markviii
Well-known member
Blues, and the rock and roll that came from it, are the only thing to play in our garages! It just sets the tone.
Thanks.
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I can only find the one picture of the Jeep. It's a 1983 with the straight six (so I doubt it would have the oomph for towing). It was from when AMC owned the company and (if I remember right) the cars were made in Wisconsin.
It's purely a work car for me -- a parts hauler. I wish I had a picture of it with the 1200 pounds of ceramic tiles and adhesive for the garage. It was riding LOW.
But I've had it since 1993, and it's never broken. I've thought about restoring it -- paint and a V8. But I don't know what I'd do while it was out of commission.
I drive the 911 around town and also to the track. I used to run stickier tires, and made 10-hour drives to some tracks with wheels and tires on the roof.
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Here in MI, most Jeeps are rust-buckets 
It might be. They called a while ago to ask if they could use a picture in some article about a low-cost racing class. Thanks for the heads up. I'll check it out next time I'm at the bookstore.Jack, is that your Porsche in the new issue of Classic Motorsports mag?
Harbor Freight.Jack where did you get those clamps that are on your drill press
Here are the new Matco ones, along with the new quick-release Vise Grips:
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I wish I knew more about them. They were a Craigslist impulse buy. I liked the way they folded up small, then opened up for a lot of storage area. By the time I found a use for them, it made more sense to just keep them open (the one with the hammers swings closed, if needed, but I've got the one with the hand tools mounted so it's always open). The box around them keeps the tools cleaner, even when it's not closed, and it also makes the tool storage look more 'on purpose.'I must have missed reading it, but what's the story on the doored cabinets with the pegbaord inside? Those look great, even opened (closed too I bet). That set-up would be a great way for me to hide tools yet keep them handy.
Thanks. Maybe someone who reads this thread will be able to add some information about the metal cabinets. I'd be interested in learning about them.Really great looking garage Jack, I must thank you ahead of time for all the inspiration and motivation reading through your thread has done for me.![]()
I was wondering, could you include a photograph of how you organized the interior of the storage unit you built along side of the house?
As per the previous comment, I too really dig the doored cabinets with the peg board inside. Correct me if I am wrong, but I have noticed this style of storage in a lot of the older Los Angeles home garages. My Grandfather in law built his own house and two car garage in historic Stonehurst (sun valley, ca) back in the late 40's and he too added this same style cabinet/storage unit. It's so practical and looks so cool.
Thanks again for sharing your garage vision and how it slowly became what it is today.
I write screenplays for movies. Some of that is original scripts and some of it is rewrite work on other people's scripts. It may sound glamorous (and I can't complain), but I've been doing it for a living for 14 years now and you still won't find my name on any of the movies I've worked on.Hey Jack. this may be inappropriate in this forum but I was just wondering what kind of writing you do? I like the attention to detail, and passion you show in your garage and I was just curious. if this is not appropriate here I apologize in advance.
...The green is a Sears WeatherBeater color called Tarragon. It's discontinued, officially -- but as long as you know the name, they can mix it. I used exterior semigloss, and I'll warn you that the WeatherBeater paint is not very good. I always have to do two coats with it to get consistent color. (But it's what I started with, and I've gone too far downstream with it now to change.)
)I wouldn't go to Lowes or HD. Their paint is junk too. You get what you pay for is especially true in paint. SW, Kelly-Moore, Benjamin-Moore(expensive as hell but excellent paint), easily outdoes the big box store paint.Jack,
Paint a sample of the Tarragon on a small piece of wood, take it to Home Depot or OSH and they can color match it exactly. Sherwin Williams, Dunn Edwards, etc probably can too. No need to keep using paint you don't like....unless you "went long" and bought 5 gallon buckets and still have a lot left! (in which case you should have responded to bdubbin with,"It's discontinued, but youre in luck - I have some left which I'll ship it to you for a nominal charge!")
True. But 1) I've already painted pretty much everything, and still have a couple of gallons in the cabinet, and 2) the Orchard Supply Hardware is my closest hardware store -- which makes it convenient to get the Sears brand stuff.Paint a sample of the Tarragon on a small piece of wood, take it to Home Depot or OSH and they can color match it exactly...
Thanks, Gary. I like it too. I also like the fact that it doesn't block light when the door is open.I still think that bench is an amazing design...
Thanks. I put the deeper drawers up (no work involved, they'll fit anywhere in the stack) because I keep one drawer full of different kind of gloves, and another one is my junk drawer. The stack of Craftsman boxes to the right is still where I keep my hand tools, so I didn't need to put any bigger, heavier tools down low.I don't know if this was brought up yet but i noticed you moved your deep drawers up to the top, why is that? how hard was it? I still kick myself in the **** for not painting my drawers black.
It's nice that people like it, but the thing I like the most about this garage is...Good to have a refresher on the pics! I agree with santagary that your garage design is amazing. Lots of detail work for very personal reasons sine through in everything included in this unique space. But really, santagary, having it blessed by Jay Leno would be a comedown imho. The garage sells itself without a "celebrity" endorsement. GJ is much better and, in fact, this thread may deserve a Sticky.
I've actually got five grinders now, since one broke. Two have grinding wheels. One has a flap wheel. One has a wire brush. One has a cutting wheel. I guess that's one more than I actually need -- although I have had grinders running at different benches before. And I've also run a full cutting wheel on one, while using up the little nib of an old wheel on jobs where it would still work. I'm frugal.Love the garage! Love the early 9! One question; 6 handheld grinders? I am verging on buying a second one so I'll have a cutting wheel and a grinding disc at all times without switching, but, 6?![]()
...so newcomers don't necessarily have to slog through all 12 pages to see it. ...
Yes. I didn't have a space on the wall where I could see the clock from the different benches in the garage. So I hit on the idea of using the kind of two-faced clocks they used to put in train stations and school hallways. But I learned the nice ones sell for 'collectible' prices.Also for Jack, is that clock two sided?
By accident, I finally found out who makes these cabinets. It's a company called Edsal, and they sell them on Amazon for $113 each (which isn't crazy, but makes me glad I got them second-hand). The dimensions are 30"Wx12"Dx24"H (closed) and 60"Wx6"Dx24"H (opened). In the picture you can see the shelf I removed from both of mine. (Warning: the steel is thin enough so that my effort to use a 4.5" grinder to take out the spot welds led to the steel getting bent and distorted.) If I had to do it again, I'd leave the shelf in place.Jack, I must have missed reading it, but what's the story on the doored cabinets with the pegbaord inside? Those look great, even opened (closed too I bet). That set-up would be a great way for me to hide tools yet keep them handy.