You kinda get what you pay for in most cases. I get to repair alot of them, and never for snow problems. Wind tears them up, but what the heck do you expect when they use a 24" rebar shoved in the ground. We take a tractor post hole digger and dig in 3-4 ft deep post holes and fill with concrete and anchor to them. If you buy one and have wind damage, a banding tool will straighten them out as good as anything we have found. Pretty much most of them had big hay bales in them to keep them from blowing into the next county.
Our local dealer has his hands tied. He gets the order and down payment---our auction house needed two in the later part of March. Last week she told them to keep the deposit because she doesn't need them come Sept first when the Mopar cars will be auctioned off. There has been more excuses than you can imagine. Floods blocking the HWYS they needed to travel. Other trafic made it just fine. Language problems are at the top of the list also trying to talk to anyone. Perhaps the CEO doesn't speak a Englisha so wella.
I can't help but wonder if the steel prices, and her locked in price may be a problem also. I will say compared to the hoop buildings, it is a step up for sure.
Like you have heard before--- trailer houses do the same job as a brick built house, for alot less money. It is not the trailer house maker that sends the high winds to trailer parks, and not the brick homes. But as you no doubt heard in Iowa brick homes do not float either, and tornadoes level them at the same speed as the trailer houses.
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