Farmall450
Well-known member
I think the bees wings would ruin your fresh wash job pretty quick.


"Hay shed paint job" I remember.Try as I may I cannot seem to find it BUT I sprayed DuPont paint on the camper bus in our hayshed. We did put bales in one doorway so the wind wouldn't kick up dust and make it all crappy. So ... dust in a wash bay doesn't seem that big a deal![]()

That was discussed only after the dirtwork was done so not gonna be able to happen easily now. I'll post a proposed internal layout/use for each area in the shop and maybe it'll make sense or maybe not. I'm wide open to suggestions as all we have now is a flat dirt padOptional quote with a 26' door on the other end? Might be nice having a pull through for two wagons, or disk with rolling basket ect. Never know, Mama Bear might want to pull her bus toyhauler with attached camper through![]()
Jeez you're old if you remember that. That was pre both of us finding our new online forum homes here on The Garage Journal. It's such a wonderful place"Hay shed paint job" I remember.![]()
Square yards would be amazing. 104'x180' would be an amazing thing !!2049 shop should have dimensions that add up to 2049. and not in sq ft.
whatever you do don't watch kyle from RR buildings. it gets expensive quick:
I'd personally put a loft all the way across that right wall and make parts storage on top with a more enclosed dirty welding/grinding area below. but its not my money.
Well Neat. I'm quoting myselfI'm going to have to dig some pictures of that paint job out of the archives now I suppose. I spent more on paint than I did in the bus and then painted it in the dustiest building I could find.














Square yards would be amazing. 104'x180' would be an amazing thing !!
That guy Kyle has had in influence in this building already. House wrap on 100% plus 2' into the attic, wet set brackets poured into drilled holes, the way he puts the plastic down to the floor under the tin and a bunch of other things that I like will be in the shop for sure. He's entertaining and has easy to watch videos.
Great minds think alike about the loft. It might all get built at the same time money depending. I'm not 100% sure what I want to do for ceiling height and walls and stuff in that half so it'll probably wait for a bit until I get that figured out.
Ok well I've read this a few times over the last few days and I have no idea where you're going with that. If the purpose was to make me think for a while you've accomplished that !!Can't blame a deere for being thirsty when all the water is frozen.
Yeah I don't think the other door is going to happen. The loss of wallspace plus the hope to add another 32' on one day as cold storage makes it less desirable.Staying busy in the cold as expected, I see. My (now heated) garage has been full of paint fumes as well this last week or two, but no hay to blow around. No snow here yet either, but it'll come soon enough. Im headed to OH next week, where they are still harvesting since the rain pushed it all back.
I second the motion for installing a second door for a pull-through in the 2049 shop, but that loss of wallspace will cost you too. Definitely need to sort your priorities on that one. Dad's shop has a similar setup, but in 45'x45' size, and it's not practical for modern farm equipment. Door is too small, building too short, and the office/overhead room is too close to the door so wide or awkward machines cant pull in perfectly straight. The space behind the room becomes a catch-all since a 2 post lift and the office "surround" it kinda. A better machining/fabrication layout would fix that I think. I'm only mentioning this to give you things to think about in all that idle time I know you don't have.
The rim joists in the wall idea is an awesome idea. We'll definitely do that. Walls will be 18' as going to 20 will be quite spendy and blah blah blah want to but probably won't. The combine currently fits in a 14' door so having a 16' door will already open up a ton of options.on the loft: maybe set the rim joists into the wall so you can readily add when its time.
thats easy. 20' wall height. so you can unfold a combine hopper in the shop.
We have a 42' ring that was used for that same thing in a machine shed a few times. I do not see using the new shop for grain storage but it's not a bad idea.Another thought, local farmer has three bin rings that he sets up inside his machine shed, fills it during harvest and hauls it to river terminal after harvest. Dismantles and stacks rings, puts machinery in. They say he buys three rings a year and every 4 years puts up a new bin.
The rim joists in the wall idea is an awesome idea. We'll definitely do that. Walls will be 18' as going to 20 will be quite spendy and blah blah blah want to but probably won't. The combine currently fits in a 14' door so having a 16' door will already open up a ton of options.
We have a 42' ring that was used for that same thing in a machine shed a few times. I do not see using the new shop for grain storage but it's not a bad idea.
If you've ever laid on a heated floor before you know that is the only way to go. It is also the most expensive way to heat but it is what it is. At first it'll be propane but I haven't totally ruled out an outdoor boiler in the future to heat the shop, pump house, house and skid loader shed.Thank you for sharing your time with use. When you build the new shop will you put radiant heat in the floor? If so what fuel would you use to heat it wood or propane?
Good deep porch can/will be added in the future for sure. There will be some sort of concrete apron in front of the shop. It'll be needed to control the water flow around the front to a degree.2' concrete stem walls is way of keeping building cost down.
I really like the chair rail setup RR does on the outside. really makes it nice.
Don't forget a good deep porch for hanging out on outside the shop like we all end up doing when its nice out.
Concrete parking pad for the pickup is also nice nice but can be added later
Also a terrible channel to watch if you're in the planning phase:
I saw one had 2 of the big forklift size totes for their oil and hydro fluid. they had a place they could fork them up into the loft and let gravity force it down the hoses into a nozzle in the oil air. No more pumping.

