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Little FixIt Shop

itstippy

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2014
Messages
98
Location
Madison, WI
EDIT:
This is an old thread; I'm rebuilding it due to the Photobucket fiasco. Bear with me . . .

SECOND EDIT:
Sorry guys, but this thread is now a mess. I can't upload more than six pictures per post, and I can't insert them within the text so they have proper captions, so the continuity is destroyed. I originally had "yesterday and today" pics of the shop, but I can't fit them all in anymore. I hope Photobucket goes bankrupt.

END EDIT

This thread is dedicated to guys like me who don't have a big shop and a big budget, and can only look at the awesome shops on GJ and fantasize like a teenager looking at the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue.

The structure is 22' deep and 20'wide. It's big enough to be a "squeezy" two-car garage, but the way it sits on the lot there's only room for one bay. One third of the space is taken up by a three season porch, currently utilized as a covered area to store heaps of "stuff". The garage proper consists of a bay 12' wide and 22' deep, and an alcove 8' wide and 8'deep.

I'd wanted my own garage since I was a wee boy, and when we bought this house in 1998 I was ecstatic to have a garage of my own. I still am. i grew up in a time and place where it was very common for men to have garage workshops. Someone who fixed their own stuff and maintained their own vehicle was not considered a "Do it yourselfer", but was merely a typical guy.

The shop has evolved over the years, and it's still changing. Here are some pictures from yesteryear:

1) Me in the alcove working on something, with my nieces goofing around. Look at that grin! I love my shop.

2) A good shot of the alcove:

3) RatRod Boat under construction:

4) The back of the bay:

5) Overhead storage:

6) More storage, including water skis and a tote of Halloween decorations:
 

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Modern Jess

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Jan 2, 2011
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1,362
Location
Bay Area, California
I like it a lot.

I think the smaller shops are much more interesting. Space is at a premium, and so (by necessity) those shops have much more interesting, clever solutions to make them functional. Yours has "interesting" in spades.

Nice work!
 

Modern Jess

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Joined
Jan 2, 2011
Messages
1,362
Location
Bay Area, California
How long have you been an 81 supporter?

Maybe he just likes red on white? It's kind of a classic color combo.

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taumac

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Joined
Aug 30, 2011
Messages
8,104
Location
Brooksville, Fl
Wow, what a great shop you have there. I really like how it evolved over time and looks like great place to hang out or do some work. [emoji482]
 

HSpencer

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 28, 2010
Messages
2,854
Location
South Central US
Greetings. VERY enjoyable shop tour. You have everything just right in there!! One of the nicest shops I have seen on Garage Journal. I love the heavy use of red in your place! Thanks for the posts and showing and sharing. Also love the workbench and tanker desk.

Best Regards
Herb Spencer
 

larry_g

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,877
Location
oregon
I like how the red tool box in the early pictures is still unmoved in the today's pictures.

lg
no neat sig line
 

dittle fart around

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Joined
Jan 9, 2011
Messages
2,455
Location
Vancouver, Washington, USA
That's very nice. Very nice indeed.

It reminds me of my neighbor's basement workshop from the 60's. It was a Michigan basement, the foundation wall was a couple of feet thick and the ceiling was less than 7 feet. He had all his reloading equipment on the ledge and more parts bins than you could count. Well lit, everything in it's place, the guy was an engineer at Pontiac Motors. His son and I would build model cars down there in the winter.

Thanks for bringing those memories back, they were good times.:beer:
 

James-W

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Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
12,432
Location
Southeastern Wisconsin
A buddy of mine had a one and one half car garage that he made strictly into a workshop. When he retired he started a little repair business where he fixed small appliances. He didn't make a lot of money doing it, but he enjoyed himself and that is what counts. Later on he and his wife moved to Colorado because that is where the daughter was living. When he left it was a pretty sad day, he did a lot of small jobs for a lot of people.
 
OP
I

itstippy

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Joined
Nov 30, 2014
Messages
98
Location
Madison, WI
How long have you been an 81 supporter?

Are those lunch boxes on that upper shelf?

No, not an 81 supporter. Just as well - the Outlaws consider WI to be their turf and sometimes there's trouble. The 1%, both bikers and bankers, scare the bejeebus out of me.

