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- #291
Never thought of taking pallets & making shingles .I have a pick up load of short pieces I was going to throw away.
In the YouTube video on pallet shingles that I posted, I think he was using pallet boards that were 12-14 inches long. But, I don't think there is a magic length you need to use.
Many of the pallets I have been cutting up with the circular saw method yield pallet plank pieces of about 18 inches long between the 2X4 supports. I think a person might be able to cut a 18 inch plank piece in half and get 2 useable 9 inch pallet shingles.
Since you line up the pallet shingles from the bottom of the board, you could probably even use shorter pieces depending on how much/little overlap you want on your shingles.
I have been cutting down my pallets with the circular saw method, getting my plank pieces ~18 inches long, then I cut them down to 16 inches for my projects. I have a big stack of them now at 16 inches. I think they would make great shingles for either the side walls as siding or as shingles for roofing.
Personally, I would have picked either size of pallet shingles and done that on all walls. Maybe it's just my past building experience, but when I see siding not matching up on the corners of the build, then it just feels wrong to me. Also, if you snap a chalk line on the wood, you would be able to line up the boards better. It looks to me that he eyeballed the line level, and came close. A chalk line would have been straighter. Of course, none of the matters to the chickens, but I have put siding and shingles on a number of buildings and I would have done it a bit differently even on a chicken coop.
I hope those suggestions did not come off as negative. They were not meant to be negative. However, with a little more planning and no extra work, a person can install siding/shingles on a straight line and ensure the corners all line up. But, I imagine he was using what was available and did the best he could with limited resources. I think he said the entire build cost him about $100.00 (in 2013) for the hardware he used, pallet wood was free. That's a pretty darn good job for his 8X10 coop, don't you think.
I did not see any windows in that build. I think it would be really dark in that coop all the time. Did you put any windows in your pallet coop build? Were any windows needed?

