Honest Bob
Well-known member
This is awesome. I hope I can do something like this in the future.
Wow can't believe I'm just now finding this thread.
I bought a place with a hangar & sorted past at the beginning of this year. Have you had to do anything with the hangar door maintenance wise?
Your Craigslist finds and repurposing are right up my alley; I can't resist a good free/cheap deal!
Also as a former PTC resident I'm curious what general side of town this is located on.
Keep up the good work!

I do have a mouse and it loves to runs down the full length of the seal at the bottom of the 48’ hangar door [emoji23].When if you do the firing strips
Don’t do them in a way that leaves any room for rodents to go from one stud cavity to the next
I did that and really regretted it
We wanted to use vertical 1x4 lumber on the walls and we just ran strips horizontally across the studs
This left a gap for the mice and squirrels to travel the entire length of the building inside the wall
Sorry to hear about the water
You’re gonna have to have gutters and downspouts taking it at least ten feet away from the Bldg
Measures 0.15” so it’s probably 5/32” / 8 gauge. The cable/wire rope I’ve found so far in that size I don’t feel is high enough strength.should be a few rigging or wire rope companies around Hotlanta. Throw a wrench on it to see the gauge. like 3/8 or 9/16 etc with be enough for them to get you what you need. We do a lot of crane cable replacement and just as an example we pay about $90 for a 90foot section.

In atlanta, try calling Cobb Wire.
They should be able to help you better than the hangar company.
https://goo.gl/maps/NpRNFLmkZc52



...and plant some grass it will be a nice side yard to spend countless hours maintaining!

The buildings total 4,900 sq. ft. but with only 10-20’ setbacks required they were placed near the back property lines giving as much room out front as possible—thus making it appear larger. My girlfriend grew up at race tracks, works on her own cars, is a photographer, and has lived in warehouses spaces before so she’s looking forward to using the property just as much as I am lol!I've read the thread twice, entirely. The land seems bigger than 1 acre. The land clearing is going well. Having a hanger to store stuff would be appealing to me. I know your goal is studio use for shoots. Guessing your status is single? My wife wants a more-traditional place to-live, but I would be OK with the place!
The scavenging and re-purposing has been successful for you. I like light, so I would spend an evening stripping-down those fixtures, a second/third to re-wire them, and then you would be motivated to get them back-up, working.
Your sliding 6 ft doors: we had three six-foot sliding glass doors we replaced with a nanawall https://www.nanawall.com/home-owners and I put the sliders onto CL for disposal/sale. The guy who bought them came with a cube truck and a helper. I had him closely-examine the doors to see they were intact, no cracks, and usable, the tracks went with the doors. I could have scrapped it out, but I assumed that would help to sell the doors.
I requested payment before he did anything-else about moving the doors, "as-is, where-is," which turned-out to be a good idea.
The first one went into the cube truck OK. The second one, the buyer stumbled as he approached the truck, and he dropped his end of the panel. It broke into pieces, and he was mad! So-what, his problem, not mine. Thankfully no one was cut by the glass, which was original to the house, a 1950's ranch-style home. I swept-up all the glass using a wide aluminum dustpan, and waved bye-bye as the two remaining panels departed, the greenbacks warm in my jeans pocket.
Hanging pics of the place from years-past will be an interesting decor addition.
Are you going to use SIP's for the roof over the trailers? That should make it a lot cooler underneath. Would you build the roof high-enough that you could use the roofs of the trailers for storage?
speedminded: I have the same dial/vernier caliper from US General. I really-like it for the casual use it gets, I am not a machinist. I keep mine in the plastic-molded case it came-in, which is a bit worse for the wear after probably 20 years.













They became super docile.OK, I'll bite. WHAT HAPPENED???
your place just keeps looking better so keep up the great work.









What the hell??

















Whew, good thing they aren’t poisonous or I’d really be in trouble.Copperheads are not an aggressive snake, not at all unless you step on it.
Neither are coral snakes.
Having handled all manner of snakes my entire life, portraying them as friendly pets on the interwebs is not impressive, it’s reckless.
Not to you, do as you please, but to the uninformed that may see this and think they can impress people handling a poisonous snake.
