TreePointer said:
Do you need to disassemble these racks in the spring and move them?
Was your question directed towards the OP?
If you were asking me (assumption based on my having mentioned that I do this), here's my answer: my racks are 10'-2x4s set 14" apart (measured on the outside). These are my horizontal pieces and they rest on 14" 2x4s, and are screwed to them. The uprights are 8' 2x4s, turned to face the wide sides together and joined with a 14" crosspiece. They are toenailed into the 10' pieces, and the top fits between some of the joists on the decking. I have two of these side by side, and upri90ghts from the two sets are side-by-side. I threw in a few screws here to stabilize them.
Come spring, I pull out the toenails, and move the sets of verticals and horizontals under another deck, and I'm done.
Because I prefer wood cut to 18", these are perfect for my wood. I stack them 6' high and they each hold about 90cf; two hold a cord and a half. I have those on one side of the door, and another single on the other side of the door. I don't have that stacked as high because I want to be able to see out on that side. If I wanted to, I could fit another couple of racks on that side as well. I don't have uprights on the house side, because I just stack the seasoned wood up against the siding (carefully). My two-cord racks cost me about $40, should last for years, and when I 'm done with them, I can burn 'em, as fossil pointed out.
I don't need to dissemble them in the summer, but I want to. I like to use that area for hanging baskets, potting plants, parking the lawn mower, etc. in the spring and summer. In the winter, with wood in them, they're a thing of beauty.