Measures 12W x 24D x 10H feet All-steel frame 1-piece, fitted, green, polyethylene cover 4 protective corner boots Steel foot plates 6 30-inch auger anchors Complete hardware kit Step-by-step instructions
Manufacturer | - |
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Brand | ShelterLogic |
Item model number | 51451 |
Color | Green |
Weight | - |
Height | - |
Depth | - |
Product Id | 853748 |
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User Reviews and Ratings | 3.5 (11 ratings) 3.5 out of 5 stars |
UPC | 677599514517 |
# | Title | Reviews | User Ratings | Price |
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ShelterLogic 51451 12x24x10 Round Style Run-In Shelter- Green Cover
Reviews: 11
Ratings:
(11)
Price:
$931.92
on
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11 | (3.5) |
$931.92
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I purchased a run in shelter 10 years ago and used it for equipment and hay storage. It was a great investment. It has stood up to the elements and hurricane Sandy!! Sadly I need a replacement cover and an end leg because our horse thought it was a hay buffet.
I previously purchased the 10' high run-in shelter and loved it. I am in a high wind and snow area. I was concerned it would blow over with the winds or collapse in the snow. The first really strong winds came and I was up and down all night worried about it. It held up just fine. I used augers on every leg. Next came the snow and once again I was up and down all night but it did great. I was so impressed with it, I bought a second one, the 8' shelter. I am very happy with both of them. The horses had no problem going in the shelter. As we installed, they walked through and were very curious. When finished, I fed inside and they were fine going right in.
I just received this today, I like the product but the instructions are not helpful I need step by step and can't find them anywhere .
the lack of instructions "suck" you got different size bolts, pipes and other pieces, you have to sort out all the pieces then use a lot of common sense, once you got all that it's just repeating each step, but note the first two arches are the key pieces with the 3 different size pipes and angle pieces, the tarp is a guessing game on how tight it should be, me first I let it lose then next day over tighten it for about an hour then I loosened the lower pipes and let it find it own relaxed position and then set the ratchet pieces till it felt about right, the screw down anchors, again common sense to use the only holes left and put the cables on after you got the tarp is in place it's just easier and the little rubber pieces is for the end on the bolts so the horse doesn't get hurt. With all that said I like it and at the farm we are at there will soon be a 2nd one, with more to follow, after all the first one was the hardest, now that I know how to do it and save time the rest will be easy. Jim from Herbertsville NJ
Be aware that their shippers are sometimes careless and destructive and that the covers can arrive damaged and with tears in the folded seams. Understand that you don't see the tears until you get through 98% of the process so if they ship you a new section of cover, you have a HUGE amount of work to redo. The company needs to do a better job of quality control from ordering to unpacking. Their packaging is to blame ...
I like the shelter, but when I received it, there were no instructions for assembly, just a drawing of the frame.
I bought this less that a year ago. Wind cause the side to collapse- pipes bent.
First of all the Instructions are not up to par. Most important is that the pipes would not fit together, the inside of all the holes on one side of the pipes had to be deburred by hand which added more work than necessary. When they were drilled only the outside of the exit holes on the exterior of the pipes were deburred at the factory.
This shelter, if I can keep the snow off, will do exactly what I want done. BUT... yeah I am very disappointed in the very poor quality control in the processed used to punch or drill or whatever they did to make the bolt holes in the tube sections. Each and every tube required reshaping with a ball peen hammer, in sub freezing weather, due to the "dimpeling" of the hole in the make ends of tubes. These dimples, (ugh the puns here are just ripe), in these male ends were so large that the tubes would not slide into the female ends of adjacent tubes. This required reshaping the tube, that had to be done carefully to avoid turning a round tube into an oval one. The second issues was "flashing". Wherever there was an exit hole in a tube on the inside of a female end, there was so much flashing that again it took extensive hand work with a heavy rasp to grind it off. These parts were essentially re-manufactured by me in order to make them fit together. This added days to a project that should not have lasted a weekend. The aggravation levels were extreme, causing cursing, swearing and the wishing of an infestation of demons upon whoever does Quality Control at Shelter Logic. But it is finished. I did get it up on 18 inch high timber walls because I needed the extra height. And, for all my frustration I would recommend this product. But, the construction time is nearly double by having to deal with this. The photos attached are just exemplars. Most if not All the tubes had problems that required a lot of hand work to fix before assembly could be done.
I bought this for my two horses in 2015 after seeing them in use at a previous barn. During that time, It withstood tropical-storm-force winds and didn't move. I overlooked the fact the shipping box arrived ripped apart, there were no instructions and the kit was missing the feet (replaced with a phone call to ShelterLogic). However, it's been less than three years and I now have to pull the shelter down because two of the larger main frame end pieces have broken as well as two smaller side supports AND the cover has torn down the middle. What once was a shelter for my horses is now a hazard. I was very happy with the shelter until it fell apart during the past two months.