Hi there!
My property's previous owner built my 36x50 metal pole barn in 2004, and as part of that he ran a water line from the house to the back of the shop. The line comes into the shop on the back wall near a corner. The line is a PVC pipe run thorugh a lager PVC pipe coming up through the floor against the back wall. He used it to feed a sink and a urinal in a small room.
I removed the urinal and sink, as well as all of the other structure he built. Earlier I just stuck some more PVC pipe on it and ended it with a spighot for a garden hose, which is why it has an absurd length of pipe on it. The pipe was used to temporarily punch through a partition wall, but I've since removed that wall too. The foil tape on the pipe was a temporary hack to help hold the pipe out of my way while we coated the floor.
Having that water was handy while I was cleaning and refinishing the floor, and it would be useful for filling buckets and such too.
The problem I have now is that I've added studs for finishing the outside walls, and I've added a partition wall to split the building into a wood shop and an auto/meta/mechanical shop. You guessed it -- the water is in the wrong room (the wood shop side), and along a wall I intend to build a full-length 17' long workbench/stand for my radial arm saw.
I'd like to route the water into the auto shop side, but I'm not sure how. If I run it along the wall on the inside of the wall, I'd have to punch through the 6x6 posts, and I really don't like that idea.
I could just finish the wall with a spighot (like a washing machine connection) and that would be okay. I'd just have to run a garden hose from there through the wood shop into the mechanical side, but that's inconvenient. It seems like there's a way to do this more permanently but I'm not sure what it would be.
There's no reason I couldn't run a line on the outside of the wall -- that's how I intend to get shop compressed air into both rooms.
Thoughts?
My property's previous owner built my 36x50 metal pole barn in 2004, and as part of that he ran a water line from the house to the back of the shop. The line comes into the shop on the back wall near a corner. The line is a PVC pipe run thorugh a lager PVC pipe coming up through the floor against the back wall. He used it to feed a sink and a urinal in a small room.
I removed the urinal and sink, as well as all of the other structure he built. Earlier I just stuck some more PVC pipe on it and ended it with a spighot for a garden hose, which is why it has an absurd length of pipe on it. The pipe was used to temporarily punch through a partition wall, but I've since removed that wall too. The foil tape on the pipe was a temporary hack to help hold the pipe out of my way while we coated the floor.
Having that water was handy while I was cleaning and refinishing the floor, and it would be useful for filling buckets and such too.
The problem I have now is that I've added studs for finishing the outside walls, and I've added a partition wall to split the building into a wood shop and an auto/meta/mechanical shop. You guessed it -- the water is in the wrong room (the wood shop side), and along a wall I intend to build a full-length 17' long workbench/stand for my radial arm saw.
I'd like to route the water into the auto shop side, but I'm not sure how. If I run it along the wall on the inside of the wall, I'd have to punch through the 6x6 posts, and I really don't like that idea.
I could just finish the wall with a spighot (like a washing machine connection) and that would be okay. I'd just have to run a garden hose from there through the wood shop into the mechanical side, but that's inconvenient. It seems like there's a way to do this more permanently but I'm not sure what it would be.
There's no reason I couldn't run a line on the outside of the wall -- that's how I intend to get shop compressed air into both rooms.
Thoughts?
