Instalați Sail Shades ca un profesionist

Instalați Sail Shades ca un profesionist



15 USD Hardware pentru umbrire: https://amzn.to/3QvGnh7 425 USD Suporturi pergole https://amzn.to/3vNdIvM 20 USD Porch Springs https://amzn.to/3JDVPoR 19 USD Lac pentru lemn (aș alege „Clear Satin „) https://amzn.to/3A1J4kS Vă mulțumim pentru vizionare, acordați videoclipului cu degetul mare dacă ți-a plăcut!

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48 thoughts on “Instalați Sail Shades ca un profesionist

  1. Very nice! A couple things I'd add:
    1) treat any wood below ground with wood preservative
    2) use a mixing tub and a garden hose to mix the concrete. (Home Renovision just released a video a few days ago on doing this with a concrete walk path.)

  2. I watched your video regarding sun shades. Very well explained. I just have one question, you mentioned that you like the 2 high and 2 low set up for the shade and you said it did not work in this instant. Did you have a triangle shade or rectangular shade? I like that idea about two high and two low. Would this work for a rectangular shaped sun shade? Thank you for the video very informational. Thank you for all the help you can advise.

  3. Cement is not required. It will hold water against the wood and the post will rot out sooner in wet climates. A 3-foot deep hole with the earth repeatedly tamped down (bottom to top, just a few inches at a time. More dirt – tamptamp – more dirt tamptamp etc. A line with a truckers hitch works just fine. Very cheap, but you MUST buy decent-quality parachute-style chord. When using lines, springs, and hardware are not required. I have three across my deck and pool. I replace the line each spring.

  4. Dude! Thank you! I’m pretty mechanical and… old lol so I’ve done just about everything. Having said that, never put up a sail shade. Bought one surprisingly inexpensive on Amazon and it’s a gorgeous turquoise. I bought it because the Tampa heat and UV is ripping ass on my Lexus leather and paint job. This house only has a nice carport but I use that for other things and can’t park my car in it. Anyway if you can imagine a rectangle house with a smaller rectangle carport on the front…. I bought a triangle shade to basically buy me a bit of cover for my car in the hottest part of the day. I bought the adjustable screws, a concrete anchor ( one point is going into cinder block) and 3 eye plates all beefy enough rated at 350 pounds. What I didn’t get is the springs! Damn! That’s brilliant! I saved a few springs from an old 12 foot trampoline the kids used. They are in visually fine shape. I don’t know what weight they are rated at but the coils are about 2-3 inch diameter and about 6 inches long. Before I go to ACE and let them rape my wallet for springs… in your opinion, you think those would work? Oh, the safe is 12x12x17… a long triangle which will fit nicely. ????

    Thanks for making the video. Right to the points and we’ll shot. Easy to watch all the way through!

  5. what about wind? is there a danger of living in to windy an area. live in NY and we get a lot of windy days… can sometimes blow over umbrellas table.
    also are these waterproof enough?… could you stay under one in the rain and stay dry?

  6. Looks great, inhave a 14×14 deck off the backdoor. Nothing to really attach it to as is. Dont want to drill into house 🤔 hopefully i can figure something out 😵‍💫

  7. Quick, concise, to the point, and informative, all with no silly intro, no obnoxious background music, or inane special effects. Plus, you made me feel stupid, too. I know all about turnbuckles. Used them for fences a hundred times. Never dawned on me to use them like this. Coupled with some springs to protect the sail if it gets gusty… dare I say genius? You found a new sub. Don’t change your format, just hit us with the knowledge.

  8. Great video. I would use pressure treated 4x6s or 6x6s though. The Douglas fur with spar urethane won't last too long especially underground. Use the pressure treated wood and wrap the part underground with synthetic felt or a good window tape for around new windows. I built my 50×35 garage this way. 3 ft deep at least

  9. Quick questions-1. Can you use long cable wires to connect to a house?
    2. Can a sunshade be temporary- and only put up on days you need it, but take down when you don’t?

  10. I'm not very DIY, but watching this I think it was super clear and even I could pull this off. P.s. extra points for the dick jokes.

  11. I'm thinking of doing a 24'x24' square with 2 high and 2 low in a color, with two flying triangles over either end overlapping the square but in white. This would make a total of 34'x24'ish, running back from my house. Maybe 8 pists and 2 attached to the house. Has anyone seen anything like that before? Got a photo? Is there a product for posts and sailshade that can be left up in winter, in New England with snow? 25% slope minimum I read somewhere, right?

  12. So im just going to throw something at the interwebs and face the consequences. I put up shade sails in the back yard for a graduation party and expected to take them down after a season. Did it on the cheap and this is what I learned.
    Four by fours, while not the best are actually a pretty good option for posts if done correctly. They will bow towards the sails after awhile because of the tension but its not the end of the world. If you angle the posts away from the sails to about two or three feet between the sail clip ends and the posts you should have plenty of room for bowing. It actually looks nice and and there is a good reason to do this. Seal and stain the posts before sinking them. They will last a good while and being free standing, not a big deal to replace if need be. mine have been in the ground for four years now and im having no problems. We were going to take the shades down after the season but kept them up because we liked them.
    I didnt buy special hardware for the sails. I did buy inexpensive boat winches from amazon. I connected the winches about chest high on the posts, ran the straps through an I bolt at the top of the posts, clipped the end of the winch strap to the shade sail corners, and cranked tension when needed. When storms came in the shades were down in five minutes and back up even faster when they passed. That is I took them down when I thought about it, sometimes. These things take a beating and I'm continuously surprised by they're resilience. The great thing about the boat winches is that you can always adjust the tension to keep rhe sails taught.
    Because the 4×4 posts were cheap and what I thought a temporary party solution I may have made them too snug in their position to the sails. We replanted them two years ago to be further out and now everything is pretty cool. They creak in the breeze in the evenings and rhat makes them worth putting up in my opinion.
    Like i said, what was to be temporary is turning into permanent. The fly by night set up is turning into a happy accident. I didnt think this would last a season let alone become a fixture in our back yard. Don't over think it. You'd be surprised how well the set I did works.

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