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Between 485 & 705 SQ/FT Mid-Century Moto Mecca Makeover

Workspaces between 485 and 705 squarefeet.

zmotorsports

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Oct 20, 2009
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21,427
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Northern Utah
Nice job on the firewood rack Gregor. Welds look great from my screen.

As for the POR-15, did you sand and/or rough up the surface at all after wiping the oil residue off? It looks rather smooth in the second to the last picture. I've found on smooth non-sanded, or rusted, or bead blasted metal that POR-15 will peel off rather easily rather than bite to the parent material.
 
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sakurama

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Oct 10, 2010
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1,458
Location
Portland - the cool one.
Nice job on the firewood rack Gregor. Welds look great from my screen.

As for the POR-15, did you sand and/or rough up the surface at all after wiping the oil residue off? It looks rather smooth in the second to the last picture. I've found on smooth non-sanded, or rusted, or bead blasted metal that POR-15 will peel off rather easily rather than bite to the parent material.

Thanks Mike!

Yes, I didn’t take photos but I hit the whole thing with 100 grit on the small Festool orbital sander since the cold rolled tube was very smooth. The thing I’m fighting right now is cold as we have clear weather but low temps making cure times really slow.

Gregor
 

ct71rr

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Joined
May 19, 2009
Messages
478
Location
Massachusetts
Hi, I just read through your van build. Pretty awesome! I saw a few of those kicking around Maui last year and thought they were pretty cool. Glad to see your still posting Festool ****!
 

VMX42

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Joined
Jun 27, 2011
Messages
50
Location
Sydney, Australia
"Oh, you're good at fractions? Yeah? Where were you when I ordered the steel? Yeah, not here. Sure, now I know that 3/16's is larger than 1/8. I meant to order 3/32nds. I hate fractions - for a lot of reasons..."

Gregor, you crack me up sometimes. That's the trouble with metric freedom units...stick to metric like the rest of us and life will be golden.

I look forward to archaeologists digging up the firewood rack in 500 years and marvelling at the over engineering. They will find your note books and deem you as the new Leonardo da vinci. A fitting epitaph if there ever was one...

Love your work, cheers from Downunder!!!
 
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sakurama

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Oct 10, 2010
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1,458
Location
Portland - the cool one.
"Oh, you're good at fractions? Yeah? Where were you when I ordered the steel? Yeah, not here. Sure, now I know that 3/16's is larger than 1/8. I meant to order 3/32nds. I hate fractions - for a lot of reasons..."

Gregor, you crack me up sometimes. That's the trouble with metric freedom units...stick to metric like the rest of us and life will be golden.

I look forward to archaeologists digging up the firewood rack in 500 years and marvelling at the over engineering. They will find your note books and deem you as the new Leonardo da vinci. A fitting epitaph if there ever was one...

Love your work, cheers from Downunder!!!

Ha, thanks.

I often wonder what will come of all of it. Lately, pouring energy into the house and trying to save what has been so neglected I wonder what survives and what the point is. Our house for example - if I can somehow get it to a point where it turns a corner and becomes iconic it might survive. If not the lot is large and worth more if the house is bulldozed like so many in our small and wonderful neighborhood.

The house I first grew up in (born outside of Philadelphia) was built in 1724. It was a spectacular, if small, colonial home and my father spent so much time restoring it and after my parents divorce it was sold and bulldozed. A nearly 300 year old home had survived countless travails and was replaced by a massive McMansion. I literally wept when I saw that.

What did survive is the memory of my parents sisyphean devotion to the history of the house and the inherent worth of that. And here I repeat the folly for your entertainment.

Today is a day where I wonder a bit more about our future than normal.

I've been bouncing around all sorts of projects for the past few weeks and none of them would really make sense if I just posted chronologically. Here's one.

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Lucas wanted to be a knight for Halloween. He asked if I could make him a wooden sword. I suggested maybe we make him a metal one and his eyes lit up.

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I rummaged through the aluminum stock to find a few scraps that would work. I machined a fuller, or "blood groove" down the middle and then machined a taper over the length. I let Lucas run the Bridgeport under my very strict oversight. The lathe gave us an end cap and I welded the parts together and cleaned them up.

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And sadly those are the last photos I have of it. We finished it and I held off taking any "final" photos until Halloween when I could do a nice portrait of him but somehow, and we have no idea how, he lost it.

Kids...

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We finished the handle and he carried it with him everywhere and slept with it at night and could not have been more happy. I don't know how you lose a giant aluminum sword. Nonetheless Ben, Tammy and Wyatt came over to celebrate and our neighbors managed to pull off a creative socially distanced trick or treat celebration for the kids which was nice.

If we find the sword I'll post a photo but I suspect that, much like our colonial house, it is lost to history and we have only the memory and maybe a few photos.

Okay, I have a few more things that I'll try to catch up on today and over the next few days...

Gregor
 

bdbecker

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Iowa
There is only one finish line in life. I suspect that once we reach it, most of the things we concern ourselves with today will seem insignificant in that moment.

Focus on what you can do in this moment to make your world a better place for you and your family. Fix the roof. Repair the deck. Practice wheelies. Teach your kids how to run a mill. Enjoy this moment because it will be gone soon.

-----

Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained in time past.
If all time is eternally present
All time is unredeemable.
What might have been is an abstraction
Remaining a perpetual possibility
Only in a world of speculation.
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present...

-T.S. Eliot
 

goldtooth

Member
Joined
Mar 7, 2014
Messages
13
Location
Portland
There is only one finish line in life. I suspect that once we reach it, most of the things we concern ourselves with today will seem insignificant in that moment.

Focus on what you can do in this moment to make your world a better place for you and your family. Fix the roof. Repair the deck. Practice wheelies. Teach your kids how to run a mill. Enjoy this moment because it will be gone soon.

-----

Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained in time past.
If all time is eternally present
All time is unredeemable.
What might have been is an abstraction
Remaining a perpetual possibility
Only in a world of speculation.
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present...

-T.S. Eliot

This
 
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sakurama

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Oct 10, 2010
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Location
Portland - the cool one.
I figure the most valuable thing I can give my kids anymore is my time. We are so inside of our screens so frequently that finding ways to get outside and be away from all that is not just healthy but essential.

So, as a way of distracting you, and me, from the events of the day I've saved up some stuff to post for just such an emergency!

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So I wanted to use enamel to paint the firewood rack since I didn't want to deal with the expense, hassle and time that powdercoating would involve. I tried brushing it on and that turned out to be a disaster. It just didn't lay out smoothly and I was bummed at how bad it looked: streaked, dust nibs, fish eyes and drips. It was like a "painting problems compendium" in one piece.

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I let the thing dry outside for two days and then wet sanded the whole thing down. I spray painted the legs since I knew that the brush was not going to work and it didn't take much since I had a good base coat.

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Rollers seem like a primitive solution but they always seem to work. I didn't do this in the beginning because of my false sense of thrift that didn't want to waste a roller and tray liner for a single small use. I decided to live large and spend that $8 to get a decent finish. I didn't want to disappoint any of you.

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It was the right solution. It put down a nice thick coat with an even finish.

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In what can only be described as a stroke of complete dumb luck it rained that night as the paint dried and the water pooled and puddled on the fresh paint and the next morning the surface was this amazing dappled, spotted and mottled finish that I didn't intend but certainly love.

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I have found that threats and promises of screen time no longer motivate my kids. But I can almost always get them to do some work for $20.

Before we placed the firewood rack I wanted to paint the wall. We'd decided on a color last year and so I picked up some exterior paint with the idea that I'd start to paint the spots I could repair.

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Lara was working the beams, the kids did the big walls where accuracy wasn't a requirement and I took care of trim.

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While I have a big power sprayer it feels like too much hassle to set up and then break down and clean unless the whole house was taped off. So once again I've got a roller in my hand - this time with a 3/8" nap. We chose the same gray that we'd found before on interior and some exterior parts.

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The trim and details are black.

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The leveling feet turned out to be essential and perfect as the brick work rose by the house.

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So this is a sort of before and after of a small space. I feel very happy at the transformation because it's the first part of the exterior of the house that has changed having lived here for so many years it often feels like my motivation has wained and what started as a sprint to move in has become some kind of epic around the world slog.

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It holds about a Face Cord which is about 1/3 of an actual cord. To save you the trouble of looking it up a cord is three rows of wood, cut to 16" that are 4' high and 8' long. So this isn't a practical solution to store a lot of wood but rather a good place to keep the wood dry and at hand.

I'll need to find a place to store the rest of the wood and I'll need to find a home for the lawn mower but at least I've imparted some sort of vision on this small corner of the house. The square for the kindling is a really beautiful thing to look at visually (a square of circles!) and I am very happy with with how it turned out.

It gives me a bit of hope that I really needed.

Gregor
 

TwoBytes

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Joined
Mar 14, 2014
Messages
790
Location
Canberra, 'Stralia
I figure the most valuable thing I can give my kids anymore is my time.

I've recently come to the same realisation, and wholeheartedly agree!

So, as a way of distracting you, and me, from the events of the day I've saved up some stuff to post for just such an emergency!

Thanks you, distraction very welcome and appreciated.

I'm on the other side of the world, but I'm still glued to the constant media stream.

That corner looks fantastic, what a transformation! The unexpected rain enhanced paint looks great too, what luck!

The square for the kindling is a really beautiful thing to look at visually (a square of circles!) and I am very happy with with how it turned out.

I agree, that square of circles is a beautiful thing to look at, you should be very happy with that outcome.
 

GeddyT

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Joined
Jun 17, 2015
Messages
1,243
Location
Bellingham, WA
$20! No wonder I can never get my kids to do anything: I vastly underestimated the going rate for elementary school labor! I'll try upping the ante next time.
 

fartymarty

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Joined
Nov 9, 2012
Messages
1,348
Location
Fort Worth
Wow, I love the way the fire rack turned out! The juxtaposition of the split logs and kindling is just so... visual! Perfectly minimalist and fits the house beautifully.

Agreed, only Gregor can stack wood to make better looking art than I've seen in museums.
 

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The J

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Joined
Mar 4, 2010
Messages
152
Turned out so great - All those colors and shapes coming together.

So rewarding having your kids join you to paint, even if it takes 5x longer to do.
They - and you - will remember it whenever you look at that corner.

Thanks for sharing Gregor. Always enjoy these posts and “hearing” you explain the process and missteps on the way to a beautiful final product.
 

Matias

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Feb 28, 2015
Messages
616
Location
Finland
The firewood rack turned out really nice!

It's a massive task to "get the outside of the house done", but completing a small area at a time it's doable. Also, you get the added benefit of now enjoying the corner each time you pass by or go to get some wood for the fireplace.

I agree 100% that time is the best thing we can give to our kids. Also, maybe we should sometimes take a step back and think do we need to take some time for ourselves too. At least, that's what I've been contemplating with a house which still needs things done, cabinets and storage to go through, project bikes and cars I don't seem to have time to get to...
 

Dr Klaun

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Joined
Mar 28, 2010
Messages
59
Location
Tumalo
The rack looks great, but my modernist OCD preference would have matched the overall length and the middle supports to the vertical jambs of the windows. But is also works as a "furniture" type piece the way it is!
 
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sakurama

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Joined
Oct 10, 2010
Messages
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Location
Portland - the cool one.
You guys are very supportive and I appreciate that a great deal and while you think that I get a lot done I have a bad habit of sometimes abandoning a project or not finishing it completely.

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Case in point is that Lara and I finished these built ins in Dec 2017 - three years ago. For the last three years I have had no handles or pulls on them. At first it was by design as I figured they'd settle and I didn't want to put pulls on and then have to adjust them moving the pulls out of whack. Well, I think three years is probably enough.

I did one last adjustment to them and while Lara painted inside the house I retreated to the garage to work on making some door pulls.

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Since the doors are in a walkway I didn't want them to be jutting out where they'd get bumped or smacked by a kids running around the house so my plan was to make them the same as before but shorter. I cut a bunch of small stainless 7/16" rod that was left over with a 45 degree miter and evened them up on the lathe.

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I pulled up the tailstock turret and found that the last time I used it was... three years ago! It still had the center, tap drill and 4mm tap in place. I swapped to the collet as it's quicker and more accurate and drilled and tapped the small returns.

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I use the fixure aspect of the table to hold the longer cuts of the stainless rod and then use a square to make sure they're orientated properly so I can tack one end in place.

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When I was building the last batch I'd made an adapter for the cold saw to use the Festool miter saw rails and it works very well for longer cuts. With one end tacked I set a length stop randomly at the length of the shortest handle and made a quick aluminum block with a channel to hold it in the vise so I could make my second 45 degree cut.

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With one end tacked into place the table holds the pull square in one dimension and a small square keeps the second end in place for tacking the other end.

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I tacked all the pulls up and double checked them on the cabinet. They're too short to put your fingers through so they're more like a pinch pull. I'm hoping that I'll like it but I'm more concerned that they are low profile.

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So after the success I had with welding the firewood rack I approached the stainless pulls a bit nervously. Somehow, over the course of this pandemic, I've found some reserve of skill that didn't exist before. I think it's accepting my weakness and working with it instead of trying to work against it. Also, positioning is essential for me to get a good weld. I fed rod into the inside of the weld and fused the outer portions and I honestly couldn't be more pleased with what are easily my best stainless welds ever.

I'm reminded of a phrase we used to joke about in photography: "It's taken me ten years to become an overnight success" and while I'm not famous I feel like I've been welding for 10 years now and suddenly I'm starting to get it.

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And then I ground off my success! It is sad for me to not keep the evidence of my best welds but the larger picture is about keeping things clean.

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After grinding the welds smooth on the 2x72 belt grinder I used a scothbrite wheel to further smooth them and match the finish I got earlier when I green scotchbrited the long rods before cutting and welding.

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All four pulls are finished and look consistent.

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I used my trusty laser level to project a line on the cabinets that I used to drill the top hole for the pulls.

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Once again I find the less I measure the more accurate I get. I set the Kreg depth tool to 25mm in from the door edge.

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And drilled for the top pull and then used the pull to determine the spot for the lower hole.

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And with that I can say that project is actually finished. Well, about 99% done.

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The second pair of doors have a slight warp to them. Something I'd hoped would settle with time but hasn't. The top of one and the bottom of the other are about a 1/2" proud and I don't have any ideas for how to fix them so I've just accepted it. I tried a small magnet catch on the one door but it didn't have the strength to pull it in and I've considered making some kind of torture rack to hold it hoping it would perhaps take a set.

Suggestions are welcome but for now I'm just living with it.

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Lastly, closing the studio in NYC left me with some of my artwork that I had there and Lara suggested that I find places to hang it. This big wall I always wanted to hang a giant print but never pursued it. These two prints from a series I did for Hasselblad when I won their Hasselblad Masters competition in 2008 have always been works I've loved and so with the kids art directing I hung them on the wall.

So, just less than eight years into this thread and we're just getting around to hanging up some artwork...

Thanks Lara for encouraging me to put up some art.

Gregor
 
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Vertigo Cycles

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Joined
Jan 14, 2010
Messages
193
Location
Portland, OR
Excellent weld there, Gregor!

It's not something I've noticed before today, but I love the difference in color temperature between the shop photos and home photos.
 

PatDonovan

Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2016
Messages
5
I've seen some people use a rare earth magnet in the floor and in the bottom of the door to pull them into place, might be an option. I'm pretty sure I saw like NS Builders do it on one of their projects they posted on IG or YouTube. its a pretty low profile solution. I love your house and your house updates. I love going back through this thread re-reading all the updates and looking at the pics. It's a beautiful place, and comes together little by little. What future house projects do you have on your schedule? I remember the front stairs, but not sure what else is left.

PAT
 
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sakurama

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Oct 10, 2010
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Excellent weld there, Gregor!

It's not something I've noticed before today, but I love the difference in color temperature between the shop photos and home photos.

From you that means a lot.

And yeah, I consider wood and metal to be Ying and Yang so I tend to push my colors towards warm for inside and cool for the shop. It's actually like that but I do push them a bit more for the contrast.

I've seen some people use a rare earth magnet in the floor and in the bottom of the door to pull them into place, might be an option. I'm pretty sure I saw like NS Builders do it on one of their projects they posted on IG or YouTube. its a pretty low profile solution. I love your house and your house updates. I love going back through this thread re-reading all the updates and looking at the pics. It's a beautiful place, and comes together little by little. What future house projects do you have on your schedule? I remember the front stairs, but not sure what else is left.

PAT

I'll look into some stronger magnets - my worry then is that the door will be too hard to open. Sort of wished I'd done push latches but that ship has sailed and would have required more space and different hinges.

Stairs and new railings are on deck for inside and hopefully before Xmas - that's the goal. New gutters as well but of course Ben always manages to tell me of some kind of cool thing I didn't know existed right before I do something so now I'm looking into half round gutters instead of the traditional shapes. I'd like to replace the sky-lights before winter as several leak. Also a new floor upstairs and eventually downstairs as well. Cork this time.

Gregor
 

Ls1Lark

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60
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KCMO
That is an impressive room as well as the fan collection - I see a silver swan- is there a favorite of yours? What’s the far right fan in your photo’s?
 

The J

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Mar 4, 2010
Messages
152
New gutters as well but of course Ben always manages to tell me of some kind of cool thing I didn't know existed right before I do something so now I'm looking into half round gutters instead of the traditional shapes.

Gregor


Gregor, take a look at flat black 5” K gutters with flat black round downspouts.

I was looking into half round for my last house (built 1898) but would have needed a very wide gutter to match the K’s water flow rates. (This may not be needed in your area.)

I found the K in flat black is low profile and sleek while the round leaders provide a really great look. I did the exact same in the next house.

It’s not something many people notice right away but it stands out once you do. Both houses had black shingle roofs and black accents like shutters or hardware, so there was somewhat of a theme.

Note of course that I’m not a designer or know anything about MCM so there may be rules or precedent you’d rather adhere to.
 

jdp993

Member
Joined
Aug 30, 2006
Messages
21
If you have some gap between the inside door face and the shelves I have had success with cross wires. You need to have a pair as otherwise the door will pull out of square over time. For the protruding corner you block the wire out a bit (hence the need for the gap to the interior shelves etc.). I've found some attractive small turnbuckles at sailing suppliers. But I know, you would make you own.

1/16" stainless wire rope works great for this. McMaster Carr is a good source. They also have some attractive swage fittings.
 

bdking

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May 16, 2013
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PDX
I was looking into half round for my last house (built 1898) but would have needed a very wide gutter to match the K’s water flow rates. (This may not be needed in your area.)

Flow rate isn’t such a big deal in the Pacific NW but ease of cleaning is the most traditional look for a mcm house would be a fascia gutter but they’re terrible to keep clean up here.
 

Steve V.

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Mar 23, 2007
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368
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Texas
Gregor,

A few things...

Your work is superb.

That kindling square would make a really cool picture.

Would you happen to have the drawings of that Kapex bench with measurements?

Thanks,

Steve
 

hewey

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Sep 5, 2014
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Location
Blue Mountains, Australia
Really nice work. That wood rack looks great but is practical too. I found I like a small stash of wood near the house for easy access, and had a big stack further away where the majority was stored. Kept things neat and was reasonably practical. Love the handles as well.
 
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sakurama

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Oct 10, 2010
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Portland - the cool one.
Gregor,

A few things...

Your work is superb.

That kindling square would make a really cool picture.

Would you happen to have the drawings of that Kapex bench with measurements?

Thanks,

Steve

Hi Steve,

I did find the drawings but I'm not sure how much use they'll be. Sorry they're horizontal - I don't do verticals. If you click the photos they'll come up much larger and you can print them.

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If you need even larger PM and I'll send you 100% shots.

I've been surprised at the strength of the thin counter. At first I was hesitant to put much weight on it but it's held well over a 100lbs or more and never really flexed or moved. Torsion boxes are pretty amazing.

I'll reply to the fan question later.

Gregor
 
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sakurama

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Portland - the cool one.
Is not doing verticals a Gregor thing, a gear thing or a wise *** thing?

Asking as an amateur photographer (and wise ***) who's always trying to learn.

Totally a wise *** thing. Also, a rebuke of the phone culture. Also, our eyes are not on top of each other but side by side. Also the horizon is horizontal so for the foreseeable future I'm going to continue my one-man crusade against the vertical image.

Nothing personal.

Gregor
 

APEowner

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Oct 2, 2009
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Sunny, New Mexico
Totally a wise *** thing. Also, a rebuke of the phone culture. Also, our eyes are not on top of each other but side by side. Also the horizon is horizontal so for the foreseeable future I'm going to continue my one-man crusade against the vertical image.

Nothing personal.

Gregor

Thanks. I agree with most of that. I'm particularly annoyed by videos shot vertically but I do like the occasional vertical photograph if the subject lends itself to that format.
 
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sakurama

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Thanks. I agree with most of that. I'm particularly annoyed by videos shot vertically but I do like the occasional vertical photograph if the subject lends itself to that format.

Yeah, vertical videos are the worst. I shot some of that when I did the XR100 build last year and when Jesse turned my IG stories into YouTube videos it was really apparent how annoying that was.

I'd have nothing against printed verticals. I like extreme crops in any direction but since our screens are horizontal and we generally are viewing things that way (aside from the phone which could just as easily be horizontal but IG chose to not incorporate that) I have just found myself liking more and more extreme horizontal shots.

To me there's something interesting about such an extreme crop - it's like a panorama and often there's nothing but space in the frame and I like that. This forum, this thread, is really a place for me to not be constrained by clients or norms or anything. It's very much a personal journal so I give myself permission to do it any way that feels right. If you go back to the beginning you might even find a few verticals. Over time you'll see that the shots have become more and more horizontal as I explore that.

Anyway, it's just a reaction to a pet peeve.

Gregor
 
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sakurama

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Location
Portland - the cool one.
That is an impressive room as well as the fan collection - I see a silver swan- is there a favorite of yours? What’s the far right fan in your photo’s?

The Silver Swan is one I was slow to come around to. Partly because, when I started collecting fans in a more focused way, it was considered sort of a "grail" fan and it always commanded pretty high prices. With very few exceptions I never spent more than $100 on a fan. I didn't buy one for a while for that reason and because they were generally painted brown. Not a fan of brown.

I got into old fans when I was in college because I was fascinated by their longevity. I saw one in a junk shop behind the counter, silently oscillating away, and asked if it was for sale. "Nope," he said, "I've owned that fan for 50 years and it's never stopped once. I sell that to you and I'll have to buy a new plastic one that will break and then I'll be buying new fans every year for the rest of my life"

And with those words began my obsession with this simple mechanical device. With most of my fan collection now here in Portland this might be an interesting time to look at a few of my favorites.

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The Silver Swan is on the left. Since paint to me ruined the "machine" aspect of my fans I generally strip them of paint. For the Silver Swan I took it apart and had the steel parts chrome plated so it would look more unified. Next to that is a Marrelli that I liked for the scalloped blades - it came from Italy via ebay.

The center is a rare Zephyr Airkooler and the small one is another small Marelli and the far right is a German fan that has no markings and I can't remember what brand it is.

I discovered many of these obscure fans when I was riding my motorcycle across the country and rode out of my way to visit the "American Fan Collectors Museum" which was in Kansas at the time. Up till then my idea of vintage fans were the heavy black fans with brass blades and cages of which I had a few. At the museum I discovered many obscure brands I'd not heard of and this coincided with this new company called "Ebay".

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The fan that struck me the most at the museum was the Roto-Beam because it had this amazing solid cast aluminum blade that protruded from the cage and had five arms. Most fans have an even number of blades and odd numbers are just more interesting. It also was a fan that acknowledged the inherit desire to touch a spinning blade and it encouraged you to do so with it's design.

The far left and second from the right are both Roto-Beams. They are by far my favorite brand.

The second from the left is a Fitzgerald which is very rare and another fan that is brown - a characteristic that destroyed (in my mind) it's crazy shape and lines. So I stripped the paint and polished the casting. It is a reminder of the period and of why some fans were painted - it's aluminum isn't great quality and it's never held it's polish very well. But it's still fine as silver. The center is another, larger Marelli, and like most of my fans is from the general period of the 1930's to the 1950's.

This, to me, is an era of mechanical brilliance where function was a given and everything, even a simple fan, was an opportunity to create something beautiful and stylish. To me these are functional sculptures. Much like unfaired motorcycles their purpose is on display - mechanical honesty, form and function.

The far right is an Air Castle and, while not my favorite, fits because of it's cast aluminum blade. I'm a sucker for cast aluminum blades.

So outside of a few books and portfolios the only thing I shipped to Oregon from NYC was my fans. My absolute favorite fan, a small Roto-Beam that I had the cage chrome plated to enhance it's shiny luster, broke in transit.

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I've had a few fans break over the years and I've had to send them away to get repaired. That's not necessary any more because since I've started collecting I've learned all I need to know to fix just about anything - aluminum welding was the last piece of the puzzle. The repair on this fas was a broken aluminum thread holding the arm to the base. I knew just trying to weld it wasn't going to work so I machined the arm to accept a new part.

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I turned a piece of 6061 down and threaded it in the lathe.

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By beveling and extending the part out I could create a larger, better weld that would penetrate deeper and allow me to machine it flush again.

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While I'm still not accomplished with my aluminum welding I'm confident in it. My only worry was that these old castings are really bad and often pretty dirty but taking my time allowed the impurity's to percolate and I got a solid bead.

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The DRO is zero'd on the center of the rotary table...

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And I left a small pip on the end of the thread that I could use to align with a center in the mill. This allowed me to get the casting back to a very close center.

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While the clamping set up seems rather precarious (and it is!) I was only taking light cuts in aluminum so there wasn't very much force going into the part. I simply milled the weld down flush.

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I know it's not much of a big deal but to me this is the first major fan repair I've done and done well. And that I've rescued my favorite fan is all the sweeter.

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While it's apart... I took the opportunity to polish it up a little. It's so nice having that big Baldor buffer.

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Here you can see the beauty of the Roto-Beam blade. It's also a ***** to polish.

Ages ago when I first met Sean he was using Kevlar welding gloves. I never liked the slippery feel of them so I've stayed with the standard thin deerskin Tillman's for welding but the Kevlar gloves turned out to be perfect for polishing.

The golden rule in the shop is no gloves on spinning machines. The fabric can catch a bit or tool and get sucked in. The exception to that is polishing where the cloth buffs won't grab a glove but the parts can get too hot to hold. A knit glove helps manages the heat so you keep putting pressure on the part.

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Here you can see how the tip of the blade pokes out of the cage. We all have that temptation to touch a spinning fan blade and every kid has tentatively stuck his hand in until the blade skims the finger and you've cheated death. The Roto-Beam lets you, ney begs you, to do that right in the middle where it's not spinning fast enough to do damage but the thrill is still there.

It is everything great about the past - built to last, simple, over designed, silent, efficient, exceedingly beautiful and encouraging exploration and personal responsibility. What is not to love?

Gregor
 
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