Yes indeed, lunch boxes. Both Alladin and Thermos sold millions of those black lunch boxes in the '60s - '70s. They're very durable with good latches and handles, made for blue collar guys to tote their lunch to the steel mill or construction site. Now I find them at yard sales for a quarter. I'm addicted to making "kits" and these lunch pails are perfect. For the shop I sprayed a coat of Zinser Bullseye 123 and then a coat of Plastikote to make them white.





Same deal with the rectangular plastic buckets in a different picture. Our Kitty Litter used to come in these great, durable buckets (now it comes in cardboard boxes). I didn't like having my storage shelf look like the Kitty Litter aisle at FoodFlood, so I painted them white. Then I found someone's cool collection of old hotrod stickers online, copy & pasted them into Word, printed them on photo stock, cut them out and used spray adhesive to put them on the buckets. One final clearcoat, and good-to-go. I label them with a strip of white duct tape so when I change contents I can just slap on another strip.



Our coffee used to come in great steel coffee cans; now it comes in plastic containers. I had a couple dozen old steel cans full of stuff, so I painted them red and put magnetic labels on them.



I'm always looking to reperpose good stuff (and get by cheap).
 
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PFSard

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Sep 12, 2013
Messages
2,423
Location
Mesa, AZ
I've visited this thread half a dozen times. Saying that your shop is impressive seems lacking, but ..... Great job.
 

Modern Jess

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Joined
Jan 2, 2011
Messages
1,362
Location
Bay Area, California
Yes indeed, lunch boxes. Both Alladin and Thermos sold millions of those black lunch boxes in the '60s - '70s. They're very durable with good latches and handles, made for blue collar guys to tote their lunch to the steel mill or construction site. Now I find them at yard sales for a quarter. I'm addicted to making "kits" and these lunch pails are perfect.

I'm a big fan of that kind of "kit" organization, too. Putting the specialty tools and all the supplies together in one place is a bit of an obsession. I like the lunch box approach -- they're durable and a good size for a lot of odd-sized stuff.
 
OP
I

itstippy

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Joined
Nov 30, 2014
Messages
98
Location
Madison, WI
A lot of you commented on how clean and organized my shop is; I have a confession to make. You see, the garage has two primary functions: 1) A place for Mrs. Tippy to park her car, and 2) My FixIt shop. Missing from that list is 3) A place to store all the stuff that a guy normally stores in the garage. So just where IS all the "stuff"?

I built a ladder rack on the back of the garage to store the extension ladders. It's nice. I get a good mark for that:



Next, I have an incredibly ugly 12' X 12' steel shed. It desperately needs to be replaced by a bigger (and taller) stick-built, but for now it is what it is:











Then there's the three season room portion of the garage. So that's where I put that cat! I've been looking for Ringo.





The temperature-sensitive consumables are stored in the basement. The shop gets well below zero degrees Fahrenheit in the winter, and up to 100 degrees in the summer.



Of course there's other garage stuff stored in the basement also. Here's my painting ladder and a cool old Kennedy roller box set I'll be refurbishing this winter:



To top it all off, I also have a 24' X 36' garage on 4 acres of land an hour north from home. It's jammed full of big stuff. More on that in a different post...

I'm retiring in one month and will have more time to work on my projects. Just think how much work a guy could get done if he didn't have to go to work!
 

demonspeed

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2005
Messages
236
Location
Gloucester, Virginia
Great garage! It has a very cool look and you have some great organizational ideas. Even a smaller garage like yours can be just as impressive as some of the mega garages on here.
 
OP
I

itstippy

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Joined
Nov 30, 2014
Messages
98
Location
Madison, WI
The Little FixIt Shop continues to evolve. My latest project has been to better insulate the place. As is my usual pattern, one project leads to another so there are some other changes as well.

In the early days the shop was a very cold and dark place. The black Cellotex walls absorbed light like a black hole, and all attempts at heating went straight to the ceiling and out the open ridge vent. There was no insulation at all, and the old windows looked cool but acted COLD.

One summer I took everything in the shop and piled it into the middle of the bay, covered it with old sheets, bought two five-gallon pails of Zinser undercoat and two pails of cheap white topcoat, and went to work with a Wagner sprayer. Everything in the shop became white except the roof sheathing. I had light!