Thank you !! Hopefully this year brings us all closer to our families and deeper in debt with our shops lol.Merry Christmas Mike, And a Happy New Year!!
It'd probably be an outdoor corn stove actually. We have lots of corn around here and most times the math works so it's cheaper to burn it than propane. One bushel of corn contains 392,000btu's of energy which is roughly the equivalent of 4.26gal of propane. Today a bushel of corn is worth $3.50 so a gallon of propane needs to be $0.82/gal for it to cheaper to heat with propane. The cost of the heating equipment itself needs to be taken into account as well which is a little harder to do but not that much harder. If that corn $10,000 stove lasts 10yrs (maybe I have no idea) it'll be right at $1,000/yr cost for equipment plus whatever pex I put from the boiler to the shop/house. I'm intrueged by it but not buying anything yet. The shop will be fired up with a regular propane boiler at first (or a Polaris boiler perhaps, I've heard they're pretty decent)wood boiler ya say? thats my ideal goal at well.
This is a genius way of storing wood for such a thing IMO:
I have lots of free time so I cannot help but to update the thread every chance I getMerry Christmas and thank you for keeping this thread updated. This city boy is learning some things about the farming life. I really enjoy it and your sense of humor.
Jay

up here and we'll have a few together sometime 





It'd probably be an outdoor corn stove actually. We have lots of corn around here and most times the math works so it's cheaper to burn it than propane. One bushel of corn contains 392,000btu's of energy which is roughly the equivalent of 4.26gal of propane. Today a bushel of corn is worth $3.50 so a gallon of propane needs to be $0.82/gal for it to cheaper to heat with propane. The cost of the heating equipment itself needs to be taken into account as well which is a little harder to do but not that much harder. If that corn $10,000 stove lasts 10yrs (maybe I have no idea) it'll be right at $1,000/yr cost for equipment plus whatever pex I put from the boiler to the shop/house. I'm intrueged by it but not buying anything yet. The shop will be fired up with a regular propane boiler at first (or a Polaris boiler perhaps, I've heard they're pretty decent)

We shoot for less than 1,000lbs hanging weight at the packer so around 1,550 live weight when they leave the farm. 2,000lb animals are MONSTERS !!!Not familiar with your herd, what do you feed out to? We had some Charolais Simmental crosses that topped 2000 lbs. You didn't want to get caught between the fence/wall with those big boysI spent half of one summer rebuilding all the fence at the feed lot. They put more pressure on the fence than the Hereford Angus. Steaks filled out the plate nicely
Merry Christmas to you and yours!

Thanks Vince for the wishes and complimentsMerry Christmas to you and your beautiful family.
Vince
Oh yeah I'd put a hopper bin next to it with a auto fill sensor and fill it up in the fall and shut it down in the spring. Probably could even feed what's left to the steers just to get the hopper empty.if only you had a place with some corn.![]()
Merry Christmas to you as wellMerry Christmas everyone

42lb snow load I believe. Plus 5 for ceiling stuff ... tin, air lines, lights etc. Should be plenty good.Living where you live, the snow load column is the most important column, that's a lot of roof to clean off!
He spends 3hrs a day on itMerry Christmas!
I can't imagine listening to that 2 cylinder hammer away once a week or even every morning lol. Nice once in a while though. It was amazing how long JD stuck with 2 holes.

Oh buddy I can't wait either !!!I can't wait to see you in the new building.
Have a very Merry Christmas.
It puffs and smokes and thumbs away like a champ. It's a really sweeeeeeeeet sound !!!I'd love to hear that 830 on the mixer lug down!
It's not the size of the tool that matters, it's how you use it.![]()

A WIDE snowpusher seems like something that would be useful as well but I went with a big bucket so I can use it in the chicken barn to clean out poooooop as well as to load that poooooop into a manure spreader in a much more rapid manner than the little bucket I use now.thats what they all say until you start being efficient. The uncle got presumably angry at all the time he was spending pushing drifts with a bucket.






A WIDE snowpusher seems like something that would be useful as well but I went with a big bucket so I can use it in the chicken barn to clean out poooooop as well as to load that poooooop into a manure spreader in a much more rapid manner than the little bucket I use now.
The Bobcat skid loader snowblower is in Dad's shop warming up. I think it'll be used out here Monday sometime. We shall see how much snow we get by then.