I'm going to build a floating dock using barrels. I have 6 x 55 gallon plastic barrels that I can disperse equally around the platform edge. I have a small (1/3 acre) 10' deep protected pond - no big waves, wind, etc... Just want something to sit/lay/fish on, something the kids can use to swim from.
I know 8x10 or 10x10 would be more stable that 8x8, but I'm thinking the 8x8 size would fit my needs just fine and would be a little bit cheaper... Will I have any stability issues with a floating 8x8 dock? I'm thinking I should have plenty of flotation with 6 barrels, and could add water to each barrel to ballast and stabilize the whole system.
Thoughts on 8x8 floating platforms? Do I need to go any bigger than that? Opinions?
4 barrels will be enough, then fill approximately 1/3 the way with water. The dock will sit low, but stable. 6 Barrels will be too high with an 8x8 dock and very wobbly. Mine is a 10x10 floater with 4 barrels and it sits a bit too high until you get 6 adults on it.
4 barrels will be enough, then fill approximately 1/3 the way with water. The dock will sit low, but stable. 6 Barrels will be too high with an 8x8 dock and very wobbly. Mine is a 10x10 floater with 4 barrels and it sits a bit too high until you get 6 adults on it.
Depends on the weight of the dock and how it's designed. Each barrel will float roughly 450# of weight. At that point it's fully submerged (theoretically).
If the barrels will be inside the joists, then each barrel will float 225# until the wood joists touch or barely touch the water. Barrels are roughly 22" in diameter.
Calculate the weight of the wood that the platform will be made from and how many people you expect to be on it at one time.
FWIW, I'm building a floating pier, the floating part is a "T". Bottom of "T" is 4'x16'. Top of "T" is 8'x12'. Joists in the bottom of the "T" are 2x10's, top part of the "T" has 2x10's on the outside, 2x8's on the inside. Decking is 5/4x6". I calculated that with 22 55g barrels, the joists will be just above the water with the barrels empty.
My floating platform is 12'x12', with a 4'x12' "brow" (gang plank). It has fifteen 55-gallon "blue barrels" holding it up. The frame and joists are 2x12s and the decking boards are 2x6s. The 4-foot wide walkway is decked with 2x6s over a pair 2x10s attached to hinged 4" concrete bollards sunk 4' feet into the ground.
I consider it quite stable. But, some friends drove up the other day as I was getting ready to fill the feeder on this dock. One of them walked onto the platform just as I was hoisting the feed bag. The dock was moving. He very seriously panicked. I thought he'd be "seasick" before he got 15 feet back to terra-firma. This isn't the first time I've observed this.
Maybe I'm just hardened after growing up on the water, spending six years in the Navy, spending lots of time in small planes ...
Anyway, as our good friend Bill Cody always says -- "it all depends ..."
I have some relatives with inner-ear issues, they won't get near anything that shifts like a floating dock or they would stumble and fall right in. That was one of my concerns about my dock, and why I decided to make it fixed (and the floater is for out in the middle). I didn't want visitors to come over and fall in from an unstable dock.
Made up my mind last night to go 8x10. Picked up the frame material at Menards last night. Shouldn't take long to put it together, and my 8 year old says he'll help out. I figure I'll go with 6 barrels and add ballast as needed.
Any other tips, tricks or insights are still (always) welcome!
FWIW, I'm building a floating pier, the floating part is a "T". Bottom of "T" is 4'x16'. Top of "T" is 8'x12'. Joists in the bottom of the "T" are 2x10's, top part of the "T" has 2x10's on the outside, 2x8's on the inside. Decking is 5/4x6". I calculated that with 22 55g barrels, the joists will be just above the water with the barrels empty.
Have any CAD files to share?
In AutoCad, you can just click export, then choose .bmp, then select objects, and voila! Using photobucket, you have to convert to .jpg now otherwise the upload will fail. Stooooopid Photobucket!
My floating platform is 12'x12', with a 4'x12' "brow" (gang plank). It has fifteen 55-gallon "blue barrels" holding it up. The frame and joists are 2x12s and the decking boards are 2x6s. The 4-foot wide walkway is decked with 2x6s over a pair 2x10s attached to hinged 4" concrete bollards sunk 4' feet into the ground.
I consider it quite stable. But, some friends drove up the other day as I was getting ready to fill the feeder on this dock. One of them walked onto the platform just as I was hoisting the feed bag. The dock was moving. He very seriously panicked. I thought he'd be "seasick" before he got 15 feet back to terra-firma. This isn't the first time I've observed this.
Maybe I'm just hardened after growing up on the water, spending six years in the Navy, spending lots of time in small planes ...
Anyway, as our good friend Bill Cody always says -- "it all depends ..."
Mine's fixed but it wobbles if you're not used to it. My last dog spread her legs out really wide as she walked on it the first time she got on. It was funny to watch. Funny thing is I don't notice myself doing anything different but it no longer wobbles for me. But for a newbie it does.
If pigs could fly bacon would be harder to come by and there would be a lot of damaged trees.
My floating platform is 12'x12', with a 4'x12' "brow" (gang plank). It has fifteen 55-gallon "blue barrels" holding it up. The frame and joists are 2x12s and the decking boards are 2x6s. The 4-foot wide walkway is decked with 2x6s over a pair 2x10s attached to hinged 4" concrete bollards sunk 4' feet into the ground.
I consider it quite stable. But, some friends drove up the other day as I was getting ready to fill the feeder on this dock. One of them walked onto the platform just as I was hoisting the feed bag. The dock was moving. He very seriously panicked. I thought he'd be "seasick" before he got 15 feet back to terra-firma. This isn't the first time I've observed this.
Maybe I'm just hardened after growing up on the water, spending six years in the Navy, spending lots of time in small planes ...
Anyway, as our good friend Bill Cody always says -- "it all depends ..."
Mine's fixed but it wobbles if you're not used to it.
HuH?
Turbine engines have components that are supposed to be fixed. Yet, some times they wobble. When this happens, the wobbling effect causes great fatigue, and things just go crazy after that.
How far does the floating portion sway side to side with the plastic pipes holding it in place? Or are those plastic pipes acting as sleeves over smaller dia metal pipes?
Don't over-engineer it (did I really just say that?) Floating docks aren't all that unstable, especially if constructed correctly. Using more barrels and partially filling them with water or even just hanging ballast from each corner of the dock will do wonders for stability.
I have seen a dock c ballast at the corners in the form of fish attractors made from concrete weighted buckets with PVC ran through themattached to underside of dock with chain
The fish attractor size makes it better for deeper water though