bigsteve1969
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2008
- Messages
- 222
how much would it cost to have a pit? im gonna be building a shop within the next few years and i wanna pit im just trying to think how much extra that would be
Depends on how much work you can do. If you can dig it and lay brick then it probably wouldn't cost more than a few hundred. I thought about it for a while and got a bid for a tractor to come dig a hole - $500! No thanks, I'll buy a lift...how much would it cost to have a pit? im gonna be building a shop within the next few years and i wanna pit im just trying to think how much extra that would be
I dug my own /layed the block and installed air/drain ect for less than $1500.00, all before I had the floor poured.
I think some of the safety police are going a bit overboard. Sure it can present a danger, but no more than a backyard fish pond. If there are fumes settling in it, then you didn't ventilate it right. If people are falling/******* in, then you should have a cover and/or chain around the hole. There is more to making a proper pit than just digging a hole. The *ONLY* proper way to build/use a pit is with continuous ventilation and cover it up when you're done. Don't blame your laziness on a safety issue...
If they were THAT big of a danger they wouldn't be in every Jiffy Lube in the country. You know those people work there because they didn't qualify for McDonalds...

Everybody acts like it's a death trap. If you build it and use it right, it's no more dangerous, and no less useful than any other tool in your shop. You, for example, are basing your statements on experience with a 50 year old pit that wasn't built right.What is the harm in pointing out negs to an idea?
Answer please?
I dug my own /layed the block and installed air/drain ect for less than $1500.00, all before I had the floor poured.
Everybody acts like it's a death trap. If you build it and use it right, it's no more dangerous, and no less useful than any other tool in your shop. You, for example, are basing your statements on experience with a 50 year old pit that wasn't built right.

That seems very narrow, maybe it's just the pic?
A) They haven't been eliminated from commercial environments, and,Fires are one of the reasons they were eliminated in commercial environments.
You mean rotting into peices?Glass lid so others could view you in resting peace-awesome!
Yes, I would have a pit only with a 'basement' configuration. Stairs, lights, room for storage of under car tools, etc. Of course, this makes the idea cost well in excess of a two post lift and whatever truss work needed............a lube shop i go to has a pit/basement setup that is kinda cool............the basement is standard 8 foot height with the area under the pit having a raised platform for servicing ...........