That picture answers all the how questions. Thank you!
As a kid our train track was 4x8. It lowered from the ceilingAlways thought about making a slot car track that lowered from the ceiling..lol
I agree that is neat.
I agree that is neat.
However, the neatest thing is having a ceiling that high in the garage.....what is that about 14ft high? I'd have more cool stuff (and a lot more regular stuff) too If my garage had a 14ft ceiling instead of only 8ft. I only had heat/AC/insulation envy when I first arrived on this forum but after seeing so many 10ft -12ft and now 14ft tall garages I've got ceiling height envy too.![]()





I have the New Age I bought through Costco.How do you like the gladiator cabinets? Looking at them or the NewAge setup.




So like some real genius, I mounted this rack when I was a bit under the weather. Genius me mounted it too low so yesterday, I go out to open my garage door to pull my Trike in for some work and DUH! The wood rack is in the way… fortunately, it’s mounted on chains so I had to lift it way up close to the ceiling for the door to clear it. Boy did I laugh at my dumba$$ self…At least I got a good laugh.Bought a bundle of exotic wood and needed a separate place to store it. The ceiling was the only logical next space. Reinforced some 2x4 with OSB for added strength and screwed I bolts in the ceiling into the joists. I don’t think it’s overloaded.
NGU, the genius is in the way you mounted the rack. I would have welded up angle angle iron and then framed and sided the garage door hole when I discovered my mistake.Genius me mounted it too low so yesterday


I also have 3 (or maybe 4) of these. I think next time I've got 30 minutes to burn I'll make some more. I think I'll keep making them 'til every stationary tool has one by it.Been chasing pencils, pens markers around the shop for years. Then when I clean up they all go back to the office. Built 3 of these today to keep the used ones close at hand. Also added another hook to the grinder rack for a wire wheel.

I'm a big fan of the french cleats. I used them in my old shop and added lots of them to my new shop. Makes it easy to move things around and between the two shops.I haven't hung anything on them yet, but I'm in the process of installing French cleats on every wall. I took 2x3 stock, ripped it, planed it, then mitered it to make cleats. Pretty pleased with the strength; I can hang (all 250lbs of me) on a cleat in the span between studs and there's no deflection, so I'm confident I'll be able to put whatever up and not worry about cleats pulling out or breaking (like the dust collector or heavy shelving).
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I haven't hung anything on them yet, but I'm in the process of installing French cleats on every wall. I took 2x3 stock, ripped it, planed it, then mitered it to make cleats. Pretty pleased with the strength; I can hang (all 250lbs of me) on a cleat in the span between studs and there's no deflection, so I'm confident I'll be able to put whatever up and not worry about cleats pulling out or breaking (like the dust collector or heavy shelving).
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A big fan of french cleats here too. We put them up in the company shop over 20 years ago. Reorganizing ever since has been a breeze.I'm a big fan of the french cleats. I used them in my old shop and added lots of them to my new shop. Makes it easy to move things around and between the two shops.
