cdrewferd
Well-known member
Looking good. Thos doors are going to look great once you finish them.
ThanksGood work, nice job so far. Great pictures as well.

I actually have another buddy who builds windows and doors and hangs them, mostly commercial stuff, so he has some hinges he says will work, and the price is right. I'll know more once I meet up with him.Great idea on the doors. Looking forward to see what you and your friend come up with for hinges. I love the swing out effect, but don't think I could live without a remote controlled opener.
Yeah, that's true. Makes sense.I think you would get more responses if you were asking questions, or needed some help.
Looks like you have it all taken care of from what I can see.
Please don't stop posting your progress.....you may come back to all the people wondering what happened.![]()

Thanks man!I am new to the forum and have enjoyed following your project. Well thought out and a lot of hard work. Great use of the space available. Look forward to seeing it completed. I appreciate how hard it is to balance work with a project like this, I'm in the same boat. Keep up the good work. It will be worth the effort in the end.![]()

Thanks peter! Will do on the photos... looking back at them all keeps me motivatedGreat project - I enjoy catching up with your progress. keep the photo's coming.
regards
Peter W

At that point, I will be ready to tackle starting the mudding, sanding, and painting next friday, saturday, and sunday.
I can't put the hinges the way you're mentioning. Since I wanted to use these bolts to add strength, the heads wouldn't allow the hinge to close in that configuration. They have to stay in the orientation I have them.I really like your innovative use of space. The doors look great. I would definately change how you attached the hinges though. Even with 1 bolt on each hinge side going all the way through, a pry bar for pressure and a cordless impact would loosen it enough to cut the head with bolt cutters. You might consider installing them the same way you are holding them in your pic. If you don't want to change them, I would at least spot weld the not to the bolt.
Good luck![]()

Very cool, inspiring thread for sure.
thanks dude.It's not a rough neighborhood at all... pretty wealthy town. But I am a paranoid, **** retentive, OCD perfectionist. I think the welding route will make the most sense.Love the swing out doors. Yeah, if you're in a rough neighborhood, the exposed hinge hardware could be tempting to a thief, but heck, to gain entry, he'd have to take off a 4x7 door - pretty conspicuous.
...If you don't want to change them, I would at least spot weld the nut to the bolt....
An option to welding - drill a small hole through both your through bolt and the nut, push a small cotter pin through it.
I am not looking forward to the mud work and the sanding mess!Looks like I'll be doing the samething next weekend although in a remodeled bedroom - not a garage.
So if you garagejournal members see any drywall mud and dust covered "ghosts" about, it'll be one of the two of us!
Good eye... yes, about 15 miles west of beantown (where I actually live)Block foundation work looks like you're in the Boston area - am I right?
Very impressive! Good craftsmanship too.

Yeah the ceiling is low... but I fit in there perfectly fine. The only really low clearance is the doorway between the two rooms. I am 5'8". If someone were any more than 5'11", they wouldn't be too comfortable in the main room. But I guess I don't care!What's the ceiling height in the main garage, looks only about 6'...although it's worth it not to have rain water coming in under the doors. Hopefully it's comfy enough to walk around in.
Great bike garage for sure!

Thanks! Yeah, that is an option. The doors are inset a bit from the edge of the building, and the vinyl siding has a lip the will encourage water to drip at the edge. But yes, I have been thinking I will either put an angled piece there to ensure it runs off out towards the driveway, or a small gutter to take it off to the right side (looking from the outside).WOW - - great work.
Not sure if you were thinking about doing this or not...how about a little overhang w/ a gutter, over the garage door opening.
This will also help prevent water running towards the door.
Great build up and thanks for sharing and great looking bike there!
Thanks man! Yeah, looking back, it's pretty crazy to think about... ALL that **** in there, the dirt floor, crusty walls, all sorts of drywall/plaster/insulation that was rotting or falling off...Looks awesome!
You really should take a "today" version of this photo. -Gabe
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Thanks for the complimentsYou do very good work.
The only nit I would pick is the way you mounted the hinges. When they are lag screwed to the outside face that way a guy with a battery drill and a socket can be in your space in 30 seconds.
The hinges should be between the door and the jamb, with only the pins exposed. (That is why they are non-removable.)
But if you are on the back side of the house, out of sight of the street, and in a nice neighborhood where everybody already has all the toys they want, you are probably in good shape.
Congratulations.
Thanks man.Nice.
Looks like you had a car in there at one time.
You sure can get around in there now compared to previously.
John,Great project. You do excellant, quick work. Hope to see some more pics. I love looking at real working spaces as they evolve.
jhn9840
John
Yeah, I just need to find someone local who has a somewhat portable welder and give them a few beers to do it for me... really welding is something I want to learn eventually.Welded through bolts will keep the hinges on the wall, for sure.
That bike is going to have a nice place to cool down in.
Procrastination is a bug that bites us all from time to time... the mudding hasn't gone as far as I would like because I've been finishing up all the issues with all the doors (3 separate entrances means lots of little nitpicks to worry about)I am stalled out on the drywall mudding in my garage......just because I am a procrastinator, and ......well....that is about it.....
It is looking great!
what color or colors are you painting it?

Thanks!Nice job on your project.
I think I found them for around 24 dollars per 8 foot length, and they are 4.5 inches in height. My space isn't too big so it's not too bad. At the bottom they angle a little bit to sit flush and push liquid towards the center of the room if something is spilled on the wall.How much are the baseboards going to run you?
Just curious to see if I would be interested in doing the same thing.
The place is looking great.
I am playing more than I am working in the garage....![]()
coming along nicely.
Yeah, that's true. Makes sense.
Maybe I was just a bit cranky the other day. But the occasional 'good job!' is certainly nice to hear
Thanks man!
Yeah, it's not the biggest or nicest space, but it's what I've got to work with and I'm making it my own. I'm pretty proud of it thus far. ESPECIALLY when I look back a the starting pictures
The work balance is the frustrating part. Especially that now it's going to get nicer out soon, I need to get this finished so I can use it for what it's meant for... working on the r6!
Thanks peter! Will do on the photos... looking back at them all keeps me motivated
Got a lot accomplished yesterday and today. Also, I'll be able to work on it tomorrow (monday), friday, and next weekend. Hell yeah.
I got all the materials necessary for the small door: solid wood slab exterior door, exterior door jambs, lock set, hinges, and a kit with jigs to help you cut all your doorknob holes. I painted the door and jambs and let them to sit:
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I ripped out the old ****** door, and installed the new jambs.
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Later sunday night I got the hinges on the small door, mounted it, and got the knob and lock all working great. It was dark so I didn't take more pics. The door still needs another coat of paint and I need to insulate around the frame with caulking and some other odds and ends. I'll get pics tomorrow.
Also, I found some hinges that would work for the large doors at a killer price. They are commercial grade 4.5" hinges with non-removable pins, ball bearing movement, nice thick metal for the plates, very beefy pin, and they were pre-primed for painting. Best of all, only 6 bucks a piece. It was a no-brainer. I got 6... maybe I only need four, but figured at that price I might as well overkill.
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I attached the hinges via 5/16" lag screws for 6 of the 8 holes, and then 1 on each side is a through bolt to the other side. This was if someone wants to break it they can't just take out the bolts on the hinges. I mounted up the doors... shimmed them up into place and got two hinges attached with half the bolts on each... just to test the movement. Movement was smooth and felt great.
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My plan tomorrow is to tidy up all my loose ends. Hopefully this can all be done in a day, but I'm not sure.
- Quick trip to the Depot for more paint and some bolts
- Finish all the small door odds and ends
---- Painting
---- Caulking/insulating
---- Weatherstrip on the bottom
---- Etc.
- Finish the big doors
---- Mount the other two hinges
---- Attach all lags/bolts
---- Attach the gate latch to connect the two doors
---- Rig up the cane bolt for the floor
---- Weatherstrip the entire opening
---- Attach weatherstrips/wipers for the bottom of the doors
---- Rubber strips over the gaps on the hinge sides
---- Paint hinges, frame, general trim around the doors
- Final drywall work
---- Small pieces by all the doors (big doors, small door, door to main basement)
- Clean the **** out of the place
---- Get rid of all random wood
---- Sweep floor
---- Organize all tools
---- Can now get rid of table, etc.
It's already starting to look less cluttered in there just from my moving the table out of the way:
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At that point, I will be ready to tackle starting the mudding, sanding, and painting next friday, saturday, and sunday.
Oh yeah, and I'm going for a ******** ride. The bike needs it, and I need it. It's suppose to be around 38. Good enough.
Assuming this is what you're referring to:Looking for a comment, the doors aren't plumb to one another.
Willy
Now comes the only real mistake I've made in this whole build (besides a couple small electrical brainfarts which I fixed). When building the doors, as I was putting on the sheeting on both sides, I used tons of construction adhesive as well as nails/screws for the back/front. After this, I stacked the doors on top of eachother and left them on my work table. But, I forgot to put some weight on top of the top door, so as the adhesive dried and hardened, the sheet moved/warped. This manifested itself when I hung the doors as the doors appearing to not be square, which is not the case.
In order to seal the gap in the middle of the doors, I decided to get extra large door sweeps which had a wider piece of rubber sheet than most, and just mount them vertically. But, due to the screwup I just mentioned, the doors don't line up perfectly and the flap wouldn't seal all the way. So I traced the error onto a board and used a belt sander to create my own 'shim'. Worked great:
