GarageHonky
Well-known member
I really dig your garage...color and all! Functional, yet clean.
This is alot like how I want to finish my garage!
Dave
This is alot like how I want to finish my garage!
Dave
BoostAddiction said:Apologies in advance for the blurry shot, but here is a shot of a drawer using tooling foam to locate some pliers. When a tool is removed, a section of RED foam below shows the outline of the missing tool-- so you know to look for it before you button up the job. This technique is used extensively in the military where they won't let a plane out of the hangar if there is a tool missing to eliminate the possibility of FOD.
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bhays said:Where does one acquire 'tooling foam'?
BoostAddiction said:Apologies in advance for the blurry shot, but here is a shot of a drawer using tooling foam to locate some pliers. When a tool is removed, a section of RED foam below shows the outline of the missing tool-- so you know to look for it before you button up the job. This technique is used extensively in the military where they won't let a plane out of the hangar if there is a tool missing to eliminate the possibility of FOD.
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-Will
OldOneEye said:Nice setup, love the foam in the tool boxes, love just about everything you've done (like the paper towel dispenser) About how much time did you spend per drawer? I'm thinking of doing mine the same way.
Juan
stimpee said:Quick question on your garage, what is the size of the primary "working" bay that you show?
I am getting ready to refurbish and set up my lift in my "regular" 2 car garage, and then enclose a screened in porch off the back of the garage as a workshop (about 15x21), but I may eventually knock that off, and build a single bay attached work bay. Trying to figure out how big it would need to be as a single bay.
Great job!
Steve
chaingang said:I may have missed it in some of the posts but where did your sheetmetal brake/shear/bead roller come from? I have been looking for some combination like that to minimize space used. It looks well built and about the perfect size for a small shop.
BoostAddiction said:Because I live in an area with cold winters and hot summers, I wanted a way to control temps.
The garage is heavily insulated (even the Wayne-Dalton doors have foam insulation and anti-leak contruction); I calculated that a 2-ton unit would cool the garage adequately. I chose the most efficient mini split unit I could find. From Daikin, it installed very nicely, and is extremely quiet.
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Any recent changes? 

I too would like to know how the heater/ac unit works. How many do you have installed? How big is your space these are heating and cooling?
So the Daikin 2-ton minisplit is remotely ran? Where do you keep the remote? Is it inferred? Wall mounted? Automaticly set to cool or heat like a thermostat? Can you take a photo of the outside portion of the unit? I am guessing the outside looks like the old a/c units from the 1970's, but the inside looks much more sleek.
I tried to google the unit, ut only got sites which sold them, not enough info.
Sick garage, seems like everyone from nova has a nice garage
BoostAddiction said:using an aqueous solution that is EPA-rated to just be flushed down the drain. No solvents, no headaches, and no permanent partswasher to use up space.
Hi Will,
I've seen your garage on other forums, and I've checked to see if I've missed it, but can you elaborate on the formula you use, or is it top secret?
Thanks for the inspiration, by the way. I'm planning a similar setup, but my color scheme is more like a bruise. (Black and blue all the way. I'll include shots of my Cobra when I'm done so everyone can see why.)