The next summer I bought a dozen rolls of Reflectix and a pile of 1X4s, ripped me a passle of 3/4" square and 8' long strips, and insulated the ceiling with Reflectix hanging between the rafters 3/4" below the roof sheathing. That gave outside air a path from the eves soffit to the ridge vent but kept the garage interior sealed off. It worked - I had heat! Not very effective heat since all the walls were still uninsulated and the ceiling only had a thin 3/8" layer of Reflectix between it and Mother Nature, but when I needed to work on something in the Winter I could heat the shop enough to get the job done.


Four years ago we had the house resided, new windows, and dense pack cellulose put into the walls. I had the garage sided as well, with a layer of 1" polystyrene underneath. Also new double-pane windows.





At some point I'd put a plywood "floor" in above the screen porch, and had the foresight to insulate with 6" fiberglass batts underneath. So now the weak points were the 16' wall between the screen porch and the garage bay, the 8' wall between the screen porch and the garage alcove, and the inadequate ceiling insulation. It still took a LOT of Kerosene and electricity to heat the shop - too much to heat it very often as it was a costly luxury.

Well, as I mentioned earlier, I retired last month and I wanted to be able to spend a lot more time in the shop. Time to finish the job!

I bought a bunch of R13 Kraft-faced mineral wool insulation and a bunch of Reflectix.

And a bunch of lumber.


I modified how the existing Reflectix met the walls to create "pockets" for my insulation but still retain the air flow from the soffit to the ridge vent. I don't want moisture problems.



I installed the Kraft-faced insulation between the 2X6 rafters, which left a 3/4" air gap between the existing Reflectix and the mineral wool insulation. This allows the radiant power of the Reflectix to do its thing.


Then I put a new layer of Reflectix over the Kraft-faced, and installed battens to keep everything tight and ship-shape. Hundreds of staples hold first the insulation and then the Reflectix - maybe thousands - but the battens cover the seams and make it look tidy.


During this process I had to get at the ceiling, obviously. Above the screen porch was a 16'X8' plywood "floored" area perfect for jamming **** into. Above the alcove was a 6'X6' "storage area" made of tag board that I'd reinforced with plywood. Filled with stuff. Above the back of the bay was another similar "storage area", this one 8'X8'. I had so much junk stored up in the rafters it was incredible. Nothing was accessible except the stuff on the edges. As more "stuff" accumulated, the existing "stuff" got pushed back further and further out of reach. This had been going on for over 15 years. Egad.

I got all that stuff out of there, hauled a bunch to the dump, gave a pile of it to a friend who does art welding using old tools & implements, and stored a heap (too much, I'm afraid) in my big garage an hour away. I have literally got a doxen 5-gallon pails full of old tools stored out there. Way too good to get rid of, but way too many to use. I continue to accumulate, too.

Anyway, above the screen porch are now big metal Lyman bins with labels as to what's in them. There's a 2'X4' shelf above the alcove and another above the bay. That's it. The shop is much more open and pleasant.



I also took care of the uninsulated walls between the screen porch and the shop. I cleaned out the porch, did some creative work around the door and corners, and installed 1" R6 foil-faced polyiso sheets and some panelling. The existing T1-11 siding was only R0.6, so I increased the R value by over 10X. I also made a nice spot for my saws, router, etc. so they're handy and I don't have to drive an hour away to the big garage, load them up, drive them home and use them, then haul them back to storage.


The saws usually reside under a thick old comforter to protect them from condensation and prying eyes. I took the cover off just to take the picture (smile for the camera!).

The difference is remarkable. I can heat the shop for 3 days on one 2.5 gallon jug of kerosene. I only use the 220V overhead electric heater and the big kerosene heater to bring it up to temp in the morning - maybe 20 minutes. After that I run the little kerosene heater on its lowest setting, and I sometimes have to shut it down because its too warm in the shop. And I like to be warm.

I'll never get the shop insulated enough to heat 24/7, what with puny wall insulation (by home standards), a drafty bay door, and a cement slab floor. However, I can now heat it when I want to without going broke on fuel costs, choking on kerosene fumes, and listening to the roar of the overhead electric. I'm ready for the coming Wisconsin winter!
 
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-Brent-

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Joined
Dec 23, 2009
Messages
4,709
Location
Utah
That's one thing I don't miss since I moved out of the northeast. Not one bit. Oh and congrats on retirement, that's exciting.

Keep up the good work.
 

PECVD2

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 30, 2009
Messages
1,380
Location
Albuquerque, NM
Nice transformation as your shop/garage. Loving the red and white and outstanding organization of the place. Now that you are retired we are all hoping for weekly updates
 
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