A good pal of mine recently had his shop catch fire. He's the second buddy in a year to share the same horrific tragedy. It's an awful experience that is sometimes prevent...
To read the rest of this blog entry from The Garage Journal, click here.
That's a cryin' shame.
Good reason for a shop not attached to your house.
i feel for him. my garage burnt down 5 years ago, but it took my house with it.
This fire started with an electrical short inside a wall and was accelerated by paint products.
Also says something for having most, if not all, of your flammables in a approved/certified flammables cabinet.
I've got a flammables cabinet, it has the spray cans of paint, thinner, etc in it, but I use enough gasoline (mower, tractor, pressure washer, etc) that I keep about 20 gal in the shop. Really would like a separate building for all the yard stuff, mower, and tractor, but I don't and cannot right now.
Charles
cant imagine how bad that would be.... if that fire started because of a shorted wire, why didnt it trip a breaker instead of arching long enough to light a fire?????
The biggest mistake folks make with flammables cabinets-and one that I suspect you have made, is that they are rarely ever vented outside the building. Without a vent to the outside air, the flammables cabinet becomes a potential bomb as the concentration of flammables inside can exceed the lower explosion limit and the act of opening the cabinet can be the ignition source resulting in a larger fire/explosion than would have occurred had the containers not been in an enclosed cabinet.
.
Breakers are supposed to trip at their rated amperage, but they dont always do it.
I watched a guy at work trying to find the breaker that fed a certain wire, he grounded the hot to a metal i-beam hoping to trip the breaker, it never did, it just welded the wire to the beam.
I was working on an old electric motor, had it plugged into a 20amp circuit, my clamp-on meter showed it was drawing more than 25 to 28 amps and it never tripped. It was a GFCI recpt also.
An Arc fault breaker may have tripped, but if there were paint fumes, one arc may have been all that was needed to start the fire.
Sprikler system may have been the only chance. You just never know.
I can feel for him. I had great insurance and still will never recover what I lost from a couple kids with matches and 30 gal. of gas. That second picture is of my shop before the fire.
Yes, Good Tips...
An Good Flammables cabinets that is Vented Outside.
Lots of 15 amp circuits instead of a few 20 amp circuits. (dont overload)
The Proper sized wire to go with the correct Breaker size.
I use Conduit runs instead of Romex. (code out here)
An easily to grab Fire ext. (out in the open)
Good outlets...not those cheap Menards .99 ones.
My Garage is Detached (it can save the house if something happens)
Water in or close to your garage (most people dont have quick access)
Running equipment on the proper circuit (not Oversized breaker or undersized wire)
Outlets, switches and electrical boxes covered and sealed.
Checking to make sure that there are no natural Gas leaks or fumes.
Close any Parts washers properly and dont store gas soaked rags indoors.
Watch your welding area, hot slag can roll under objects and stay hot for a long time.
I always turn off my compressor when I am done for the night. The Motor start-up can set off an explosion if there is Fumes built up.
I would hate to see anyone loose a Shop, Garage, Home or Worse!
Speaking of keeping stuff unplugged, when I added outlets strictly for my compressor & shop tools, I installed a fused shut-off switch as you can see here:
![]()
I can leave all my tools plugged in. When I close up shop, I just turn the switch off, and all tools are de-energized. Great peace of mind.
Damn now I'm paranoid about my chem cabinet. I got brake cleaner, acetone, denatured alcohol, paint thinner and naphtha in there... anyone know a good source for those NFPA cabinets?
Breakers aren't meant to work in this way. That guy should not be working with electricity at all!
Fire is probably the worst disaster that you can encounter IMO, there is no recovery, no reclaim, nothing. With water at least you can restore precious items or recover some stuff... in fire even the steel is useless.

cant imagine how bad that would be.... if that fire started because of a shorted wire, why didnt it trip a breaker instead of arching long enough to light a fire?????
Either way its horrible, i just had my insurance add my garage on 2 days ago... (even though its not finished yet)
