Raspy
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,636
- Location
- Smith Valley, Nevada
- Tractor
- NH TC29DA, F250 Tremor, Jeep Rubicon
If you bury it, it won't fly away, but it can fill up with water and it can rust through in a few years. Plus, you still need a door on top, and one that won't let water in.
Containers are EXTREMELY durable. Much, much stronger than trailers and not likely to collapse during a tornado, but a twenty foot one probably only weighs about 4,000 lbs. and has a lot of surface area, so they could get blown around. Remember, they get filled with thousands of pounds of cargo and stacked many high on ships that take a pounding all the way across the Pacific. Sometimes a large storm will tear off a stack and they'll float around at sea for a long time. Yours would definitely need to be anchored down and the mounting system provided at each corner is more than strong enough for any assault by weather. You'd need to fix some anchors into a concrete slab. This could easily be done with heavy steel embedded in concrete and sticking out next to each corner where it could simply be welded or bolted to the brackets on the box.
In my area, permanently mounted containers are considered real property and are taxable
, but, if just sitting there, are not.
The door latches/dogging system on them can't be beat for strength, but must be worked from the outside. If I wanted to weather a storm "in" one, I'd make a steel hatch that I could reach through to release the door dogs, or squeeze through in an emergency. Probably 16 or 24 inches across and released from inside.
Set up in this way, anchored sufficiently and with a hatch, it would be the first place I'd go in a tornado. And it would last indefinitely outside. Especially if you coat the roof with trailer top coating and paint the sides to prevent rust. If you still think that's not enough you could wrap retaining wall/corrugated plastic material around it and backfill a berm all around it. That would let the surface breath and still lock it in place like burying it. If there is any chance that water could rise in your area, keep the hatch up high so you don't get trapped, or put it on top. Something like a ship hatch with dogs. Maybe a periscope so you can watch the proceedings. :laughing:
Containers are EXTREMELY durable. Much, much stronger than trailers and not likely to collapse during a tornado, but a twenty foot one probably only weighs about 4,000 lbs. and has a lot of surface area, so they could get blown around. Remember, they get filled with thousands of pounds of cargo and stacked many high on ships that take a pounding all the way across the Pacific. Sometimes a large storm will tear off a stack and they'll float around at sea for a long time. Yours would definitely need to be anchored down and the mounting system provided at each corner is more than strong enough for any assault by weather. You'd need to fix some anchors into a concrete slab. This could easily be done with heavy steel embedded in concrete and sticking out next to each corner where it could simply be welded or bolted to the brackets on the box.
In my area, permanently mounted containers are considered real property and are taxable
The door latches/dogging system on them can't be beat for strength, but must be worked from the outside. If I wanted to weather a storm "in" one, I'd make a steel hatch that I could reach through to release the door dogs, or squeeze through in an emergency. Probably 16 or 24 inches across and released from inside.
Set up in this way, anchored sufficiently and with a hatch, it would be the first place I'd go in a tornado. And it would last indefinitely outside. Especially if you coat the roof with trailer top coating and paint the sides to prevent rust. If you still think that's not enough you could wrap retaining wall/corrugated plastic material around it and backfill a berm all around it. That would let the surface breath and still lock it in place like burying it. If there is any chance that water could rise in your area, keep the hatch up high so you don't get trapped, or put it on top. Something like a ship hatch with dogs. Maybe a periscope so you can watch the proceedings. :laughing: