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Norb's BMW/Audi Double Garage

nsogiba

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Jan 16, 2013
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Just closed on my first home, 4BR, 2.5BA, with attached 2 car garage.

A bit of background about me; I'm 25, engaged to be married in 2014 (on my birthday ironically). As an engineer I design and build medical device production equipment for a living, while my fiancee works in the medical field as a Nuclear Medicine Technologist. Tinkering/fabricating/fixing everything/getting my hands dirty comes naturally to me and I've been immersed in automotive culture as long as I can remember. With each vehicle I've had the projects have gotten more and more complicated, from basic bolt on installs to the last project, which was a full blown drivetrain swap. The swap was completed on jackstands in an un-insulated 1.5 car garage over the course of a brutal Buffalo winter, with a small propane heater helping me out. So, with that winter fresh in my mind, interest rates being low, and being at the right point in my personal life, we decided to take the plunge into homeownership.

The swap is a 6.0 "LS" motor and T56 into a 2001 BMW 540i Sport, and it's a daily driver from April - November. I had a blast doing the swap and learned many new skills, but one thing I regret is not taking better pictures and documenting my work. I'm going to do my best to put down the camera phone and use my "nice" camera to document progress.

Speaking of the swap, see the following link. I need to make a thread about it on here for those that aren't members on other forums.

http://forums.bimmerforums.com/forum/showthread.php?1879712-6-0-LQ4-into-E39


The garage's existing specs, and my thoughts on what I want (mostly for reference, because I know I'll forget everything)

Electrical:
1 electrical socket at the front. Would like to install a strip of sockets for my workbench and have a hanging extension cord reel as well. The house has 220V power which is from a now defunct hot tub, and will be perfect should I ever decide to upgrade welders from my 115V MIG.

Lighting:
2 naked overhead bulbs. I have about 4 or 5 fluorescent strip fixtures from my old place that can go up, but I'd also like some track lighting/LEDs that will accent the workbench area and possibly the walls.

Aesthetics:
The garage is currently fully drywalled and (I assume) insulated, which is a huge plus, much less work that I have to do. It will need some mudding to cover up some trouble areas on the walls, and definitely primer+paint. The idea is to have a stripe theme like many of the garages on here, but with a few personal touches centered around our type of cars. I'm a big German car fan, hence the name.

Floor: Concrete in excellent physical condition. Some staining from water and rusty shovels is present but overall it's smooth and crack free, which is most important to me (I spend most of my time laying on my back on the ground). Sloped to a center drain which will be a huge plus for washing/rinsing the floor. Although Racedeck looks fantastic I beat my floors up, and I need something that won't look like **** after a few years of my abuse. The floor will regularly see fluid spills, welding, grinding, and heavy equipment rolling around (floor jack, jackstands, engine cranes), so I think some sort of polyurethane coating will be best. My best friend is a project manager for a great little flooring company and will advise me when the time comes. The driveway itself has an extra row to the right of the garage, continuing all the way to the street. I probably could fit 9 cars in the driveway/garage without blocking the sidewalk. It's handy as I drive an old Subaru in the wintertime and will store it on that pad during the summertime.


Work area: In front of one of the bays is a recessed portion in the wall which I'm sure was used to store garbage cans and lawnmowers by the previous owner. Luckily, we have a sizeable shed in the backyard, so I'll be able to put all the lawn equipment, bikes, and all other **** back there to keep my space free. The recessed area is split by a vertical drywalled beam which makes fitting existing equipment in there a bit more tricky, but I will work around that. The plan is to have my rolling toolbox, air compressor, and welder on one side, with the work bench on the other. In the past I used to have to bring down my laptop for quick reference while working on cars, which was clumsy and awkward. I'd like to incorporate a small, maybe 20" display mounted on the wall, with a desktop tower tucked away under the workbench. A wireless mouse and keyboard will go with the setup and can be stowed away in the toolbox when not in use, since everything that stays on the bench somehow attracts a layer of dust and grease. A couple of speakers mounted up in the corners of the room will provide tunes, controlled by the computer.

And what everyone came for, pics:

Just a few days after closing:
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The rear of the car is about a foot forward of the minimum distance from the rear door, and I still have a lot of room in front of it. This will come in handy if/when I pull the motor out of the BMW for service. Pardon the piles of **** as we're just moving in.
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Garage floor is in good shape.
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Insulated garage door, with opener
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General views:
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Whew, long first post! We are in the process of moving, so updates will be slow, but I'm very motivated to get going and get functional in there. I will leave you with our mascot Finn, who is 15lbs (more to love) and doesn't want to go.

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dubber

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Welcome, i remember seeing your car posted on here on another user's thread. Good luck with your project i'll be checking back for sure.

Should also note that this garage and house sound like an awesome head start. Love the extra bump at the end of the garage, the floor drain, the driveway wrapped around the garage for an extra spot and that very large shed. #winning
 
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smg980

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Is Finn a Maine ****?

Looking forward to your two car!
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Finn is a fluffy monster pulled out of a cardboard box in a barn. No idea of the make/model of that cat. He was the runt of the litter but grew up to be a beast. He has the personality of a 9 year old boy but is part of the family.

We are moving over there starting at 6pm today, until whenever we get lazy and start cracking beers, tomorrow. I will try to grab some pics as we go.
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

making slow progress, busy with overall house duties.

these are from the day we moved in, around the end of October. we got poured on all day while moving; the cherry on top was the flat tire on my fiancee's A4. luckily it held enough air to get (to the new) home, where i swapped the wheels for another set i have for her car. Impromptu first "auto job" in the new place.

we got tired of organizing (and needed to return the truck) so everything remaining went into the garage.

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end of first day after moving in. UGH

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Today I hit it hard again and started to take everything unnecessary in the garage down into the basement. I left off here for the evening. Finally got a cover on the BMW, and it was kind of ironic since we got our first snow this evening.

10811305633_6865e47572_b.jpg
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

After cleaning up quite a bit, I was feeling pretty good about myself. Then I saw this:

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It has been pouring the last few days so it is weather related, but I have no idea where to start looking for the leak. That wall is not an outside wall (it actually backs up to the family room), so the leak must be up inside, towards the roof.

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I'm 99% sure the pipe is b-vent coming from the hot water heater in the basement. Does it make sense that the penetration from the exhaust is leaking through the roof, and letting rain drip in? Or, is the hot water heater vent leaking and allowing moisture/condensation to drip? It is dripping about every 5-7 seconds.

I would hate to rip down the drywall right there since it's already partially mudded but if it has to be done, so be it.
 

55cadillacking

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Hey! This doesn't look like Germany!

I'm going to be absolutely no help on the water issue, but I will say that I am excited to see how you end up finishing your "toy box". Looks like you have a lot of goodies to use in the transformation. Being a double-garage owner, these are the builds that interest me the most.

Sub'd.
 

dubber

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Congrats on moving into your new place. Oh we can quickly be brought down off that high to the reality of a problem. Good luck finding the source.

The victory party will be you able to actually set-up the garage space.
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Actually, I'm glad you chimed in. I'm taking a lot of inspiration from your color/trim scheme as well as from the other 2 cars on here that I like:

Copyright Infringement
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=201973

Hoosier Audi
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=210756

I am thinking a dark charcoal bottom, stripe in middle, and white up top.

Stripe will probably be red throughout but will have Audi Motorsport and BMW ///M accents thrown in on the respective side where that car will sit.

There is a bit of foundation showing at the bottoms of the walls that I will most likely paint black.

Floor is still a ways ago, but I am thinking polyurethane/epoxy coating (gray or cream) with ///M colored flakes in it. Or, red and black (Audi). Racedeck looks exotic but wouldn't last a year in my garage with the amount of heavy mechanical and fab work I do (heavy parts, sharp, greasy, flames, sparks, etc)

Dream is to toss in a lift but not sure if the ceiling heights will allow for it. It is drywall so there may be some hope in the way of making room!

