Shed vents

worms7

Songster
May 22, 2015
447
9
116
england
I am a bit scared of cutting my new shed to put vents in but i know i have to do it how did you
Do yours ?
Cheers Phil
 
It's pretty scary when you make the first cut to your new shed - then it gets easier.
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I had to cut many vents in my shed to meet the ventilation needs of my chickens...a jigsaw was my tool of choice. I added approx. 12 metal vents, though I close off a few by covering with plastic mil when it's really cold (snow can blow in, for example). Even with all the additional vents, I think that adding a rabbit-wire "screen" door that allowed the big wooden door to remain open during hot weather made the biggest difference.

Good luck with your retrofit!
 
Wood shed but i can't put a picture on as my camra is not working
But my shed is pent roof not apex
Cheers Phil
 
I personally use whatever tool I have that would do it the fastest, 95% of the time it's the skill saw.
Handsaw, jigsaw, reciprocating saw, whatever you have or are comfortable using.

If you have none of those, get yourself a keyhole saw, they are cheap.
Use a level to mark out the vent using a pencil, or use a ruler, or anything with a straight edge.

If you have or can lend a drill, drill a 1/4 inch hole in each corner of that vent drawing, staying within the lines when drilling.
Take the keyhole saw, put it in one of those corner holes and cut on the line.
You can't really go wrong unless your measurements are way off.

However you choose to do it, take your time and don't rush it.
Once you have done the first one, it's all easy sailing from then on.
 
Yes, a pent roof is what we call a shed roof, I had to look it up. More proof we are divided by a common language.

For the benefit of those that have not yet built theirs, when I built mine I did not put the siding all the way to the top. My rafters were 2x6’s so I took the siding to the undersides of those, leaving a 5-1/2” hole under the overhang and covered that open area with hardware cloth.

If it is already built I can’t add much to this.



I personally use whatever tool I have that would do it the fastest, 95% of the time it's the skill saw.
Handsaw, jigsaw, reciprocating saw, whatever you have or are comfortable using.

If you have none of those, get yourself a keyhole saw, they are cheap.
Use a level to mark out the vent using a pencil, or use a ruler, or anything with a straight edge.

If you have or can lend a drill, drill a 1/4 inch hole in each corner of that vent drawing, staying within the lines when drilling.
Take the keyhole saw, put it in one of those corner holes and cut on the line. 
You can't really go wrong unless your measurements are way off.

However you choose to do it, take your time and don't rush it.
Once you have done the first one, it's all easy sailing from then on.
 

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