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Above 1200 Sq/FT OldCarGuy’s New Toy Shop

Wokspaces above 1200 squarefeet.

badbricks

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Jul 31, 2006
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2
OldCarGuy,

You must be near my old neck of the woods. I grew up in Norton, parent are still there, you close?

That's one (or more) hell of a shop
 
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bmwpower

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Apr 24, 2005
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NJ
:thumbup: OldCarGuy = Machine God
Now I see why you installed the crane FIRST. There is no ideal way to move all of that stuff inside with such precision. Great job!

Very very impressive, to say the least. You have so much cool stuff and great equipment that it would keep me busy till I die

Another one for ya.....:thumbup:
 

DaveL.

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2005
Messages
337
Location
Pennsylvania,HBG area
OldCarGuy - You are my garage super hero. If I'm ever out your way can I sign up for a tour? Your 'compound' is simply over the top and then some.
 

Pops

Active member
Joined
Oct 18, 2006
Messages
32
OCG

I am just amazed. As I read through this great thread, I was hoping we would be able to see some wide shots of the overall layout. Congradulations on the great build. Thank you for sharing it with us!

J.
 
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OldCarGuy

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Nov 29, 2005
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Location
Ohio
Pops said:
OCG

I am just amazed. As I read through this great thread, I was hoping we would be able to see some wide shots of the overall layout. Congradulations on the great build. Thank you for sharing it with us!

J.

I don’t claim to be a cameraman; but without a wide angle lens I wasn’t able to get one overall view of my machine shop area. I’ll post some photos of my machine shop area from ceiling height at three corners. The area is 30' wide and just over half of the 50' length. Leaving the area by the garage door open for the lift and a spot for a second vehicle on the floor. This area I have planned for some sheet metal equipment, like a 48" wide 12 gage box brake and shear. Plus a tire mounting and balancing equipment.

Most of the machinery and benches are placed along the outside walls. The two surface grinders, bench grinder, along with the sandblasting cabinet are next to each other on one wall. Segregating the dust producing equipment, for the central dust collector. Leaving the one lathe, CNC mill, Kearney Trecker mill, optical comparator, tool box, granite plate, and storage shelving in a back to back center row. Conduit was buried below the floor to feed three phase and 120 Volt power to these machines. The bridge carne prohibits drops from the ceiling.

DSCF0724.jpg
DSCF0723.jpg
DSCF0717.jpg
DSCF0711.jpg
 
Joined
Oct 21, 2006
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charlotte nc
OldCarGuy said:
I don’t claim to be a cameraman; but without a wide angle lens I wasn’t able to get one overall view of my machine shop area. I’ll post some photos of my machine shop area from ceiling height at three corners. The area is 30' wide and just over half of the 50' length. Leaving the area by the garage door open for the lift and a spot for a second vehicle on the floor. This area I have planned for some sheet metal equipment, like a 48" wide 12 gage box brake and shear. Plus a tire mounting and balancing equipment.

Most of the machinery and benches are placed along the outside walls. The two surface grinders, bench grinder, along with the sandblasting cabinet are next to each other on one wall. Segregating the dust producing equipment, for the central dust collector. Leaving the one lathe, CNC mill, Kearney Trecker mill, optical comparator, tool box, granite plate, and storage shelving in a back to back center row. Conduit was buried below the floor to feed three phase and 120 Volt power to these machines. The bridge carne prohibits drops from the ceiling.

DSCF0724.jpg

DSCF0723.jpg

DSCF0717.jpg

DSCF0711.jpg
YOUR SHOP is neat enough to be part of NASA research. Gez man how do you do it?
 
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OldCarGuy

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Location
Ohio
ZRX61 said:
How do you get any moisture out of the underground part of the airlines?

The trick is to get the moisture out before it goes underground. There is an auto drain at the bottom of the 80-gallon compressor tank that is set for 1 second blasts every 15 minutes. The air then goes through an over-sized coalescing filter that removes any oil and particles larger than 1 micron. The compressed air is cooled and enters a 55 CFM BelAir refrigerated dryer to take any remaining moisture out. Followed by a final .01 micron filtering before it is piped underground.
 
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OldCarGuy

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thefairlaneman said:
YOUR SHOP is neat enough to be part of NASA research. Gez man how do you do it?
It’s a way of life to keep a shop looking good. First off it takes organization. Making a place for everything and seeing that it is returned soon after using it. It takes little more effort when working on something to spend a little more time to clean up after yourself. Rather than letting things pile up and getting out of hand. By the way I see a lot of other wonderful and clean garages and shops here that look better kept than mine.