My next few days will be spent finishing up the cleanup of the garage and helping out my best friend at his place. He's also a recent new homeowner and unlike me, has a lot of work to do remodeling the inside of his place. Paint, tile, etc. I will see if I can get him to post up his progress on here (big gearhead as well).
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

I had a chance last night to finally buy a ladder and inspect some of the spaces above the garage. I will note that coming from strictly automotive work, I've been spoiled by having all the tools needed for a job right at my fingertips. Needing home-specific tools is a pain since the nearest Home Depot is 15 mins away (1 way).

The space above the "front" half of the garage (closer to the door) is accessible by a hole cut in the drywall by the previous owners. The crawl space ends at the midpoint of the garage, at which point the upstairs hallway/bedrooms begin. Unfortunately I have no access from that end, so I cut a small access hole in the ceiling on the "rear" end of the garage, just to the right of the vertical hot water vent riser. The riser is unfortunately covered with 2x6 all the way up, and I have the upstairs hallway floor resting on the 2x6s to which the garage ceiling drywall is nailed. As much as I want to get in there and see what's going on, I just am not sure how to access that area without starting to tear out the vertical plywood and drywall on the face of that vent column.
 

JimVonBaden

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Great house, and a decent garage start. Not too different from mine, see my sigline. It might help with ideas for yours.

As for the leak, I am betting it is coming from around the vent in the roof and following the pipe down. I had a similar issue on my other house. Easy fix if you can get on the roof and seal the vent pipe. looks like it has been leaking a while by the rust stains.

Anyhow, take a look at my place. I used florescent lighting and used the two original light sockets and replaced them with plugs for the florescent lights.

Jim :cool:
 

txusa03

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Great house, and a decent garage start. Not too different from mine, see my sigline. It might help with ideas for yours.

As for the leak, I am betting it is coming from around the vent in the roof and following the pipe down. I had a similar issue on my other house. Easy fix if you can get on the roof and seal the vent pipe. looks like it has been leaking a while by the rust stains.

Anyhow, take a look at my place. I used florescent lighting and used the two original light sockets and replaced them with plugs for the florescent lights.

Jim :cool:

I am with Jim on the leak. I had similar problem. Roofer came out and change the shingle but it still leaks. Roofer came the second time and change the shingle and flashing and it still leak.

Finally a suggestion was made to change out the vent. Turn out the vent has a cracked which allow water to come through via the crack. No more leak with new vent.

Basically, why tear up your dry wall at this point. The first thing I would do is get someone to go up to the roof and inspect the vent and the flashing around it and go from there.

GL and congrats on new home!
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

We had a severe storm last night (50+mph winds) with some rain, so I'll have to check if the leak came back.

I did some organization over the weekend and can finally fit both cars in the garage. I assembled a 42"x28" workbench out of old aluminum extrusions I had at work. Still need to have a fellow BMWer locally bend me up a tabletop (thinking 3/16") with a 4" rear backsplash. I want it to be steel so that I can weld on it easily.

Electrical - I hung my new Craftsman hose reel in the ceiling and set the retraction length on the cord so that I don't have to leap to grab it. The bad news is that the only outlet on the wall in the garage has no power to it, and all the breakers are untripped. Not sure how to investigate that, perhaps the outlet itself needs to be replaced? It was working when we moved in because I remember that my compressor ran for a while on it.

In the meantime, I did some renderings in Solidworks to show what things could look like. I still need to add features like the man door for the house, the windows, the overhead beam, etc.

As it is now (more or less).
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Work area.
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Possible paint scheme.
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The FR wheel bearing in my Subaru is howling so I'll be tackling that this evening and spending some time out there. Excited to get my hands dirty.
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Some ups and downs last night. I finished up the wheel bearing on my Subaru after some running around for parts and press service, only to find that it didn't cure the howl I have. So the diagnosis continues on that thing.

On the upside I did fix the only wall mounted outlet in the garage. It was working when we moved in, and just quit one day. None of the breakers were tripped, and switching them off/on to reseat them didn't fix it. I disassembled the outlet and checked connections and all were fine. Still no power on the multimeter. Finally started to trace the wiring back through the basement to the panel, and found that it is fed (along with 2 other outlets down there) by a GFI outlet not far from the panel. The GFI wasn't tripped, but there was a CO detector plugged in there that could have been rubbing on the buttons of the GFI. I moved the CO detector to another outlet in the basement, cycled the GFI a few times, and sure enough the power comes back to that outlet. Now I finally have a place to plug in my phone charger and speakers while I work.

