Results 1 to 10 of 21
-
04-14-2008, 04:05 PM #1OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
One of my co-workers is constantly bugging me for garden advice and loves Italian food... Since my saltwater fishing trip plans got rained out this weekend, we got a bright idea to build her a greenhouse instead so she can grow enough tomatoes and peppers for herself (and the rest of the county).
The finished size is 10' x 20' and will be an insulated structure framed in PVC and sheathed in 6mil poly. It will be strong enough to hang minimal lighting from.
So here's the parts list:
16- 1/2" x 10' PVC poles (secondary ribs)
6- 3/4" x 10' PVC poles (primary ribs)
2- 3/4" x 10' PVC poles (ridge pole)
1- 3/4" straight coupling (joins two halves of ridge pole)
8- 1/2" non-threaded PVC 'elbows' (ridge connectors)
3- 3/4" non-threaded PVC elbows (ridge connectors)
4- 1" PVC poles (to be cut for base receiver poles for the secondary ribs)
2- 1 1/4 or 1 1/2" PVC poles (to be cut for base receiver poles for the primary ribs)
1- package of assorted ZipTies
2- Rolls of duct tape- get the good stuff, trust me.
1- 25 x 100' roll of 6 mil clear poly sheeting
1- 4" inline fan with power cord (optional)
1- length of 4" ducting (optional)
1- 4" ductwork flange piece (optional)
Enough heavy tarp material to cover a 10 x 20 area
Lots of used shipping pallets
You also need tools:
Chop saw
Small iron mallet
Sharpies
Drill with 1/8" bit
Ruler
Things that will make your life easier:
Measuring tape
String for laying out the form of the structurestinkyattic Reviewed by stinkyattic on . Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse One of my co-workers is constantly bugging me for garden advice and loves Italian food... Since my saltwater fishing trip plans got rained out this weekend, we got a bright idea to build her a greenhouse instead so she can grow enough tomatoes and peppers for herself (and the rest of the county). The finished size is 10' x 20' and will be an insulated structure framed in PVC and sheathed in 6mil poly. It will be strong enough to hang minimal lighting from. So here's the parts list: Rating: 5
-
04-14-2008, 04:16 PM #2OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
First mark out the area where your greenhouse will be. It will be 10' x 20' and should get at least 6 hours per day of full sunlight, preferably early in the day. If there are weeds and brush, rake them off as best as possible so the 'floor' is smooth and won't poke holes in the tarp you will lay later.
Lay out your supplies and tools first. It's helpful to have a nice flat area to work on. If you count, you'll notice that we forgot some poles, and Home dePOT was out of elbow connectors so there are some of those missing too.
Your first step is to cut the receiver stakes.
First, mark 4 of the 1" poles and 2 of the 1- 1/4" poles off into 2-foot increments.
Cut with the chop saw set on 90' into FOUR foot sections.
Re-set the chop saw to 45' and cut each section in half into TWO foot pieces.
At each corner of the greenhouse, and at the 10' (middle) point of each long wall, pound in a 1 1/4" receiver stake. These will hold the primary ribs.
Along the long walls, pound in the remaining, smaller (1") receiver stakes spaced 2 feet apart. These will hold the secondary ribs.
Make sure the stakes are PERFECTLY upright. Sink them so that they are HALF buried. One foot above ground, one below.
Pics:
1- Supplies
2- Stakes
3- Layout showing stakes installed (partial)
-
04-14-2008, 04:28 PM #3OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
Now assemble your ridge pole.
There are a few places in this greenhouse where I recommend pinning the connection so it doesn't come loose later; this is one of them. The elbow connectors on your primary ribs are another. If you live in a windy area, you might want to pin all connections.
The method by which I do this is shown:
Lightly spray the pipe ends with cooking spray. Butter flavor works best.
Insert the pipe into the connector, and pound it all the way in with a small mallet.
Drill 1/8" holes through the center of where the pipe and connector form a double layer in the joint.
Insert a zip tie through the holes and zip it tight.
Now the connector can't pop off, and when you want to take down the greenhouse, all you do is cut the zip tie.