I appreciate all your thoughtful comments. Indeed I do set aside time to sleep; but I lost tract of how many hours have been spent on this transformation. Though it has been a labor of love…

House moving day has now passed. Three 26’ van loads, Five young movers nonstop for 18 hours on Saturday,, and it looks like the aftermath of a storm in my house. It’s going to take me weeks to put everything in its’ place.
 

M. MYERS

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Nov 29, 2005
Messages
84
Location
BATON ROUGE, LOUSIANA
OldCarGuy said:
Thanks

I have been planning this for years. I just finished redoing some problem areas in the epoxy floor and have finished adding the base coving. I am now putting together a bridge crane to span 26 feet with a run of 40 feet with a 4,000 pound electric hoist for the attached garage. Then I’ll put in the 3-phase power for all my machinery.


The car under cover is a 1967 Falcon convertible. The yellow car is a 1947 Triumph roadster.


Would like some information on the overhead crane assy you are going to build.
Would you send me some information and photos.

Mel
 
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OldCarGuy

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Ohio

christmas

Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2006
Messages
11
Location
frederick,colorado
Today I decided to check back on this website, which was tough as the last time it was called "garagejunkies". So it had been awhile. Anyhow, once I opened it up, I couldn't stop reading all the posts. What a wonderfull man you are to take the time to post your photos,information,thoughts,and answers to the various questions. I have an attached 26x80 garage that,thanks to you, I now have more ideas to implement. I retired 2 months ago and am now sure I will never run out of things to do.
All the best to you OCG!
 

christmas

Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2006
Messages
11
Location
frederick,colorado
DynoDave said:
Welcome back christmas. There are all sorts of bad (in a good way) ideas here!

Thanks Dave. Of course, if I spend too much time here, I won't get any projects done. I truly enjoy seeing what others have done. Even if one isn't very wealthy, one can always make your own garage better to work in by just organizing what you do have.
 

tmartin

New member
Joined
Oct 24, 2006
Messages
2
hello guys, i´m new here and i have read your topic from the beginning and i must say that it is the best shop i have ever seen. The pics and information is also (Y)

greetings from Estonia
 

Sack

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Joined
Nov 22, 2006
Messages
228
Location
north central nj
Great thread.

So the only thing that has me curious is; what's the story with the import lathe? Just seems out of place with all the old american iron.

Greatly appreciate you taking the time to post up all the pictures and details.
 
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OldCarGuy

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Sack said:
So the only thing that has me curious is; what's the story with the import lathe? Just seems out of place with all the old american iron.

The largest part of the “iron” in my garages was manufactured in the good old USA. Though over the years I have wavered my buy American stance and purchased the 14” lathe that was manufactured in China. Twenty years ago I paid $500.00 to a friend that had to relocate. It was almost new and came complete with all the tooling including a 3-jaw and 4jaw chucks along with a 5-C auto-closing collet setup. I wouldn’t consider purchasing one new as it doesn’t come close to the quality and rigidity of my used well taken care of 15” Clausing Cholchester.
 

bmwpower

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OldCarGuy said:
..doesn’t come close to the quality and rigidity of my used well taken care of 15” Clausing Cholchester.

Even the name sounds cool. :)
 

Sack

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Nov 22, 2006
Messages
228
Location
north central nj
OldCarGuy said:
The largest part of the “iron” in my garages was manufactured in the good old USA. Though over the years I have wavered my buy American stance and purchased the 14” lathe that was manufactured in China. Twenty years ago I paid $500.00 to a friend that had to relocate. It was almost new and came complete with all the tooling including a 3-jaw and 4jaw chucks along with a 5-C auto-closing collet setup. I wouldn’t consider purchasing one new as it doesn’t come close to the quality and rigidity of my used well taken care of 15” Clausing Cholchester.

Hope my question didn't come across the wrong way. The question about the import lathe was sort of in jest based on all the other american iron in the shop. I have an older 15" Clausing and believe in all the older high quality stuff myself. That's why when I saw the import lathe sitting there I figured there was some story behind it. ;)

Garage looks great. I'm more focused on your machining area as it's so well laid out you can tell you really put a lot of thought into it. Looks great.
 
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OldCarGuy

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Sack said:
Hope my question didn't come across the wrong way. The question about the import lathe was sort of in jest based on all the other american iron in the shop. I have an older 15" Clausing and believe in all the older high quality stuff myself. That's why when I saw the import lathe sitting there I figured there was some story behind it. ;)

Garage looks great. I'm more focused on your machining area as it's so well laid out you can tell you really put a lot of thought into it. Looks great.