This evening I'll convert the overhead naked bulb fixtures to outlets so that I can hang my fluorescent fixtures and get some REAL light in there.

We have already had one small snowfall, and it's getting frosty nearly every morning, so next on the list is HEAT! I have an idea for a portable but powerful heater that I've been thinking about for a while.
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Nice space,
Dont forget to use all the space above the garage doors, I made a mezzanine on top of each door and all the tires fits real good there.

Thanks for the tip. Between the shed and the basement, I actually have a TON of storage space available - 95% of the stuff you see in that picture is gone. I'll have to post up what it currently looks like after some more reorganization.

go get yourself one of liftmasters jackshaft garage door opener. I'm going to install one next year and it will help clear up even more space above the garage door and really make the space feel big! Also, get some good lighting in there!

http://www.liftmaster.com/lmcv2/productdetail/19724/elite-series-wall-mount-garage-door-opener/

Current opener works like a charm, so I don't want to spend money unnecessarily. I actually just got back from Home Depot on lunch with a station wagon full of lighting goodies! That's tonight's project.
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

I have been working on some projects to make all my tools more easily available and accessible. My work area (bench) is the biggest priority since I have no real place to put parts yet - also have no way to bolt down my vise, and you all know how useless you can feel without one. A friend of mine that works for a structural steel company is bending up a sheet of 3/16" for me for use as a benchtop, and it will cover the whole surface of the aluminum extrusions. It features a power strip and some storage underneath - also picks the fridge up off the floor, and makes for an overall cleaner look. I have been taking pics along the way and will get those posted up once I've made significant progress, but in the meantime, here are some quick ones to hold you over:

I hung 3 out of my 6 light fixtures - they are 48" long dual T12 fluorescents. They are hung end to end with equidistant spacing between, right over the main work area (engine bay of each car). They replaced the 2 CFL curlies that had their own receptacles on the ceiling. On Jim Von Baden's recommendation I replaced the bulb fixtures with electrical outlets to free up some much needed power in the ceiling. I definitely plan on hanging more over the workbench and toolbox since when a vehicle's hood is raised, it blocks the light from the ones directly overhead anyways. I also replaced the dim incandescent bulbs on the garage door opener itself with the same big CFL curlies that came out of the front area. I may not keep those as I'd like to put in some "warmer" style halogens that are angled towards the vehicles in more of a "spotlight" display.

The other 3 fluorescent 48" fixtures either need new bulbs or a ballast as they are flickering and/or don't work, so I will have to look at those.

New light output after installation.
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Spending a lot of time here after work and on weekends with the winter beater
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I also picked up an industrial duty black rubber hose (2x 25' lengths) along with 3 nozzles for garage duties. A friend of mine works for a flooring contractor and raves about this hose since it is used by his guys daily and still works great. Having that on the wall plus floor drain means I can now wash the cars inside the garage. Gotta say it's nice being able to do that while it's snowing and freezing outside!
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Once the day is done I relax by the fire. It's a gas insert and really puts out some heat.
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And my buddy helping out.
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Hugo L.

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Ha! A fellow bf.c'er! I used to be a mod there until last spring (Hugo).

Congrats on the new place. Did you find the source of the leak yet? That should be the utmost priority, otherwise mold and rot are gonna ruin the place.
 
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Lord Vader

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Hello from a fellow BF.c member as well. I love your E39. I don't think the Racing Dynamics wheels suit the styling of the E39 very well, but as long as you like them that's what matters.

What software program did you use for the design? That looked really awesome!
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Ha! A fellow bf.c'er! I used to be a mod there until last spring (Hugo).

Congrats on the new place. Did you find the source of the leak yet? That should be the utmost priority, otherwise mold and rot are gonna ruin the place.

Hi there! BF.c is great, I have a build there in "Engine Conversions". Will have to eventually get one posted up here.

I haven't found the leak yet but I think I have narrowed it down to either the roof penetration, or the pipe condensation inside. I'm leaning towards roof penetration.


