04-05-2017, 09:38 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-05-2017, 09:48 AM by ®smpr_fi_mac®.)
My new shop is a three car garage. Two of the bays will be my shop; the third will be partially walled off for my wife to park her car in.
I'm removing the rails and motor for raising the two doors on my side; I'll have stationary tools in front of them and will store my lumber on racks above the (now stationary) doors. I've already laid out (roughly) the location of my tools and future work bench (bench will be under the two windows), but need help with utilizing *all* the space...in particular, the ceiling.
My work space will be 24'x24' with a 12' ceiling. It will take me months, maybe a year to set it up as I want; the expenses of moving will set it back a while, but I'm okay with that. I do have some ideas that I'd like to put into play and would like advice on what to change or do differently.
I plan on hanging two ceiling fans, two air scrubbers, and as many LED shop lights as I can fit in.
Here's what I have to work with:
Standing in the doorway to the house, the bay to the left is number one, where my wife's car will reside. Bays two and three are to the right; I'll remove their rails and motors.
Standing in the opposite corner. Notice the round support? I'm going to build a wall from that support to the house wall to the left of the point of view. I'll use that to hang tools and a set of cabinets.
This is standing in front of bay one door. The wall I'll put in will run to the house wall. I will have an electrician install a sub panel near the entrance door. My hope is that the wall I'll add will help minimize dust exposure to the sub panel's guts.
I'll build a Roubo bench that will go under the windows. A hand tool cabinet will be hung between them.
What do I do with this wall? I'll put my light duty work bench there, which holds my mini lathe and grinder. I know at least one row of cabinets should go on this wall, starting at about 5' up. Maybe two rows? I don't mind needing a step ladder to reach them if it means more storage for things I won't use often.
Fortunately, the house's main panels (a pair of 150A boxes) are on the opposite side of this wall in the basement, so getting power from them up into the garage won't be *too* expensive. I'll get the largest capacity sub panel I can installed.
My table saw will be in the center, with an Incra table and 52" rails. It will be stationary. My PM100 and 8" jointer will be on casters. My RAS will reside in front of the bay doors. The DP will likely be on a rolling base, pushed into the corner of the windowed wall and the house wall.
The only living space above the garage is a closet; the other space is attic area. I plan on installing a small wood burning stove later in the year, with the chimney passing through the unoccupied space above. There will be outlets galore, with both 110 and 220 installed (five of my tools are 220). I'll spend the first months after moving in laying out power circuits, insulating, and then covering with drywall.
DC, for now, is a mobile unit that I have that works quite well for my light duty use. I may, in the future, install a fixed-location unit and add in ducting, but I'm not convinced I need to.
Yet.
From the outside, bay three is to the left. Note the upper window on the left wall; that's to a large closet, so the chimney has to be closer to the bay door side of the garage.
So, having laid all that out, can you gents point out any mistakes or stumbling blocks I might encounter? Any thing I'm missing?
I'm removing the rails and motor for raising the two doors on my side; I'll have stationary tools in front of them and will store my lumber on racks above the (now stationary) doors. I've already laid out (roughly) the location of my tools and future work bench (bench will be under the two windows), but need help with utilizing *all* the space...in particular, the ceiling.
My work space will be 24'x24' with a 12' ceiling. It will take me months, maybe a year to set it up as I want; the expenses of moving will set it back a while, but I'm okay with that. I do have some ideas that I'd like to put into play and would like advice on what to change or do differently.
I plan on hanging two ceiling fans, two air scrubbers, and as many LED shop lights as I can fit in.
Here's what I have to work with:
Standing in the doorway to the house, the bay to the left is number one, where my wife's car will reside. Bays two and three are to the right; I'll remove their rails and motors.
Standing in the opposite corner. Notice the round support? I'm going to build a wall from that support to the house wall to the left of the point of view. I'll use that to hang tools and a set of cabinets.
This is standing in front of bay one door. The wall I'll put in will run to the house wall. I will have an electrician install a sub panel near the entrance door. My hope is that the wall I'll add will help minimize dust exposure to the sub panel's guts.
I'll build a Roubo bench that will go under the windows. A hand tool cabinet will be hung between them.
What do I do with this wall? I'll put my light duty work bench there, which holds my mini lathe and grinder. I know at least one row of cabinets should go on this wall, starting at about 5' up. Maybe two rows? I don't mind needing a step ladder to reach them if it means more storage for things I won't use often.
Fortunately, the house's main panels (a pair of 150A boxes) are on the opposite side of this wall in the basement, so getting power from them up into the garage won't be *too* expensive. I'll get the largest capacity sub panel I can installed.
My table saw will be in the center, with an Incra table and 52" rails. It will be stationary. My PM100 and 8" jointer will be on casters. My RAS will reside in front of the bay doors. The DP will likely be on a rolling base, pushed into the corner of the windowed wall and the house wall.
The only living space above the garage is a closet; the other space is attic area. I plan on installing a small wood burning stove later in the year, with the chimney passing through the unoccupied space above. There will be outlets galore, with both 110 and 220 installed (five of my tools are 220). I'll spend the first months after moving in laying out power circuits, insulating, and then covering with drywall.
DC, for now, is a mobile unit that I have that works quite well for my light duty use. I may, in the future, install a fixed-location unit and add in ducting, but I'm not convinced I need to.
Yet.
From the outside, bay three is to the left. Note the upper window on the left wall; that's to a large closet, so the chimney has to be closer to the bay door side of the garage.
So, having laid all that out, can you gents point out any mistakes or stumbling blocks I might encounter? Any thing I'm missing?
Semper fi,
Brad
Brad