Not offended at all.

And I appreciate your comments about my shop’s layout. I put a lot of time on the drawing board to “shoehorn” all my machines, cabinets, and shelving into place. Making the most out of every square foot. The pictures make it look crammed full; but there is more than ample space for running everything. Being in a work environment and setting up manufacturing plants my entire life, I appreciate having my tools, supplies, nuts & bolts close by my equipment.
 

NicksTrix

Member
Joined
Nov 29, 2006
Messages
6
beauty of a shop. lots of nice toys you have to play with.
curious how you get your argon bottle out when it's time to change it out?
 
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OldCarGuy

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NicksTrix said:
beauty of a shop. lots of nice toys you have to play with.
curious how you get your argon bottle out when it's time to change it out?

I have to move the welder and table 6” to the left in order to change out the argon bottle. No problem moving with the overhead bridge crane though.
 
Joined
Dec 4, 2006
Messages
14
Location
St.Pete FL 4 now, TN soon
I became a member of this site souly to thank you.

You are an inspiration to not only me, but many others that read your thread.

Again, thanks for being so candid and taking time out of your life to share with complete strangers.
 

78fj40

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Nov 21, 2006
Messages
458
Location
Arlington, VA
OldCarGuy said:
House moving day has now passed. Three 26’ van loads, Five young movers nonstop for 18 hours on Saturday,, and it looks like the aftermath of a storm in my house. It’s going to take me weeks to put everything in its’ place.


Just two questions:

1. Can I buy your old house? From the looks of what you had in there to begin with, it would be more than I could ever use anyway.

2. If the house is already sold, can I buy the old gantry crane from you? That has to be the coolest thing ever, I thought about doing something similar in my garage build, but decided to just save the $$$ and spend it on a decent engine hoist.


Pics look great. I'm in the process of building a shop myself right now

Link to my garage build

Now I can show my wife your photos and tell her not to worry about spending soo little on my project....hehehe
 
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OldCarGuy

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78fj40 said:
Just two questions:

1. Can I buy your old house? From the looks of what you had in there to begin with, it would be more than I could ever use anyway.

2. If the house is already sold, can I buy the old gantry crane from you? That has to be the coolest thing ever, I thought about doing something similar in my garage build, but decided to just save the $$$ and spend it on a decent engine hoist.

1. My old house is not sold. Thought it will be up for sale in the spring.

2. As of now I don’t have any plans for the bridge crane; but I know I won’t leave it behind. Most likely I'll try selling it along with the 5 HP 2-stage air compressor.
 

happy

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Dec 7, 2006
Messages
66
Location
Outside Buffalo, NY
You must have read my mind. Now that the kids are gone this is very similar to what I am planning to do. I currently have a 24 X 48 garage as an outbuilding and I am finding that is just too small. Thanks for the inspiration.
Joe
:thumbup:
 
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OldCarGuy

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Charles (in GA) said:
Any pics? This one I GOTTA see

That car was an all original with about 50,000 miles and was sold; but I’ll see if I can dig up some photo’s. My interests have since gone toward “brass Era Cars” 1915 and earlier.
 
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OldCarGuy

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Since my old build thread was brought up, I thought I’d add an aerial view photograph of my garages. Help102.jpg
 

Charles (in GA)

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50 mi south of Atlanta
OldCarGuy said:
That car was an all original with about 50,000 miles and was sold; but I’ll see if I can dig up some photo’s. My interests have since gone toward “brass Era Cars” 1915 and earlier.

The reason I ask is that there were no Falcon convertible's built in '67. The only converts were '63, '64 and '65. In '67 the intermediate Fords that were convertibles were the Mustang, the Comet, and the Fairlane. The Cougar and Falcon didn't get the soft top that year.

Charles
 

M.Ribz

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Joined
Mar 5, 2007
Messages
14
Location
Riverside Kalifornia
OldCarGuy said:
Since my old build thread was brought up, I thought I’d add an aerial view photograph of my garages.
Help102.jpg


now thats what i call some great garage **** :bowdown: i cant wait until its time for me to buy some property, out of state of coarse lol
 

bmwpower

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OldCarGuy said:
Since my old build thread was brought up, I thought I’d add an aerial view photograph of my garages.
Help102.jpg

LOL... It's OldCarGuy's Compound.
 
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