Pole Barn Walls: opinions please!

   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #11  
Around here, we use full-inch rough-sawed white-oak or yellow-poplar for barn siding.

I have several of both around here, wood and metal.

The flimsy metal is fine and no painting required, but is soon bent and banged all over, full of horse-shoe dents, and big holes from some bolt or the other snagging into it as something gets too close.

The inch wood is nearly bullet-proof; horses kick it and you can't even find the spot; bump it with a trailer or bush-hog and no harm done.

I have tried it both ways, smoothly planed and squared up neat, and rough straight off the saw.

The rough-sawed actually holds paint much better and looks better longer than the planed.

Forget the "batten" foolishness and sheet with 1/2" OSB or somesuch, prior to nailing on the wood, if you want the cracks stopped up.:)
 
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #12  
Just to throw another idea out there I built my barn and put up 7/16" OSB then did a 3 tab shingle roof to match the house and used vinyl siding and sofit. Its built as a pole barn but had to get the wife's approval on the exterior.

One other thing. Go bigger then you think you need. My barn is 32x52 primarily to make 4x8 sheets of OSB work, but I wish now I would have done deeper like 52x40. Also I kick myself for only doing 12' tall. So many things like my buddies dump truck, my boat, and friends RV, my neighbors Case Back Hoe all will not fit in a 12 footer. 14' would be so much better and I could have built a stand up loft in the rear of the barn for small item storage.

Sorry, no good pictures, I am on a backup computer.

Chris
 

Attachments

  • Chris's house.jpg
    Chris's house.jpg
    984.5 KB · Views: 304
  • ice10.JPG
    ice10.JPG
    400.7 KB · Views: 292
  • IMAG0104.JPG
    IMAG0104.JPG
    467.5 KB · Views: 254
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #13  
Lowes here has 22 ga Galvalume while HD has the 29 ga. Price difference is about $2 a sheet.

That just goes to show that gauge doesn't mean much anyway.
 
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #14  
I did mine with the board & batten. Used treated poplar. Only problem I ran into was shrinkage. I allowed an inch to an inch and a quarter on each side of the batten. I have gaps all over. I'm now thinking about pulling them off and just putting metal on the outside. I'm not real sure on how to figure for the shrinkage.
 
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #15  
One other point :

The original poster mentioned possibly using fiber-glass roof panels.

No way would I waste my time/money/stuff-in-the-barn-I-don't-want-wet on any type of fiber-glass roofing or so called "sky-lights".

I have never seen anything but trouble from day one from using it.

Several around here got the big idea to use a see-thru fiber-glass panel about every fourth sheet across the roof.

In less than a week, due to either incompatible shrinkage, warpage, or who knows, the "sky-lights" develop splits and cracks and leak like a sieve.

One guy I used to work for, against my advice (he was a control freak that always went against sound advice), roofed the whole barn with fiber-glass panels; when it was raining, it was dryer outside that in.



If you want free natural light, use those genuine sky-lights that are made to seal to the roof, leak-free, and project/amplify tons of sun-light.


Of course, in foggy rainy overcast one sunny day a month KY, sky-lights are about a waste anyway.:)
 
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please!
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Thanks for all the responses folks. Decisions to be made I guess. I'll scrap the fiberglass roof idea, that seems like a recurring theme.
 
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #17  
T1-11?
No way.
You're better of turning that stuff inside out and using it as sheathing only. Horrible stuff, miserable to paint/stain.

If the little lady would rather have you working ON your barn/garage than IN it , go with barnboard approach. It's got classic good looks, and the individual pieces aren't so heavy that you'll have to disturb her from her tea to help you manhandle them into place, as you would with the T1-11.

Fiberglas belongs on boats and Corvettes-or possibly greenhouses. As a workshop roof?
It's ugly, it cracks, the corrugation makes it nearly impossible to seal.
If you simply must have some fiberglas, make one of those ugly carports out back-where your wife won't have to look at it, and neither will I if I happen to drive by.

If you build the first four feet or so out of a masonry product, you should have plenty of durability, no matter what you do with the rest.
 
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please!
  • Thread Starter
#18  
   / Pole Barn Walls: opinions please! #20  
I went with 1" x 12" boards and 1" x 4" battens and it works great. This was green eastern white pine as the mill was out of hemlock when I needed it. I was going to go with 3" batts, but a friend talked me into 4". Glad I did, as the 1x12's shrink enough to be barely covered in places. One more tip, it's not too much more money or work, go ahead and wrap the whole thing in Tyvek (or the cheaper equivilent) after the purlins, but before the siding. Any cracks, gaps you do have won't allow air infiltration with the Tyvek. My father didn't on his, and has problems when rain comes out of the north. Mine is dry as can be, despite a few through checks in the siding.

The issue with board and batt - deciding whether or not to stain it. If you do it once, you will do it every few years. The alternative is to let it grey and weather. It will still last a long time, but probably not as long as if it's properly stained.

Hope that helps.

Jon Hunter
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

Massey Ferguson 9250 (A53472)
Massey Ferguson...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
2025 JOHN DEERE X350 LOT NUMBER 166 (A53084)
2025 JOHN DEERE...
2024 JOHN DEERE 35P LOT NUMBER 110 (A53084)
2024 JOHN DEERE...
2014 MACK PINNACLE (A52472)
2014 MACK PINNACLE...
2004 Ford E-350 Passenger Van (A51692)
2004 Ford E-350...
 
Top