Hello from a fellow BF.c member as well. I love your E39. I don't think the Racing Dynamics wheels suit the styling of the E39 very well, but as long as you like them that's what matters.

What software program did you use for the design? That looked really awesome!

The black wheels are just some spares that I have laying around. I corded the tires on the M-Parallels and so these ran as a backup for a few weeks. Personally I think they are very ugly, unaggressive, and boring. But they're good for burnouts.

Solidworks is the program, I use it at work for the machines I build.

I put together something on my new table to get the fridge up off the ground and onto a shelf. It doesn't gain me any floor storage space but it makes the area look a bit cleaner. 2 more horizontal aluminum posts and an old wood top I had laying around makes for a nice shelf. I will also store some of my more frequently used fluids (PB Blaster, Simple green, etc) by the fridge.

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More updates to come this weekend! I am in the middle of a wheel bearing job on my Subaru and will report back.
 

Lord Vader

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

The black wheels are just some spares that I have laying around. I corded the tires on the M-Parallels and so these ran as a backup for a few weeks. Personally I think they are very ugly, unaggressive, and boring. But they're good for burnouts.

M-Parallels are nice for sure, but have you thought about something like the BBS CH's?

DSC06136.JPG
 

maxspeed96ct

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Im a big fan of the LS motor swaps, Ive always dreamed of doing a e36 M with a LS motor, just cant find the $ or time

e39 M5 owners must hate you huh lol


nice garage to btw
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

M-Parallels are nice for sure, but have you thought about something like the BBS CH's?

DSC06136.JPG


Those are very high up on my list of favorite wheels. They just don't make sense for me financially...and the M-Parallels are just better looking to me :)

Im a big fan of the LS motor swaps, Ive always dreamed of doing a e36 M with a LS motor, just cant find the $ or time

e39 M5 owners must hate you huh lol


nice garage to btw

The folks over on M5Board are actually quite supportive and enthusiastic about the whole thing. I guess it's tough to hate a car that's a bit quicker than yours for a fraction of the price, with superb reliability :)

:evil: :beer:
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

progress has been made, here is the most recent update with some pictures.


About 2-3 weeks back, still unpacking.
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Putting together some old Bosch extrusions from my workplace. Messy still.
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I was lucky enough to have a hose bib installed INSIDE the garage by the previous owner, which makes washing the cars a breeze, even if it is snowing/freezing outside. The fitting was leaking so I pulled it and replaced it. On a side note, the employee at Valu recommended that I just buy some "packing" for $3.50 and try to stuff it in the valve to eliminate a leak. Normally I'm all about fixing things rather than buying new, but when an entire new valve is SIX DOLLARS, I'll take a new one!
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Workbench getting there.
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Using the extrusions has many advantages. For one, some quick work with a tap allows for leveling feet

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Which makes things nice and square. May seem trivial but when you're working with small parts like screws, ball bearings, etc, it's nice not to have them roll off the table.
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Also, the slot in the aluminum accepts tee nuts, which are threaded and can be used for universal mounting. I split the case on the surge protector, drilled some holes, and used some socket head cap screws to mount her up.

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The spacing on the surge protector serves a purpose. Stay tuned!
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

One of my complaints in the last garage was that my phone charger and audio input were always tangled and hanging sloppily on the wall. This fixes that.

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Took a break from the garage work to wash the BMW. Fiancee's Audi next to it. Hence the "German Garage" name!
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A friend of mine works for a structural steel company and was kind enough to bend some 3/16" steel for me as a bench top. Here is his gorgeous supercharged E36 M3. Complete with car seats, car moves like hell! Here she is.
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2" down in the front, and 4" vertical backsplash.
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Fits well. Got the vise mounted up as well. There may be fancier/more robust vises, but this one was a gift from my mother and has sentimental value.
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

The Subaru got some wheels bearings, and I keep the hood open on the BMW just to come out and look at it sometimes.

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On Jim Von Baden's recommendation I converted the weak, single light bulb fixtures to receptacles. The covers are too small for the original hole but work for now. Once I do paint in the spring, we will get some nicer ones up there.

