PhantomEB
Well-known member
I liking how this ‘Urban shop’ is progressing!
Hey Thomas,
Looks like you did a good job with the fork lift... another few hours on the machine and you'll be driving like a pro.
Very nice work on the tile job! If I ever get the walls in my shop finished, I'd like to put tile on the floor... but I'm not sure my knees would last through a job like that...
Anyways, I'm liking your progress!
...D
Tom: i'll get the popcorn popping and get ready for your next post cause this is going to be GREAT.
nice start and glad to hear you and the fork lift and tile delivery worked out ok.
good luck!!
Thanks a lot Tom... been following along since the thread started. But now I want to tile my new garage when we move to a new house in a few years.
The '68 floor looks great so far. And keep the broken box of tile. Like phantom said, I'm sure you will find uses for it. Worst case, make a mosaic back splash with it for the bathroom. You'll just have to break it up into smaller pieces.
That box may come in handy later when close To doing the edges. Perhaps enough to do a small toe kick all the way around?
Tom: your write ups at midnight after working all day in the shop are pretty entertaining to say the least.
yep that voice in your head could be your father or just words you recall him saying as he was trying to teach you some valuable lessons.
i probably would move the boxes of tile once they are unstrapped to flat on the floor. is there a reason why they can't be stacked on top of each other? also I bet you'll find that you'll use some of the smaller broken pieces for some project so I bet your $60 won't be totally lost.
great job on the tile between the sump pump covers. are you going to paint them or maybe just wipe some of the surface rust off and put on some BLO?
keep up the great work and keep posting all the great pics and stories of your hard work.
cheers
Would rust converter be an option for the covers?
Tom: you sure go to a lot of extra work to make things RIGHT or better that is for certain. I might have put in some steel in those edges to raise the drain covers or if I had welding skills and some scrap steel I might have welded on some steel around the edges. your idea might work even better so best of luck with that.
great to see all the progress cause even though you have 6 Saturdays and a Sunday currently it's still hard to be self motivated to do some things that seem to go on for days at a time.
keep up the great work and always nice to see what you have invented or thought of to do some jobs.
<snip>
And yes BoilermakerFan Please join "team porcelain" (I guess from what I gather you GJ guys/gals are calling it here, versus epoxy/coating; for me, I just don't like the wavy reflections epoxy gives, the flakes are too much distraction to look at, metallic (the Vaults garage condo's clubhouse had it in 2,000 sqft, it was always dirty, so the developer just porcelain tiled over it as well) )
<snip>
Oh, I'm pretty much sold on the idea, especially if I will be building my next detached space at our next house from scratch. At least half the space will be tiled. It's probably the most durable option for the hobby projects I will do in the space.
I'm not a fan of epoxy floors so the only other option I would consider is tinted concrete with a densifier/sealer, but I'm really prone to spilling oil; old, nasty oil (no matter how careful I try to be, I always end up spilling some or dripping it everywhere)... so tile is the best option for me in the motorcycle fab and cnc mill area. I'll probably use high quality LVT in the finished lounge half of the space.
(haha speaking of RC stuff... I remember the very first "big boy" RC car dad bought me was a Tamiya Striker; problem was, he was only able to spare time on the weekend, my memory serves that it felt like it took forever to get that thing built)
Tom, on a trip from New York to Alaska in 1957 we passed through a gasoline price war in the Midwest. Dad paid $0.18 a gallon. Same trip he paid $0.50 a gallon on the Alcan Highway and $1.00 a gallon in Mt. McKinley (aka Denali) National park (5-gallon can flown in by Piper Cub).
In today's money that was $1.66 for the price war gas, $4.60 for the Alcan Highway gas and $9.21 for the National Park airlifted gas. Right now gas on the Alcan Highway is selling for around $4 a gallon so not really a huge change.
Tom: great job on the leveling for the metal lids and nice progress on the tiles too. you might think you are not working quick enough, but you are making steady progress and keep going.
I do like my Ryobi 18v tools, but I have a Dewalt and Milwaukee rotohammers with SDS bits along with a few big drills and plenty of cement drill bits. that said i'm good at drilling holes in cement, but haven't figured out the best way to attach things to them. Be careful not to drill to hard or fast or you'll bust the cement unless your cavities are filled with cement.
i've had some luck with the plastic holders and screws holding shelving that held a lot of books, but when I mounted our murphy bed and went to bigger bolts or tapcon screws it wasn't working as well. slow and steady with your wall drilling and make sure to wear a good mask and have your shop vac close cause that dust goes everywhere.
yep my first fill up on my 1963 Mercury Comet was .29 per gallon, but at 16 my wages were $1.65 per hour which was a lot more than the $1-2 per day to deliver papers to the 60-100 neighbors when I was younger.
keep on keeping on and you are doing great!!
