Interior and Exterior Sheathing
Now that the pallet walls are up and the roof is on it’s time to sheet the interior and exterior. I’d use plywood since it adds a lot of structural strength to the tiny house. If plywood is not available use whatever you can find. 4′x8′ sheets of the most weather resistant material you can find is best.
If you use surface mount windows this will give you an opportunity to cover the window flanges with the exterior sheathing. If house wrap is available adding this to the exterior of the pallets prior to attaching the exterior sheathing will make a tighter seal.
The most important part of this step is to try and make your tiny pallet house as air tight as possible. The more air tight a house is the warmer and cooler it will stay. If you have insulation available by all means add it before sheathing the interior.
I personally think metal roofs are best. They might be louder in the rain but they sure stand up to the weather better. They also don’t tend to fly off like asphalt shingles when towing your tiny house down the highway. Always lay down roofing felt (a.k.a tar paper) before applying the final roofing material and if flashing is available by all means put that around the edge of the roof on top of the roofing felt.
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hey can u send me the compleate plans for a small houes on a traler . may be even a fold out type if u can but if not wot ever u hav is gud chers
Hi James,
I haven’t drawn the plans for this pallet house and made it available in a single file yet. I do plan to do that eventually.
I do offer free tiny house plans on my primary tiny house design blog though.
http://www.tinyhousedesign.com/free-plans/
any thoughs on how to insulate?? love the whole concept, especially for freecyclers!!
Here’s an interesting way of insulating cheap with foil and newspaper. http://multifoilexperiment.blogspot.com/2006/08/12-layers-of-newspaper.html