- Location
- Grand Junction, CO
Wow Greg! I didn’t realize your new place was so badass!
We (I) moved here because of the shop.... the wife thinks we moved here due to the remodeled home.
Wow Greg! I didn’t realize your new place was so badass!
Wow Greg! I didn’t realize your new place was so badass!
Been there a couple times and it is nice
@zmotorsports Mike, I don't remember, what did you do to your floor?
There are fully engineered plans available online. They cost money, but less than having someone design one from scratch, and many come with full code enforcement approval.
Ok hearing Nate’s experience with things out in the right place for future add ones, it brings up another question.
Anyone use someone to draw up the plans for their shop?
Or just start laying concrete and going from there?
I like the idea of having a set of plans to shop around with the different contractors and such, deciding much money to dig up, etc.
Maybe if there are enough of us “thinking” of building we can get an RME architect.
I also added a lot of air drops from my air compressor which is located in the RV storage bay so I don't have to listen to it while working in the shop. It is barely audible in the shop as the dividing wall is also well insulated. I have about 8 air line drops each with a dual air connector and two hose reels hard-plumbed into the air as well.
Mike
I’m working on a 50’x60’ with approx. 18 1/2’ ceilings and 16’x12’ roll up doors. I’ve put most things on hold until spring, but currently working with the power company to pull separate service and 3phase 208v or possibly 480v to it. Spring/summer plans are to finish exterior, wiring, lighting, insulation, radiant heat, and 2-post lift install. Future loft space a possibility.
This is key - lots of air drops and locate the compressor either in a different room, or a shop I worked in once simply built a closet in which to put the air compressor. while that takes up some floor space, not having to listen to the compressor cycle is a big deal. The air compressor drain was plumbed to the outside of the shop. You walked around back to open the valve and drain the compressor.
Did I say lots of air drops? When we built that shop - it was back in '91, we used copper tubing for all of the air lines. We had so many drops it was incredible. We even plumbed overhead air lines in those retractable reels, plus some overhead on swing beams. It was awesome, you could grab a 6' length of air line, walk to just about anywhere in the shop and connect up. Customer's bikes outside the shop could be worked on with air tools without requiring them to be brought inside.
The other thing we did was to install outlets at bench level about every 6'.
When running air, make sure you keep a fairly continuous slope to the line, and add a drain point on every drop. Unless you run a chiller air dryer, you will have moisture in the air. I like to run the whole line on a slight down slope away from the compressor, with a dedicated drain drop at the very end, and the actual air drops off the top of the pipe, so there is very little moisture getting to the tools.
Also, never use PVC. It eventually cracks and breaks, I've worked in shops that had it and when it fails it's like a shotgun with the shrapnel. It'll also kick the remaining pipe hard enough to put it through drywall.
....Plan for heating and cooling.... a minisplit A/C with a heat pump seems to be a good solution and its probably what I'll be adding in the near future. I have a wood burning stove for heat, but think I'll swap it to a pellet stove with a big hopper and thermostat to control it. If I could maintain my shop at 55-60*'s thru the winter, then turn it up when I'm in there, I'd be a happy man. The wood burning stove needs to be constantly fed & adjusted. If your shop is too cold or hot, you won't want to spend too much time in it. A big ceiling fan would be nice for moving air around, too.
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AC
Heat
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Radiant heat will be nice! I'm to the point of installing the boiler or water heater. Haven't decided which direction I'm going. I planned ahead and left a section down the center so I can bolt down lift to anything else in the floor.
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.....- Rather than a detached 2 car garage I ended up with an extra garage bay (4 car bays vs. 3) that is dedicated "shop" space. That price was 45k-ish for the detached vs 17.5k. The size of that extra bay is 12'x28. I also paid 2k extra to have the driveway width expanded 10'x30'x4". Upgrading from an 8' garage door to 9' door was $750. To be fair adding the extra bay was my wifes idea after I floated the detached garage knowing we didn't have the bankroll for it.
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