Thomas, you're making amazing progress and your workmanship is top-notch! This project will be yet another to be proud of!
Do you have any sketches or drawings of how the mezz will be built... areas above and below?
Keep up the great work!
...D
I so can’t wait to see it fully tiled out.
Tom: i'm guessing when you say you have another piece to cut and install where the tile meets the garage door since it's so small maybe your epoxy or cement or some other leveling compound might make a more durable edge?
I can't believe you are already driving your truck on it.
looks great AND you are making great progress.
keep up the good work and thanks again for posting all the pictures and your stories.
Everything is coming together nicely... I love the color and size of the tiles... the copper trim and the black grating where the floor drain meets the tile. And, I think the "rusty" look of the sump covers will add an interesting effect... I think you mentioned maybe lightly cleaning them and then a clear coat? Should be awesome! You could always change them later... if you were to change your mind... but, once the floor is finished, I would be surprised if you did (change).
The areas above and below the mezz are well thought out. This will be an incredible space when finished!
You know you're making progress when you start installing baseboard trim!! Keep up the great work!
...D
I wouldn’t worry about the concrete outside, it just leads more to the wow factor when the big door is open.
Tom: thanks for clarifying the edge tiling work. that said can you maybe trim that rail a 1/2 inch since other rails don't go to the floor? might be easier than having to make all those cuts on your tile?
I see a cool tool advertised on YouTube a lot that measures angles and odd shapes for cuts around pipes and stuff so you can draw it on your piece to cut. do you have a dremel with a diamond blade and if not having a little dremel tool might come in handy for other stuff with all the attachments you can buy for them. or a Fien or Festool multytool might have a blade that cuts tile?
that entry apron does look a little beat up so maybe to keep it from getting worse is there an exterior cement epoxy you can buy to maybe level it up and keep the pieces in place since it's really not yours to cut out and replace?
carry on and i'm heading to go make guacamole now for some chips to continue reading and watching the Tomco show.
cheers and hope you are maybe getting a bit of spring weather soon as the frozen north warms up a bit
On the mezzanine plans, change orders were invented for a reason
Floor is looking good. Agree with you doing a little clean up on concrete approach.
Shorty Korte
Always remember quality in QST
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
Tom: thanks for the update and trim looks great. I know if something bugs you and you let it go and don't fix it then it can always bug you so best to do things the way you want them first (of course if not too expensive) and smile such as cutting around the garage rails.
I wish I could send you some warm weather, but it hasn't been a lot above freezing here lately even though i've been mowing my lawn since January every week sometimes 2 or 3 times.
since I know lifting and placing all the tile and being up and down might be taking a toll on your body so you might want to buy an inversion table. i've used one for 10 years and I can't tell you how much better I feel. I hang 100% from my ankles for 5 minutes (I try to do it daily even if not in pain) and I haven't taken an Advil for back pain since i started using it.
I wish I would have bought stock in Teeter Up cause they make the best inversion table I know of and i'm actually thinking of selling my used one and buying a new one cause it has a better ankle holder. here's the link i'm looking at https://teeter.com/fitspine/
keep up the great work and your progress is coming along nicely.
Tom: doing handstands doesn't stretch the back out like hanging from your ankles on an inversion table, but happy you can do one and not sure i still can. hanging from a rafter would be better but you put a lot of stress on your arms and shoulders not to mention you have to hold your weight in the air for 5 minutes.
i'm actually selling my 6 year old (I've own a version of INVERTALIGN inversion chairs since 2005) and buying the new Teeter up (they bought out or always owned INVERTALIGN) cause it can be shoved into a corner after I do my daily 5 minute hanging and the ankle holders are finally so much better that its worth the $300 upgrade (new chair $450 and selling my neighbor my old one for $150).
I won't tell you to search out and use someone's inversion chair today, but as soon as you feel it's safe for you if you can you'll love it. or find a used INVERTALIGN for $100-$250 (they sold 100,000 new ones at costco for $225 and normally $450 online until Teeter Up put their name on these tables). i'm sure there are more than a few Canadians that crossed the border and shopped at Costco and bought one. or bite the bullet and buy one and I bet you'll love using it. I hang even when i'm not in pain.
there are a couple threads in Free Parking like UPSIDE DOWN WORLD or one that is about BACK PAIN you can read my comments and sorry i'm getting an early start on my moving stuff and organizing today so you or maybe another member can post the link.
nice work in the garage and yep having a tile floor would be awesome for anything on wheels.
dress warmer and get out and i'll try to send you some heat. BAD WEATHER is really only bad clothing choices is what I hear, but damn it does get cold in your part of the world.
cheers
Fantastic job on the tile!!
Hmm some of the pics not showing up. I ain’t been on this thread for a few days, sure can’t wait for a pic from outside now it’s getting WARM here in Calgary!