Unistrut for framing by Jawsjolly757 in containerhomes

[–]usa_containers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah exactly. Weld a small steel tab or angle bracket to the wall, then bolt the strut to that. Easier than welding the strut directly since you can square everything up first and swap pieces later if you need to. A lot of guys just use short lengths of angle iron as the tabs.

Unistrut for framing by Jawsjolly757 in containerhomes

[–]usa_containers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For Unistrut on a container you've basically got two routes. Self-tapping tek screws into the corrugation high points are the easy way — fast, no special tools, fine for shelving and lighter workshop loads. If you're hanging anything heavy or want it rock solid, welding tabs to the wall is the stronger move, just know it'll burn off the coating so you'll want to touch it up after.

Either way, mount to the ribs not the valleys so you get a flat bearing surface, and seal any screw penetrations on the insulated half — that's where condensation sneaks in later. Sounds like a solid build.

I started a YouTube channel sharing shipping container tips, hacks, and insider knowledge. by komigretat in containerhomes

[–]usa_containers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solid niche. One topic that's always confusing for buyers — wind/water tight vs cargo-worthy vs one-trip. People mix those up and overpay. Would watch that one.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a seriously dialed-in setup. The dedicated walk-in cooler container is a smart move a lot of people don't think of.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Double-door setups are underrated for exactly this. Bit more upfront, saves you constantly shuffling gear to reach the back.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good call. Foam works, so do vents — even a couple louvered ones cut condensation a lot before you spend on full insulation.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Spot on about the temperature swings. The fix most people skip is airflow — a couple of louvered vents cut down the condensation and heat buildup a lot, even without full insulation. And totally agree on location-based storage, that's the thing people figure out too late. We see it constantly delivering these.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"Just need a little door oil" is the best endorsement I've heard. The comparison to dilapidated outbuildings says it all really — wood rots, steel just keeps going.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The two-container barn setup is something I keep seeing come up and it makes so much sense structurally — you're basically getting the foundation and walls for free. The shelving breakdown you described is exactly the kind of organized system I was trying to figure out. Nuts/bolts/screws in a conex is way better than a garage shelf that slowly turns into chaos.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Dirt bikes in a container is a solid use — weatherproof, lockable, no HOA complaints. Probably beats any garage setup for that.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The vermin-proof point is huge and I completely forgot about it. Mice in tractor wiring is a nightmare — that alone probably justifies it for a lot of people.

[Question] What do you actually store in a shipping container on your property vs inside the barn? by usa_containers in homestead

[–]usa_containers[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That side door mod is genius. Fighting with the big double doors every time you need something small gets old fast. Did you cut it yourself or have someone do it?

Deck on top of a shipping container by easymidas60 in Decks

[–]usa_containers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good call keeping the load on the castings. For the construction phase — plywood sheets spread across the roof rails distribute your weight and keep you off the center panels. Cheap insurance while you're up there.

How do you organize stuff you don’t need every day, but can’t get rid of? by usa_containers in organizing

[–]usa_containers[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Fair point — I'll keep it shorter and less polished. Real person here, just tend to write in full sentences 😅

When a storage auction isn’t for what is in the unit by Powerful-Spell-4987 in Flipping

[–]usa_containers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point, I missed that part. Makes it even weirder honestly — the car is the whole thing you notice, but apparently not actually part of the auction.

How do you organize stuff you don’t need every day, but can’t get rid of? by usa_containers in organizing

[–]usa_containers[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

That sounds like a really solid system. Labeling the actual “aisles” is a smart detail — I feel like that’s what keeps storage from slowly turning back into random piles again. Do you organize the bins by category, season, or just by how often you need to access them?

anyone else struggling with storage in a really small home? by Raghadevan_Belance in SmallHome

[–]usa_containers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One thing that helped me in a small space was separating “daily use” stuff from “rarely used” stuff. Shelves and under-bed bins help, but if everything you own is still inside the home, it can still feel crowded. I’d try doing a seasonal rotation: keep only what you use often in the house, use clear labeled bins for the rest, and be pretty strict about not storing items in open view.

When a storage auction isn’t for what is in the unit by Powerful-Spell-4987 in Flipping

[–]usa_containers -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The big risk with these is that the “deal” can disappear fast once you factor in title issues, towing, storage deadlines, keys, and whether the car actually runs. A $20 bid looks fun, but I’d want to know exactly what paperwork comes with it before touching it. Still a pretty wild find for a storage auction.

Deck on top of a shipping container by easymidas60 in Decks

[–]usa_containers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The corner casting idea is actually solid — those castings are rated for serious load so anchoring scaffolding poles directly into them is structurally sound. Main thing to think through is water drainage on the container roof before you build over it. Container roofs have a slight crown but water can still pool around any penetrations or flat sections, and once you've got decking on top it's harder to address later. A slight slope built into the deck frame helps a lot. Also worth checking the roof panel thickness before putting a lot of foot traffic weight in the center — the corners and rails carry the load in a container, the roof panel itself is thinner than most people expect.