have the builder do it all. You would be surprised at how fast they can throw a building up compared to the average DIYer.
A word of caution. I had a 36x54 building put up and looked okay. I went to my other property and studied my other pole barn and notice that the new one I just had put up did NOT have any diagonal cross bracing on the walls or on the roof. I squawked at the builder adjuster and he basically said it is up to the actual builder to put wood in as needed. Besides he said, this is not a commercial building. I stewed on it for a while and went through many hard storms and it stood for 10 years.
Then after some complaining about pole barns on this forum someone was bad mouthing a particular pole barn company. I chimed in with my same perceived issues and it got the companies attention. After 10 years they came out and stuck all kinds of bracing up like they should have previously.