howdy, has anyone ever made a grain hopper for feed storage? Im looking at different storage methodes of feed
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howdy, has anyone ever made a grain hopper for feed storage? Im looking at different storage methodes of feed
Thank you, I was thinking more along the lines of a silo sorta holder for storing grain.
Thank you very much! I will definitely add a wood frame to my tractor, or I might build a real hoop coop.That could be your problem. A triangle is the strongest shape (that is why geodesic domes work, they are a lot of connected triangles) but you have to keep them triangularAnd the deeper the triangular tent shaped structure is from a 2D shape, the weaker the sides will be without reinforcing framing.![]()
A flat cattle panel is happy to be that way and as you can see from the true hoop pictures, they will flex quite a bit under load but they WANT to be flat which is why they hold that hoop shape. When flexed they are a giant spring. There are people here who can tell you what happens when you bend them enough to get into the bed of a pickup for the trip home and they decide they would rather be flat.
I would toss the tractor format and go with a true hoop. Besides being inherently strong due to the panel WANTING to be flat, you have 100% usable space with the (near) vertical walls unlike the tight angles at ground level in a triangular tractor. You could put on lift up wheels if the ability to move it is desired.
If I did not have my old barn and converted horse stall coop, there are only two free standing designs I would consider. The hoop (relatively cheap without a lot of building skills needed) or a Woods coop like JackE has: https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/445004/woods-style-house-in-the-winter
Person in "farm Show" magazine. Did the big white rectangular totes the 300 gallon or so ones... turned into grain bins....
Great job!I got the idea for making T-Post hoop coops from @Blooie , and we love them. They are super fast to build, and probably the cheapest coop if you're having to buy stuff ... we used 1" chicken wire to wrap the cattle panels, but you could invest in 1/2" hardware cloth for more security. Greenhouse plastic is pretty inexpensive and great for letting light into the coop, but it can get hot in the summer without good ventilation and some shade. You could add a layer of shade cloth between the cattle panels and the plastic.
You can see we left the plastic off the far wall, and we also cut a vent in the top of the door. We roll up the sides in the summer.