First, I don't want this to turn into a "what type of air line is best" discussion. I want to know how/where you would run your air lines. My shop is 24X48X8 with a wall dividing it into 24X32 and 24X16. It is a regular stud frame building with minimal attic space due to the roof trusses. The walls/ceiling are currently open, but they will be sheetrocked soon.
I plan on using Garage Pak or something similar for my air lines. At a minimum, I will have a supply line running along each of the 48' walls, and may go ahead and make an entire loop of the exterior walls. Would you go for...
1. The "clean look"...run all lines in the attic/walls and only come thru the walls or ceiling right where an outlet will be?
2. The "industrial look"...run all lines exposed, i.e., an exposed supply loop high on the walls, then an exposed drop to each outlet?
3. The "compromise look"...run the supply loop in the attic above the sheetrock, then run each vertical drop outside the wall cavity to the outlet point. In other words, the supply loop is hidden but the vertical drops at each air outlet are exposed from the ceiling down.
Once the sheetrock is up, the attic will be virtually unaccessible.
Thanks,
Ira
I plan on using Garage Pak or something similar for my air lines. At a minimum, I will have a supply line running along each of the 48' walls, and may go ahead and make an entire loop of the exterior walls. Would you go for...
1. The "clean look"...run all lines in the attic/walls and only come thru the walls or ceiling right where an outlet will be?
2. The "industrial look"...run all lines exposed, i.e., an exposed supply loop high on the walls, then an exposed drop to each outlet?
3. The "compromise look"...run the supply loop in the attic above the sheetrock, then run each vertical drop outside the wall cavity to the outlet point. In other words, the supply loop is hidden but the vertical drops at each air outlet are exposed from the ceiling down.
Once the sheetrock is up, the attic will be virtually unaccessible.
Thanks,
Ira

C'mon...you know deep down that you really do.

