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Above 1200 Sq/FT New home, next chapter ....

Wokspaces above 1200 squarefeet.
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Toolfool

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Yes ?
Not much going on lately. Health Insurance refused to cover one of my meds, so CVS had to switch to an alternative. Seems like it has drained my energy and stamina. I even have to break the four hour retention pond mowing into two days. My Doc is petitioning Blue Cross to cover the original med since the replacement has proven to be detrimental. The cost of plywood has also slowed progress. I'm beginning to prep shop floor for staining and sealing. Not the sequence I had planned, but have to do something.
 
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Toolfool

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John, how’s the off-gassing doing?
(The foam, not the breakfast burritos.)
The off-gassing has lessened to the point that I'm not physically affected much. But I also not spending much time in the shop. My chemist friend says the summer heat on the steel walls will prolong the off-gassing at low levels for up to 3 months. :dunno:
( no breakfast burritos for me ) :thumbup:
 
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Toolfool

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Spent a few days working on the cleaning, prepping, staining, washing, staining, washing, then three coats of sealer on the floor of the shop area. The time consuming part is waiting for the concrete to dry thoroughly between each step. Now a couple of days to cure and let the building air out.
Thanks for the help Shorty. :headscrat


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Toolfool

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Got the garage door wall covered while the scaffolding was in the garage. Will be breaking it down and re-assemble in the shop to install upper plywood and paint. Still waiting for a 25' length of 12/3 Romex to arrive from ebay ( decided to run one more 220v outlet in west shop wall, just in case. ) . Didn't want to purchase another expensive roll.


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Toolfool

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John, I look at your work and smile. So that's how a true professional does it. Two-by-four let into a tall wall and all the holes for the power cable in a level line set exactly in the middle of each stud. I suspect you look at it and see mistakes and flaws. You are THE MAN!
Bob, there was so much crown and twist in those 14' pine 2x4's that it was the only way to attempt correcting the flaws. Plus, it helps to stiffen a tall wall. I've never subscribed to the "it gets covered up, nobody will see it" approach. My mother taught me to be thorough and ALWAYS do my best. That set me up for the 12 year career repairing cameras ( Nikon, Hasselblad, Canon, Pentax, Leica, Mamiya, Bronica, etc.) that required attention to details and zero compromise dealing with the professional photographers in NY. Residential construction was an easy transition as I could put my own 'style' on things. I do subscribe to the "How you do anything is how you do everything" adage.

BTW , thanks for noticing.
 
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