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Two CFL curlies on the garage opener and 3x 4' long fluorescent fixtures with 2 T12 bulbs each.
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Where I stand as of this evening. Sharp eyes will spot my trusty infrared, propane powered heater mounted on the wall. Runs off a standard BBQ 20# cylinder for convenience and puts out some HEAT! It was bulletproof for about 2 years and when I went to fire it up this year, I couldn't get the pilot to stay lit. Turns out the thermocouple was bad. It was an oddball wire/spade style, so replacement parts weren't available that easily. I did some more digging and figured out that the wire and spade style could be replaced with the more common copper tube/fitting style. Of course, this took many trips and phone calls to various supply stores, but it's a learning process. $16 later at Lowe's at we now have heat.

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TOASTY!
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nsogiba

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Jan 16, 2013
Messages
232
Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Picked up this on my lunch break.

http://www.sears.com/legacy-flexzilla-reg-zillareel-trade-hose-reel-with-3-8-in/p-00929974000P#

Got good reviews and will be nice to have the hose up off the floor. I currently have a non-retracting, manual hand crank reel. It's not terrible but the fitting that allows swivel leaks CONSTANTLY, making my already loud Campbell Hausfeld Compressor run more often.

The plan is to install the compressor in a small utility closet I have in the basement and run a length of copper through the basement ceiling and over to the garage. Penetration will be easy as the fireplace flue goes through the wall right where I need it. I still have to draw up a list of items to have in the hard pipe system but at the very least I'd like to have a shutoff valve and a drain let to allow moisture to come out. I'm also going to plumb a small ball valve at the bottom of the tank since it's a horribly messy experience now to drain the tank of water. I will also be putting the compressor on some isolating pads to keep noise and vibration down.

Long term, if I'm unhappy with the noise (still) I will plumb the intake to the outside.

Tonight I will be hanging the reel and some more lighting (can never have enough!), and making up a list of copper supplies to buy. The whole system will be sweated together. PVC is unsafe for compressed air and black pipe seems too cumbersome to use (I already own a nice portable torch, but don't own thread cutters for iron pipe).
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Thank you Hugo. It does not look like much but the functionality is increasing a ton.

Last night I disconnected my old troublesome manual hose reel from my air compressor and lugged the big thing outside. With about 10psi in the tank to motivate the water to move, I slowly removed the bottom drain plug. Less than a cup came out, but it hadn't been that long since I last drained it (maybe June?). It was rust colored, and the steel fittings on my hose reels had rust stains on the inside so moisture is definitely an issue. I'm glad I have decided to run a copper hard line with multiple water traps and drains.

I hung two more fluorescent T12 4' fixtures last night, directly over the workbench and toolbox. I hardwired them to each other and then ran the wire through some gray conduit screwed to the ceiling. Wasn't feeling too well so I left it at that. This weekend I plan on hanging the air reel, moving the heavy *** compressor to the basement, and beginning to run the copper hard line (sweat fittings). I also need to pick up some hockey pucks to mount the compressor on.
 

Lord Vader

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Joined
Nov 26, 2013
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54
Location
Calgary, AB
Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

What do you think of the flourescent lighting? Huge improvement?

What supercharger kit is the E36 M3 running? I know four guys with S/C'd M3's lol. Two were AA kits, the other were VF Engineering kits.
 

ralphy99

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Aug 4, 2013
Messages
19
Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Please don't take this wrong but when I started reading your thread I was thinking your house was in Germany. Then I saw the New York license plate and it all dawned on me. Grin.

I too think you should start at the source of the problem leak, the vent on the roof before tearing anything out. But you know what they say about free advice.....

Please keep posting. Thanks.
 
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nsogiba

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Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

I have been busy! No pictures yet, but they're on the way. I need to clean up a bit as I have tools and materials everywhere.

What do you think of the flourescent lighting? Huge improvement?

What supercharger kit is the E36 M3 running? I know four guys with S/C'd M3's lol. Two were AA kits, the other were VF Engineering kits.

