Pallets - how to take them apart. x post
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- Barbara Good
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Pallets - how to take them apart. x post
Pallets - how to take them apart.
Okay have pallets ready to make duck house, what’s the easiest way to take them apart.
Okay have pallets ready to make duck house, what’s the easiest way to take them apart.
- Muddypause
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I tried dismantelling pallets once, but found it rather frustrating. Getting good, clean wood can take quite a lot of time and effort. Several things conspire against you; pallets are intended to withstand the rigours of industrial handling, so they are not designed to come apart easily. Usually they will have been made with a heavy duty nail gun that will shoot the nails in so deeply that the head is well burried. And the nails are usually 'ring nails' or 'annular nails', which are kind of barbed to hold them into the wood extremely tightly.
I reckon you really have three options. Prise them apart with a crowbar, and accept the fact that much of the wood may break and split in the process; Saw the wood as near as you can to the nails, and accept shorter pieces; Use a bolster chisel and a heavy hammer to try and force into the joints and chop through the nails. You may end up working a combination of all three.
I reckon you really have three options. Prise them apart with a crowbar, and accept the fact that much of the wood may break and split in the process; Saw the wood as near as you can to the nails, and accept shorter pieces; Use a bolster chisel and a heavy hammer to try and force into the joints and chop through the nails. You may end up working a combination of all three.
Stew
Ignorance is essential
Ignorance is essential
It actually depends on the type of pallet, the ones Muddy is talking about sound like the heavy duty hardwood "Chep" style. The lighter duty,almost disposable pine pallets are much easier to deconstuct.
Nev
Nev
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- Stonehead
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I prise the planks and crossmembers just far enough apart to insert either a hacksaw or a thin angle grinder cutting blade. I then cut through all the nails.
A good quality wrecking bar is a big help - you want a long, well-tapered wedge that can be worked right in past the nail and then used to gently ease the wood up. If the wedge is too steep (like most cheap bars), it will start deforming the wood before you reach the nail and you will get splits.
Oh, and if you're going to be cutting the resulting timber, remember to drift the pieces of nail out with a hammer and punch.
A good quality wrecking bar is a big help - you want a long, well-tapered wedge that can be worked right in past the nail and then used to gently ease the wood up. If the wedge is too steep (like most cheap bars), it will start deforming the wood before you reach the nail and you will get splits.
Oh, and if you're going to be cutting the resulting timber, remember to drift the pieces of nail out with a hammer and punch.
- Millymollymandy
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I built a small fence in our back garden from chep like pallets (very sturdy pallets) to stop our dog killing the grass with her toilet visits and the best way to take them apart was with a bolster or plasterer's chisle and a heavy hammer, tap between the block and slat untill you reach the nail and then give a real good wallop to cut through the nail. You can either tap the nails out afterward or leave them in (I left them in).
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/colin.greensmith/fence.htm
And I was pleased as punch with my new (free) frence.
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/colin.greensmith/fence.htm
And I was pleased as punch with my new (free) frence.
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Not surprised you are pleased with your fence... it's rather smart
Shirley
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I use old pallets for kindling on the fire, and I also used them to build a lean-to on our garden shed to store wood.
I did it by knocking the wood out gently with a hammer. This did end up breaking up a lot of planks though. It wasn't wasted, as I chopped up everything that was left and used it as kindling.
I like the hacksaw and crowbar ideas though! Why didn't I think of that!
I did it by knocking the wood out gently with a hammer. This did end up breaking up a lot of planks though. It wasn't wasted, as I chopped up everything that was left and used it as kindling.
I like the hacksaw and crowbar ideas though! Why didn't I think of that!
- Thomzo
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Umm - don't want to be a party pooper but please do not take apart the blue pallets. These are part of a special scheme whereby the pallets are reused. Return them to wherever you got them from and do not take them if they are offered as they will have been stolen.
I've seen quite good sturdy fence (can't remember where though) which was made from whole pallets filled with straw. Would save taking them apart and I wonder if you could plant into the straw? If not, I expect it would make a great frame for climbing plants.
I've seen quite good sturdy fence (can't remember where though) which was made from whole pallets filled with straw. Would save taking them apart and I wonder if you could plant into the straw? If not, I expect it would make a great frame for climbing plants.
That's interesting about the blue pallets. I got two through freecycle a few months ago. The person I got them from had been doing some DIY and gotten them with loads of bricks on them. She was told it was up to her to dispose of them. I'd wondered why some pallets are blue and some not painted at all.