Sure does look pretty all painted and lit up.
Very nice job bud!
Awesome work!
Great job, and I particularly like the lighting!
Cheers fellasNoice!
Every time I got tired I said to myself "exercise exercise exercise"Man that tired me out just looking at those pictures! Fine job.
Cheers mate, no but ive previous experience with floor work, first time with rebar and walls though. So much good info on youtubeWow, that's some nice work! Are you a concrete guy by trade?
Lol, I remember as a know it all kid walking past a guy in a petrol station with his head in the footwell of a TVR (Griffith iirc)Glad you don't have any those those "Traveling Very Rapidly" vehicles. (TVR's)
Lol, guilty as charged, for £1k be worth getting some over.Of all the cool British rides, you got a C10? We use those as ballast for Ships!!
In perfect condition they can fetch almost 1000 Pounds Sterling here!

Yep, thats pretty much the plan on the ventilation side, tbh im more concerned about about falling in it and fires, in that order. Theres risks with everything tho eh, as a counter, a garage my buddy works at had a 2 poster fail some months ago. The tech was under it seconds before the emergency nut let go (main nut was long gone, lack of maintenance and inspection) and the whole right arm and carrier free fell to the floor, tipping the car on its side. The shop owner learnt a lesson that day.Great Job !!!!
As many have mentioned you need ventilation. Tie the ventilation to the overhead life so that whenever you are in the garage it is clearing stuff out. There was a guy several miles from here that died from CO
Cheers mate, not sure how long itll stay pretty but nothing a coat of paint wont fixSure does look pretty all painted and lit up.
Cheers for that Larry, youre welcome. Will update as I get other things worked out, eager to get a start on the jack mods that have been rattling around my brain@Demon69
Thanks for posting this! Hell of a fine job and excellent execution!
Color me green with envy!

lol, its not the easy route for sureHolf **** do I appreciate my lift even more now!!! That's one hell of a pit though!!!
Thankyou sirOne more vote for job well done, and done right!
Cheers man, lifts are great, an easy choice if you've the space and overhead heightOutstanding! That's a lot of work right there. Very nicely done.
When I was in the military in the early 90's all of my buddies from the hills of "hollers" of West Virginia had pits in their barns and garages. As a 19 year old I had never heard of a pit before and from that point on I always wanted one. When I built my shop 5 years ago for my 1980 K10 stepside I was going to go with a pit. But a friend talked me out of it and convinced me to go with a lift.
Thanks manLooks awesome.
Cheers mateCracking job you've done mate, how long did it take?
I'm lucky enough to have a 4 post lift and maybe the type of bridge jacks I have could be easily modified to span the width of your pit?

Thanks manGreat job!!!


All three of these things are Number ONE !!! Pits have fallen out of use in North America with the exception of the drive through Oil Change places. They are dangerous as hell. The fellow I mentioned was a Journeyman Mechanic. He knew better, but he was working in a closed building........ He are a hundred scenarios around 'I'LL just be a minute".Yep, thats pretty much the plan on the ventilation side, tbh im more concerned about about falling in it and fires, in that order. Theres risks with everything tho eh, as a counter, a garage my buddy works at had a 2 poster fail some months ago. The tech was under it seconds before the emergency nut let go (main nut was long gone, lack of maintenance and inspection) and the whole right arm and carrier free fell to the floor, tipping the car on its side. The shop owner learnt a lesson that day.
About 2 or 3 seconds after doing an exhaust estimate, one of the 4 post lifts dropped a Chevy Caprice Taxi Cab. One of the 4 locks failed when a cable broke, I heard clunk, then the cab hit the floor. I barely flinched, but after a few seconds of adrenaline my hands were shaking..lol, thats pretty much the plan on the ventilation side, tbh im more concerned about about falling in it and fires, in that order. Theres risks with everything tho eh, as a counter, a garage my buddy works at had a 2 poster fail some months ago. The tech was under it seconds before the emergency nut let go (main nut was long gone, lack of maintenance and inspection) and the whole right arm and carrier free fell to the floor, tipping the car on its side. The shop owner learnt a lesson that day.
I think you might have mentioned itDid I mention ventilation? lol
And remember, it doesn’t take a lot of gasoline to make a real big flame
Spilling a little gas on a floor while changing a fuel filter isn’t that big of a deal, but in a pit, the fumes don’t dissipate unless there‘s a fan actively moving air.
I know you probably already know all this, but I thought it might be worth mentioning.![]()

Cheers budAbsolutely amazing. Very jealous!!
Well, as I said before, there's risk in everything. Imo the most we can do is aim to understand/accept and mitigate them as best we can, If we can't accept the risk, it might be better to find something else to do.All three of these things are Number ONE !!! Pits have fallen out of use in North America with the exception of the drive through Oil Change places. They are dangerous as hell. The fellow I mentioned was a Journeyman Mechanic. He knew better, but he was working in a closed building........ He are a hundred scenarios around 'I'LL just be a minute".
I know I would say "I know what I'm doing". I have 55 years for FUs on stuff I knew that I knew what I was doing.
Cheers manDang. Just dang. Well done!
And a full time box fan. They use almost zero juice. Full time. Lots of burny gassy stuff settles.
How often does the sump turn on?
That would be the best fit id imagine, decent kitchen extractor perhapsYes that jack is very similar to what I have. Fits in there like a glove.
I guess you'll need an explosion proof fan (bifurcated) to drag petrol vapours out?

I think it should be fine, ive got more work to do if notSeeing now what you're using on the angles, I would have liked to have seen twice the amount of anchors welded on the back.
Sobering stuff when **** goes down eh.About 2 or 3 seconds after doing an exhaust estimate, one of the 4 post lifts dropped a Chevy Caprice Taxi Cab. One of the 4 locks failed when a cable broke, I heard clunk, then the cab hit the floor. I barely flinched, but after a few seconds of adrenaline my hands were shaking..lol
One of my techs (we called ourselves mechanics back then lol) saw it happen. He said the one corner dropped when the cable snapped then the whole thing kind of did a little bounce, and then the whole thing fell.
No way I would‘ve had the time to get out once the cable broke.
Cheers manThat is an impressive home mechanics pit! I am sure the OP has reasons why it was easier and cheaper than a lift such as a low ceiling with rooms above.
Haha, my neighbour said the same, hes a mechanic with pit time back in the day and isnt a fan, narrow dirty and damp as he remembers them (he has a mid rise scissor lift that works well for what he does now). He gave a thumbs up to mine tho, was his idea to have moveable stairsGreat work. Looks nice but my claustrophobia would be at 110% if I was down there with a car on top.
Cheers mate, enjoyNice work. Of course I show up after all the hard work is done. I'll just have a seat and grab a warm beer.
I was going to comment about the shortcommings of that suit, but I see that there's a "fart extraction unit", so I have nothing else to add.



















May you enjoy your pit for many years while in Good Health.So I phoned a friend. He suggested I do some more diggin.... So I did some more diggin, and I will admit that the fun was starting to wear a bit thin at this point
A bin that always got in the way will never get in the way again.
Then some weaved membrane and gravel for drainage.
A bit of ventilation in the form of 4" soil pipe, it will connect to a fan that vents outside and a liner for the sump outlet pipe to run in.
Time for the DPM, which was a fkn pita to wrestle in, but in it went.
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