Of course. More light is never a bad thing. So much so that I actually added an additional 2 T12 fixtures (4 more bulbs total) to the area right over the workbench. I will have to snap some pics for you. I still have another 3 T12 fixtures (6 bulbs total) sitting in the corner, and will probably install them in the "rear" of the garage, mirroring the front. Although the majority of work is sometimes under the hod, you never really realize how much time you spend working on rear brakes, bearings, diffs, exhaust, etc, so it will be nice to have light back there as well.

The E36 is running an Active Auto kit, I think. Not totally sure. It was previously non-intercooled and still boogied for being an automatic car. The owner recently had a new intercooler fabricated for the car, I will have to ask him for some pictures. It's a gorgeous setup, his car is pretty much flawless.

Please don't take this wrong but when I started reading your thread I was thinking your house was in Germany. Then I saw the New York license plate and it all dawned on me. Grin.

I too think you should start at the source of the problem leak, the vent on the roof before tearing anything out. But you know what they say about free advice.....

Please keep posting. Thanks.

None taken! I see what you mean about the thread title...when I initially posted it with that name, I thought that people might interpret it that way, but decided to go ahead with it anyways as it had a nice ring to it. Now, I might change it.

The leak has not come back yet. It's about 20F here in Buffalo and snow is on the roof, so I'm not sure I'll be able to get someone up there this winter, but we'll see. We have had some days above freezing when it was wet, and no leak, so I'll have to investigate further. I plan on painting the garage once it's warm(er) again (April? March?) and will definitely have the leak done before I started to pretty things up.

I like the seat/office chair.

Thanks, it's just a generic comfortable office chair from my old job. I have another one you might like...It's the driver's seat out of my old car, a 2006 Sentra Spec V. I removed the seat from the car once the new owner wrecked it, welded some angle iron to the seat rails, and welded that to the base of an old office chair. Looks cool and is an interesting conversation piece.

Looks really nice so far
Thanks.

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I'm 99% done with my air system.

-5hp 30gal Campbell Hausfeld direct drive compressor relocated to utility room in basement on hockey pucks.
-System uses 1/2" Type L copper tube, fully silver soldered
-2 drainable water traps in the system,
-1 remote water drain on the tank
-Gauge in the garage for remote viewing as I didn't want to have to go in the basement everytime I wanted to see what pressure I have.

I filled the system to 120psi and it came down to 110psi overnight. I am hoping that some of this had to do with the air charge cooling down and reducing pressure slightly. I'll continue to monitor for pressure loss and if it drops more, I'll start looking for air leaks. It was my first time ever sweating copper, so there was a learning curve. Some things I took away:

-Always buy more copper tube than you need, especially if you are going long distances. I'm pushing 55 feet given all the small jogs and curves I had to take to avoid stuff in the basement.
-Pre-fab is king. Rather than assemble and sweat joints on the wall and risk burning the drywall with the torch, I mocked everything up on the walls, took it down, and sweated it all on the bench.
-Heat the copper until it itself can melt the solder, do not use the torch to melt the solder into the fitting (makes a mess).

I still have to hang the retractable air reel and connect the lead in hose to call it done, but that's easy as pie.

I am going to see Trailer Park Boys live tonight, so pictures will come tomorrow evening or over the weekend.

On an unrelated note I am getting some quotes locally for having my M bumpers painted, so the BMW will start coming apart soon.

Thanks for looking everyone, comments always welcome.
 
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nsogiba

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Jan 16, 2013
Messages
232
Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

The garage got paint and some decals. Best pictures I have for now, they are outdated as I have moved things along since then.

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Obviously a floor is next on the list but I don't want to spend any money on that until the lift is put in. I am thinking a full rise, scissor lift like the Atlas SLP-7K, recessed into the floor so that I can park normally in the garage when it's not in use.

http://www.atlasautoequipment.com/products/slp-7k

 
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nsogiba

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Jan 16, 2013
Messages
232
Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

The "right" side of the garage is dedicated to my BMW/LSX, and the "left" side is for my fiance's Audi A4 Quattro. Brand-specific white decals are on each respective side for that car. I'll have to get better pictures up.
 

dubber

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Joined
Dec 31, 2012
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5,326
Location
Canada's Capital
Re: The Suburban German 2 Car Garage

Thats a sweet piece you have there. I'm a big fan of Husky's range of products.
 
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