I have been collecting junk for a new shop on our farm for years now. Meant to start building 2 years ago, but the unbelievable price of materials meant just go back to collecting things to make this a far more DIY project.
It all started with finding a matching pair of 5 ton overhead cranes (47' bridges). I literally designed the shop around them (for obvious reasons). I have small versions of everything I need/use in home workshop (26 x 39 heated and about a bit more under roof but cold). but key tools will be cranes, shear, brake, saw, mill, lathe, ironworker and newer welding equip. Got saw 2 years ago (Marvel #8) and lathe almost 1 year back (Colchester 15 x 50 variable speed). Have passed on several press brakes too large (need pit), too small (need to make trailer parts), too expensive (newish digital). Did not want to chase and move stuff at this time of year, but a big steel fab shop in a small town went **** up last year and they were bought out of bankruptcy by a company with other shops. They took all of the newer or better stuff and auctioned off the rest. Mostly too well used up for me, but they catalogued a 200 ton press brake (too small for me) that out of curiosity I had a look at. Not list correctly as it was a 400 ton Accupress from the '80s with a 12' bed and 10'+ between posts. EXACTLY what I want/need! Found the operator and got full story so jumped into a sale where stuff was going stupid high. Only 3 serious bidders on the brake and once the price got up a bit, only two of us left. The other guy must have been just like me: knew exactly what it was and what it was worth. Hate these blind online auctions as it is hard to figure out a strategy to blow the other bidder(s) out of the water, but in the end, he gave up while we were still far, far below market value (25 tons of steel in a remotish town will slow down the city slickers a bit). I had the load and uload quoted and arranged and trailer rental booked before bidding, so should be no more surprises. It will have to sit outside as my indoor storage is closing (beset bud trading the land it sits on). Will be strong incentive to get the darn shop floor poured (will probably place this before doing walls and roof as it is far too heavy for my overhead cranes).
Will post some pics when I get up there (rush job in opposite direction tomorrow).
It all started with finding a matching pair of 5 ton overhead cranes (47' bridges). I literally designed the shop around them (for obvious reasons). I have small versions of everything I need/use in home workshop (26 x 39 heated and about a bit more under roof but cold). but key tools will be cranes, shear, brake, saw, mill, lathe, ironworker and newer welding equip. Got saw 2 years ago (Marvel #8) and lathe almost 1 year back (Colchester 15 x 50 variable speed). Have passed on several press brakes too large (need pit), too small (need to make trailer parts), too expensive (newish digital). Did not want to chase and move stuff at this time of year, but a big steel fab shop in a small town went **** up last year and they were bought out of bankruptcy by a company with other shops. They took all of the newer or better stuff and auctioned off the rest. Mostly too well used up for me, but they catalogued a 200 ton press brake (too small for me) that out of curiosity I had a look at. Not list correctly as it was a 400 ton Accupress from the '80s with a 12' bed and 10'+ between posts. EXACTLY what I want/need! Found the operator and got full story so jumped into a sale where stuff was going stupid high. Only 3 serious bidders on the brake and once the price got up a bit, only two of us left. The other guy must have been just like me: knew exactly what it was and what it was worth. Hate these blind online auctions as it is hard to figure out a strategy to blow the other bidder(s) out of the water, but in the end, he gave up while we were still far, far below market value (25 tons of steel in a remotish town will slow down the city slickers a bit). I had the load and uload quoted and arranged and trailer rental booked before bidding, so should be no more surprises. It will have to sit outside as my indoor storage is closing (beset bud trading the land it sits on). Will be strong incentive to get the darn shop floor poured (will probably place this before doing walls and roof as it is far too heavy for my overhead cranes).
Will post some pics when I get up there (rush job in opposite direction tomorrow).