The shop is looking great! Keep up the good work. I must say, I am jealous of a few of your toys in there. That stepside is looking sweet in the last picture.
It’s slow going as usual. I tap out a minimum of 25 holes like this per sheet, plus other bends and dents. Basic dolly and hammer work but still a slow process.
@Toolfool John I’m knocking down those sharp points for two reasons. First, they are on the back side so they could tear the paper on my insulation. Second, it is a cut hazard and could cause fitment issues at the overlap. There is plenty of “patina” left!
When I coached HS boys' basketball, some of the parents complained that I was too hard on their babies. I started wearing a t-shirt that had that saying on it.
I finished the end wall to the 12’ mark. Then I came across the back wall 30’. I will be stopping there until the plumbing is done and I decide which direction to go with the room and mezzanine on the northern end of the building.
Today I hung the sink in preparation to complete the plumbing. Then I worked on the compressor. I removed it from the shipping frame work, wired it and mounted it to the pallet.
I installed some temporary plumbing on the compressor and turned it on for the first time. For a 5hp two stage unit it is pretty quiet. You can have a conversation in the building when it is running.
My impatience got the best of me today. I have no time line on my plumber, so I installed the spigot on the front of the building. I needed that corner closed up so I could start hanging sheet metal on the front wall. I made fair progress for a late start.
Great thread! Love all the work you've done and the reclaimed sheet metal is a GREAT idea. If you dont mind, what did it cost to "dry in" the building? Slab, and building costs? Wife and I are trying to figure out what direction we want to go. Trying to cut cost down from a normal stick build
It’s been a while since my last post. My progress has slowed tremendously for a couple of reasons. I have traveled for work for 5 weeks. Then a hit a snag when my plumber buddy came over. I bought a faucet for a”farm sink” but it really wasn’t designed for that application. Although it came up in my google search for one. After spending weeks trying to find parts to make it work, I threw in the towel and ordered the correct one for my application. It came with all of the installation hardware I need. When it arrived it took me 20 mins to install it.
Since I couldn’t continue installing sheet metal because the sink/plumbing wasn’t completed, I started working on trim. I have decided to finish the south end of the building while waiting on my plumbers next visit, which should be next weekend.
I ran by Lowes yesterday and picked up 1600# of quickcrete for the next phase of exterior work.