daddylama
Well-known member
edit... added pics/updated to the last post...
hi... been a HAMBer for years, although i mainly lurk... have been lurking here for a year or so. figured i'd post pics of my wee little shop and introduce myself here.
apprenticed blacksmith, former metal fabricator/welder (certified), former building contractor (licensed), currently a software engineer (a crappy one) who's thinking of going back to welding or contracting. sitting at a desk all day really *****.
married and have two kids... 10 year old step daughter and a 20 month old daughter. the little one loves loud cars, helps me work on the house, knows how to use a hammer, and thinks getting dirty is fun. daddy's little girl, she is...
into 50's style hot rods, customs, choppers/bobbers... and turbo volvos (doesn't quite mix with the other stuff...)
we bought a 1913 craftsman style house in portland oregon a couple months ago, on an urban 50x100' lot. after living in grad student housing with the wifey and kids anything was better than working on my projects in a parking lot.
before this, my last home shop was in a 60' x 22' former rabbit hutch, with 8' ceilings at the peak, 5' at the low. good floor space, but hit my head a lot
. still built a lot of cars in there... usually a couple of my projects, and one for a client (used to do fabrication for customs/hot rods/bikes, for a livin')
now this... this is a carriage house built in 1913. 10.5' wide by 17' deep. max ceiling height is about 10.5'.
the yard looks pretty ghetto/white-trash... but we're in the middle of lots of construction. sounds like a good excuse, right???
inside... well, it's a little tight
it's also temporary storage while we get situated in the house. lotsa boxes laying 'bout, for now. also restoring the house... so the shop/carriage house is gonna take a while.
the plan is to pull the vinyl siding off, strip the ship lap siding and re-paint... after adding a bit in length to it.
needs a new header above where the swing-out barn-door used to reside... so may as well build a whole new front wall a few feet further out, right? the framing is mostly the old rough cut dimensional lumber... and i've got enough salvaged dimensional to build the front extension. final dimensions will be 10.5' x 20'.
small, but i hear it's not the the size that matters, it's how you use it. right?
keeping the walls exposed inside; jack up the rear corner that's sunk ~2"; repair the VERY THIN slab... likely going to float gypsum/concrete over it, and call it done... and yeah, i know it'll crack again; then move my stuff in.
it'll be a tight fit... but should be usable to build a little hot rod in it. definitely won't be getting more than one project at a time in there.
floor drill press, bench top lathe, small 220v 140a mig, full oxy/acetylene rig (the only way to go), sheet metal brake, english wheel, anvil... and gotta figure somewhere to squeeze in a small natural gas forge (likely outside). tools? damn... they gotta go somewhere, too.
i've got lots of space in the basement for additional tool storage, but would like to use as much space as possible in the little carriage house. the basement is a laundry room, storage, and eventually a studio for the wife and a game room for the kids. carriage house is all mine... unless the wife wants to weld (nothin' like a woman who can weld that doesn't look like a woman who can weld!)
i'm very much into the nostalgia/original/restored/old-school kinda house and shop, rather than modern... so this is a decent start, at least.
despite the "original" thing, i pulled out the crusty knob and tube wiring that would make funny sizzling sounds when it rained... pulled 2/2/2/6 aluminum feed line from the house's 200A panel to a 100A panel in the carriage house, in buried PVC conduit.
in the process of wiring for lights: five 4' T12 cheap-o home depot specials (ugly as sin, but do the job i suppose), four 60W incandescents in some old barn housings/reflectors. plugs every 4', 220V by the door. water for a quench tank and drinking fountain in the front, alarm cable, phone and network.
sorry for the crappy pics... the camera has taken a few falls and i'm a crappy photographer.
hopefully i can contribute here from time to time, but likely i'll just lurk, and occasionally give useless answers.
anyway... that's my story, and i'm stickin' to it.
hi... been a HAMBer for years, although i mainly lurk... have been lurking here for a year or so. figured i'd post pics of my wee little shop and introduce myself here.
apprenticed blacksmith, former metal fabricator/welder (certified), former building contractor (licensed), currently a software engineer (a crappy one) who's thinking of going back to welding or contracting. sitting at a desk all day really *****.
married and have two kids... 10 year old step daughter and a 20 month old daughter. the little one loves loud cars, helps me work on the house, knows how to use a hammer, and thinks getting dirty is fun. daddy's little girl, she is...
into 50's style hot rods, customs, choppers/bobbers... and turbo volvos (doesn't quite mix with the other stuff...)
we bought a 1913 craftsman style house in portland oregon a couple months ago, on an urban 50x100' lot. after living in grad student housing with the wifey and kids anything was better than working on my projects in a parking lot.
before this, my last home shop was in a 60' x 22' former rabbit hutch, with 8' ceilings at the peak, 5' at the low. good floor space, but hit my head a lot
now this... this is a carriage house built in 1913. 10.5' wide by 17' deep. max ceiling height is about 10.5'.
the yard looks pretty ghetto/white-trash... but we're in the middle of lots of construction. sounds like a good excuse, right???
inside... well, it's a little tight
it's also temporary storage while we get situated in the house. lotsa boxes laying 'bout, for now. also restoring the house... so the shop/carriage house is gonna take a while.
the plan is to pull the vinyl siding off, strip the ship lap siding and re-paint... after adding a bit in length to it.
needs a new header above where the swing-out barn-door used to reside... so may as well build a whole new front wall a few feet further out, right? the framing is mostly the old rough cut dimensional lumber... and i've got enough salvaged dimensional to build the front extension. final dimensions will be 10.5' x 20'.
small, but i hear it's not the the size that matters, it's how you use it. right?
keeping the walls exposed inside; jack up the rear corner that's sunk ~2"; repair the VERY THIN slab... likely going to float gypsum/concrete over it, and call it done... and yeah, i know it'll crack again; then move my stuff in.
it'll be a tight fit... but should be usable to build a little hot rod in it. definitely won't be getting more than one project at a time in there.
floor drill press, bench top lathe, small 220v 140a mig, full oxy/acetylene rig (the only way to go), sheet metal brake, english wheel, anvil... and gotta figure somewhere to squeeze in a small natural gas forge (likely outside). tools? damn... they gotta go somewhere, too.
i've got lots of space in the basement for additional tool storage, but would like to use as much space as possible in the little carriage house. the basement is a laundry room, storage, and eventually a studio for the wife and a game room for the kids. carriage house is all mine... unless the wife wants to weld (nothin' like a woman who can weld that doesn't look like a woman who can weld!)
i'm very much into the nostalgia/original/restored/old-school kinda house and shop, rather than modern... so this is a decent start, at least.
despite the "original" thing, i pulled out the crusty knob and tube wiring that would make funny sizzling sounds when it rained... pulled 2/2/2/6 aluminum feed line from the house's 200A panel to a 100A panel in the carriage house, in buried PVC conduit.
in the process of wiring for lights: five 4' T12 cheap-o home depot specials (ugly as sin, but do the job i suppose), four 60W incandescents in some old barn housings/reflectors. plugs every 4', 220V by the door. water for a quench tank and drinking fountain in the front, alarm cable, phone and network.
sorry for the crappy pics... the camera has taken a few falls and i'm a crappy photographer.
hopefully i can contribute here from time to time, but likely i'll just lurk, and occasionally give useless answers.
anyway... that's my story, and i'm stickin' to it.
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My wifes family is in the warehouse business and I have an endless supply of pallets. I have been thinking for a while that there ought to be a way to build a storage building out of them.