Assemble each pair of ribs and its elbow connector the same way. They should form a 90' angle, which you will bend later. Be sure that the connections are all snug using your mallet. Mine is named The Persuader.
You should now have one 20' ridge pole 3/4" diameter, 3 primary rib pairs 3/4" diameter, and 8 secondary rib pairs, 1/2" diameter.
Pics:
1- Pipe ends with cooking spray, yum yum
2- Straight coupler shown with one side pinned and the other side just a hole that doesn't even go all the way through (battery on crappy Craftsman cordless died... I swear cordless power tools are totally marketed towards chicks. I made the switch to corded everything about a week after I bought my house hahahahaha!!!!).
-
04-14-2008, 04:31 PM #4Senior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
Lighting? Do you need it for an outdoor grow and what is minimal? For seeing or for growing?
Very cool.....I may have to try this myself. :thumbsup:
Is it deerproof?
Is the butter flavor a non-interchangable supply?
-
04-14-2008, 04:32 PM #5OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
This part is much easier with 2 people.
Stick the base ends of the ribs into the receiver stakes. Now THAT is starting to look like something!
That's all for now; I'm not making the drive out to see my co-worker again until next weekend and will post the rest of the instructions when the thing is done.
Pic:
1- The frame taking shape
-
04-14-2008, 05:09 PM #6OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
Garlic flavor works okay too
Not strictly deerproof unless you add some extra poles or netting. Deer COULD break down the plastic, but it should be relatively easy to keep them out. I may end up trying to do some rodent-proofing on this one, since my friend has a local woodchuck population that made off with all her melons last year. We'll see.
Oh, didn't notice the lighting Q.
We talked about the lighting and yes, it's more for 'seeing' than for 'growing', since the sun takes care of THAT. She works a day job that rarely allows her to be home before 6, so a lot of greenhouse chores will be done at night. We were thinking about just 4- 4' shop lights hanging high from the ridge pole. Each weighs only a few pounds and will give plenty of light to work by after dark.
If you are interested in using correct agricultural lighting, such as 4- 1000w MH lamps with reflectors that are appropriate to what can be a WET environment, I'd replace all the 'secondary' ribs with 3/4" PVC and replace the 3/4" ridge pole with a full inch diameter one, and instead of securing the ridge pole by zipties, use BOLTS.
-
04-15-2008, 12:54 PM #7OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
Heavy clay soil, lol! Them thangs ain' goin' nowheres.
-
04-15-2008, 02:05 PM #8Senior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
lookin good
and givin me more ideas to build stuff:thumbsup:
are you using sch. 20 or 40 for your tubing? do you have alot of strong winds?
cant wait to see the finished product good luck and have fun
-
04-15-2008, 02:13 PM #9OPSenior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
Oh sorry Tex, I didn't read the stuff stamped on the tubes- it's just the cheap, standard home depot grade. We DO get some strong winds, but that location is sheltered from them by structures, shrubbery, and a retaining wall.
I can't wait either! I told her I will take my payment in a couple gallons of home-made spaghetti sauce
-
04-15-2008, 06:24 PM #10Senior Member
Build-A-Long with Stinky: $150 PVC greenhouse
yum spaghetti!!! you can can some and share the love
you can get both sch. 20 and 40 from the local store
20 is thin wall
40 is thicker wall about twice as thick. if you have stronger winds i would atleast recommend that
and im with you on using 3/4" for secondary and 1" for primary
Advertisements
Similar Threads
-
Long long long time lurker, new poster!
By Resisting Nut in forum Introduce YourselfReplies: 0Last Post: 09-09-2012, 01:59 PM -
usb greenhouse
By GetDown in forum Tech Related / ComputersReplies: 0Last Post: 07-15-2010, 10:03 PM -
how long does it take to build tolerance?
By Frank_The_Tank in forum ExperiencesReplies: 3Last Post: 03-15-2007, 08:46 AM -
Greenhouse
By redeyed in forum Outdoor GrowingReplies: 13Last Post: 01-29-2007, 11:52 PM -
greenhouse
By deeply depressed in forum Outdoor GrowingReplies: 4Last Post: 01-30-2006, 07:44 PM