Our Pole Barn Build in a 10 Minute Timelapse

We built a 40′ x 80′ x 16′ pole barn with a 4″ concrete pad on the property to use as a shop and RV cover. This video shows it from start to finish in 10 minutes.

The pole barn was built by a small building company in Central Texas and cost us about $45,000 total including the pad. That did not include the wiring and lights, but pretty much everything else in the video.

Our pole building is not planned to be a house or barndominium home. The foundation is more of just a concrete pad than a load bearing foundation. That’s pretty common for pole barns.

A pole barn is one of the easier type of barn builds. I was going to do it myself, but after adding it all up for materials and concrete it came very close to what I could just pay someone to do it for me. It would have taken me a lot longer to build also by myself.

Pole barns are basically just post and beam buildings. You put posts in the ground and you use trusses to connect the roof. The wood purlins are there to hold on the sheet metal and that is about it.

Easy Solar Powered Water Pump

#solarwaterpump, #solarpump, #offgridsolar, #cheapsolarpump
We put together an easy and simple solar powered water pump to pump water from our pond / lake up to the high parts of our property. Pump we used: https://amzn.to/3suOsHq

For less than $200 total we now get “free” water from the lake to water all our trees and plants.

Here are the specs on the pump:
Cable: 10 feet (3m)
Voltage: 12V DC – 24V DC
Amps: 4.0 Max
Flow Rate(lph/gph): 360/96 1.6 GPM (6 LPM) Max
Maximum Lift: 230 Feet (70 Meters)
Maximum Submersion: 100 Feet (30 Meters)
Material: High Strength Engineered Plastic
Inlet: 50 Mesh Stainless Steel Screen
Outlet Port: 1/2”(12.7mm) Barbed Fitting
Internal Bypass: 105-110 PSI Max(7.2-7.5BARS)
Motor: Permanent Magnet Thermally Protected
Pump Design: Positive Displacement, 3 Chamber Diaphragm Pump
Package Size: 13.97″x4.33″x5.12″ (355*130*110mm)