aggierailroad
Well-known member
What is this white cold stuff that you speak of?











Nice work on that little deck. I'll be tackling one next summer with the pops-in-law. I definitely will be using some visual knowledge gleaned from yours. It was more daunting in my mind but after looking at that I feel much better, congrats!
You ran dirt up to the wood? Is there a reason you want to rot a deck you just built?
That's a fantastic job on the deck, done well.
I love your delivery method for the lumber, very innovative to say the least, we would get a ticket and three demerit points if we tried that here.
Mind you I have seen some try it.![]()
Regards..
Tickets and points? wow. I never checked around here, I hang stuff out the back of the car all the time though...

Here in GA I think you can get away with it if you hang and orange flag off the part sticking out.
Usually rule of thumb is anything that sticks out 3ft pass back of vehicle needs a red flag at end. I never heard of someone getting points cause of it but give you a warning.
I used my MG Midget to bring home some 10 ft 2x4's. It was only a mile or so. That was before rental trucks were available at the big box hardware stores. Heck it was before big box hardware stores.
Another fine use of the smiley face icons.
Top job and good photos.
Top notch thread from a youngster who listens and watched. You must have some great craftsmen to have learned from. Your enthusiasm and energy amaze me. Glad to see you got water under control. I have a couple of suggestions that may be good to incorporate.
When you do doors for your cupboards, even if you do pegboard, double side them using a dry erase board. Mount the DE board with steel at each corner and put magnets on the door to hold it.They'll be removable to carry or write on, easily visible to reference and you could even carry the list you wrote on it to the Big Box or lumberyard.
Another idea is to use a piece of the 4 in vent pipe. Run it from the top eve of the roof and bring it down to near the floor. Put a small "Muffin" fan (like an old computer cooling fan) inline. Then when you start to heat the space, what heat rises can be pumped back down to the floor. This should even out the heat and lessen the amount of wood needed to keep the space warm. I used this concept in a building with 30 plus ft. roofs and brought the floor level temps from mid 30's to upper sixties (huge building with a few small heaters but lots of equipment that put out heat). I doubt you'll see that much difference but it's cheap, I'm pretty sure you have the pieces laying around and I already know you got the chops to do it and see if it helps.
And again, I'm impressed with your abilities and energy. Not many young guys will work so hard and repurpose so much to get what they want. Keep up the good work and keep posting the cool projects and garage up dates.

Great drawing keep them coming!
Love your sketches, I wouldn't be too concerned about the tail lights as its what's called Artists Licence.
You wont know yourself having a metal cut off saw, one very thoughtful birthday gift for sure.
Regards..
The deck project is a good one!! Looks great. I love the metal cutoff saw, and that is certainly a nice gift. You will indeed be in the metal working business big time.
Looks like things are moving right along for you. Hope you have cured your water troubles in the shop.
Best Regards
Herb
Nice gift!! You've taught her well and must treat her pretty good to have her think of that when she was shopping. Did she up your hobby budget so you can buy steel to play with?
Been following your posting. You are very talented in your use of materials and how you obtain them. I would never thought about old bed frames for angle iron. I'm sure going to keep that in mind. Keep up the great work on your shop.
That would be a perfect spot to put a roll of butcher (or similar) paper in a spot just right to grab a sheet to sketch out a project. This gives bonus points since you could post those same sketches for the GJ folk.
Well you are far more ahead of me and my shop. My shop has a dirt floor, no insulation, its an old barn 20' x 24' barn, most of the year I can't use it because its either too hot or too cold. So when the weather is right I try and get everything done ASAP. Seems the money always runs out before I get to do anything to finish the shop. Someday maybe LOL.
Keep up the great work. Its really surprising what all you can fit into a small space. Sketches, and computer design software is a great way to help, its usually a lot easier and cheaper to sketch or design something by hand or on the computer than it is to cut, build, tear apart, etc LOL.
I tend to try and reuse what I have or re-purpose stuff as well...otherwise there's no way I'd be able to do anything at all. I picked up a benchtop lathe last November for making pens, which I took an old office desk and mounted the lathe to that, as well as a few other tools I've picked up. No need to build something when I already had a table/desk that wasn't serving any other purpose except at the time being in my way. Now I can either sit or stand and do my pen turning, and this is something I can do all year as my small 10'x12' shed is insulated/finished inside so it is really easy to heat in the winter and if I would have been thinking when I built it, I would have roughed in an opening for a small A/C unit.
Paper storage, not a bad plan. I certainly have lots of paper kicking around in there, both blank and grid.
Old dirt floor buildings can have a lot of potential, though they typically require a good deal of work to get them usable. On my family's farm there's an old 12'x16' train shed that has a dirt floor. It was at the local train depot some time ago and I've heard when the station closed it was dragged on a sled on the winter down the roads and set where it is now.
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I re-roofed it (same material I used for my garage) a few years back and turned it into a bit of a museum of sorts, but it's just storage now.
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https://scontent-b-ord.**.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfa1/v/t1.0-9/1924085_57540015448_5043_n.jpg?oh=f72c5271265ec6b93f0570bbc5e9a646&oe=54CED9F7
It needs to be jacked up and set on a new foundation, as the 12x12 sleepers it sits on are basically soil at this point. Still, it has loads of character and is worthy of a restore. Personally, I think it would make an awesome small woodshop or fab-shop.
The dirt floor pretty much prohibits any ability to heat the shop though. Not to mention its anything but level, and extremely compacted due to all the horses that spent many years stomping around in that old barn.
At one point I was actually thinking of installing a wood floor but never got the money to do so. Then I thought about actually digging it out and leveling everything then having a concrete floor poured, but once again no money for that stuff. So...20 years later it is still the same as before. I do have my tools out there, but in the winter and summer its totally useless due to heat/cold.
It can be a bummer for sure working in less than suitable conditions. That trainshed was no fun to work in.......
Thanks, artists license eh? I'll use that one in the future, say I meant to do it. I think one of my first projects with the saw (accompanied by welding) will be a rolling cart for my welder and the saw itself. welder on the bottom, cutoff saw on the top.
One of the other members said on his thread the first project for your welder should be a cart to make it more usable. When you mount the cutoff saw on the top, will it have a swing up support on both sides to support long work?
Don't design it to be top heavy so it will tip over when moving it around.
There are times I wish I had a shed like that to work in, and I'll bet the same holds true for you. Having endured those times makes you appreciate what you have. Another thing is that a lack of money usually forces us to become creative, so I'm happy for tough times, in a left handed sort of way.
One of the other members said on his thread the first project for your welder should be a cart to make it more usable. When you mount the cutoff saw on the top, will it have a swing up support on both sides to support long work?
Don't design it to be top heavy so it will tip over when moving it around.
It can be a bummer for sure working in less than suitable conditions. That trainshed was no fun to work in, so I dug it out and levelled the dirt floor, then put down a couple inches of gravel... at least that was a touch better. It still needs a real floor if and when it's renovated. A small woodstove made it bearable in the winters, and summers arent too bad here. I guess it's all about making the most of what you've got or repurposing stuff you can find for cheap/free. Heck, level the floor some, throw down a couple inches of pit-run gravel, and lay down a floor of reclaimed pallet wood on 1/4 of the floor, and at least it's better than it was...