The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network







Register or Log In To remove these advertisements.

Go Back   The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network > General Truck Forums > Tools, Shops and Shop Safety

Web 67-72chevytrucks.com


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 08-07-2020, 11:43 AM   #1
Zippi
Registered User
 
Zippi's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2019
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 585
*Us Little Guys*

I'm off work today and setting out in the garage wishing I had a bigger garage but it ain't going to happen so it is what it is. My wife parks her car on one side and the 49 gets the other side. Of course my car sets outside and that's fine. Getting ready to retire in 3 1/2 weeks so I'm looking at putting a desk in the corner in front of the truck. I'll have to shoehorn it in but I think it will fit. For all you other little guys out there let's see what you have done with the space you have.
Attached Images
   
__________________
If you can't fix it with duct tape, it's an electrical problem.
1949 5 Window 3100
https://zippi6.wixsite.com/adtruck
Zippi is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-07-2020, 08:16 PM   #2
4u2nv
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Ontario Peterborough
Posts: 732
Re: *Us Little Guys*

This truck




Is going in this garage this fall one way or another.

I did sell some sleds to clear one bay
Attached Images
  
4u2nv is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-09-2020, 12:59 AM   #3
tim71
Senior Member

 
tim71's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Brownsburg, IN
Posts: 1,069
Re: *Us Little Guys*

I have the same dream, wish I had a larger/taller garage or workshop. I live in a neighborhood with 1/2 acre lots and have a septic system in the back yard. Didn't have a lot space to work with. I also have a wife who wanted to be in a neighborhood and not out on a county road with a couple acres. I built a detached 20x28 garage. I couldn't go any wider due to septic field and utility easements. I like my little garage, but 40x56 would be more fun. However, it was big enough to completely tear down and rebuild my 71 K1500. I guess you can call our small workshops as "cozy".
Attached Images
    
__________________
1972 Blazer Highlander
1971 GMC K1500 SWB (sold)
tim71 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-10-2020, 12:11 PM   #4
Ziegelsteinfaust
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Temple City
Posts: 3,551
Re: *Us Little Guys*

One thing you could do is make the desk a roller so it can be moved as needed.

I have a old sunpro cabinet I am turning into a fabrication table to hold my drill press, vice, and grinder. Plus a area to weld parts. It holds alot, and is versatile.

A few years ago I had one of those jobsite bins that had shelves inside, and I used as a movable storage. I was desk sized, and held alot. I traded it for something as a friend really wanted it. He cleaned it up, and still loves it. Plus in a pitch it could just be left outside as it was lockable. I need to get another.

This model.
https://www.knaack.com/products/jobs...PianoSeries/79

Not sure how much extra room you have, but I could roll mine in or out in a minute. Efecctively doubling my small stuff storage.
Ziegelsteinfaust is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 08-10-2020, 12:23 PM   #5
Troy Sr
Registered User
 
Troy Sr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Antioch, Ca.
Posts: 442
Re: *Us Little Guys*

Quote:
Originally Posted by 4u2nv View Post
This truck




Is going in this garage this fall one way or another.

I did sell some sleds to clear one bay
I hope you didn't sell the SRX!!! We owned a 1976 SRX first year only 6 sold to public! And you had to be a top racer!! It was scarey fast!!
__________________
Take Care
Troy
Troy Sr is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-11-2020, 12:02 PM   #6
e015475
Registered User
 
e015475's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Show Low, Arizona
Posts: 749
Re: *Us Little Guys*

I have a 5-600 square foot shop, which is equivalent to a generously sized single car garage. There's room for one project car and that's it. I wish I had a couple thousand square feet, but I suppose if I did it'd be stacked to the gunnels with projects. The size I have to work with keeps me from spinning out of control. I'm retired and spend 20-30 hours a week in my shop.

Over the years the biggest problem is tools and equipment that don't 'earn their keep'. That is, they take up valuable floorspace but don't get used that often or they were put there by some other family member because they thought it was a convenient storage place.

Examples of things that 'didn't earn their keep' in my shop - parts washer, refrigerator, old oven, microwave, freezer, kitchen cabinets (more on that later), MIG welder (I TIG 99%), OA welder, wood planer, Kalamazoo horizontal band saw, table saw. Things that did earn their keep - all on castors- 60 gallon vertical compressor, TIG, belt sander, vice, 56" HF tool box, portaband on a SWAG stand, bead blast cabinet, bench that can be raised or lowered so you can sit or stand and work there -

Here would be my suggestions how to optimize your space-

* Put everything on casters so you can reconfigure the shop easily to fit your project
* Anything that you don't use regularly needs to be stored somewhere else. Spare parts, ramps, jack-stands, automotive chemicals, paint, metal/wood stock can all be stored somewhere else. Buy a yard shed if you have too. I bought about 20 of those hard plastic totes they use to stock inventory at drugstores and made a rack for them. I store all my wiring, drywall tools, painting supplies, plumbing supplies, rope, straps, hardware, small steel stock, etc in those boxes and drag them into the shop when I need them.
* Keep other family members from using your workspace as their storage area. In the past I've had to put my foot down about boxes from kids that left for college, bicycles, an iguana (always trying to bite my toes when wearing flip-flops and **** all over the floor), freezer and a refrigerator, dogs my wife didn't want in the house, to name just a few.
* Keep stuff off the walls, especially cabinets. For a few years I had a 20' wall of kitchen cabinets, both upper and lower with a stainless work surface. A few years ago I tore them all out and replaced them with two HG 56" tool boxes and horse stall mat rubber work surfaces on top. Much more flexible and nearly the same counter space and the metal tool boxes are much more robust than wood drawers
* Epoxy the floor in a solid light color - no flakes/speckles. You'll be amazed on how much your illumination improves and you can sit on the floor without getting dirty. Cleanup is easy. Fill in the expansion joints with flexible epoxy so all your stuff on castors can go everywhere.
* Install good lighting. I have a combination of LED cans and halogen spot lights on tracks that I can aim at a work surface
* Adding heating and cooling to my workspace easily doubled it's utility. I can now work there year around.
* Install a ceiling fan and keep portable fans from taking up floor space - but be careful, I've poked pieces on long stock into mine several times and now it is a little wobley.
* I like to listen to music or have the TV on in the background while I work. I bought a 52" 'smart' TV and a remote keyboard so I could access the internet in the shop. I've used it many times to look up how to do something in the middle of a project. I have a Googlecast device hooked up to to an old stereo receiver so I can listen to podcasts or Spotify while I work, plus it lets me know if the phone is ringing through the speakers.
* I have a toilet and a stainless sink in the workshop. They both 'earn their keep' by keeping me out of hot water with my wife for tromping in and out of the house to pee or wash my hands. (I clean the toilet once a year, whether it needs it or not! It's nice to have a little refuge to sit and read a magazine uninterupted)
* I keep a smoke detector, a carbon monoxide detector and a few fire extinguishers handy. My next upgrade is probably going to be some security cameras. I'd like to know what's going on out there when I'm not there.

That's what's worked for me but YMMV

This is my main workbench in the shop- a little messy with a project in process. It can be used either standing up or sitting down by raising it or lowering it with jack screws. It's on casters and the pegboard moves with the bench top. I keep tools on the pegboard that I frequently use so I mostly don't have to get out of my chair to get something when I'm working. Ditto for the two drawers - pencils, rulers, razor blades - all small stuff I'm likely to need working there. The monitor didn't 'earn its keep' and it and the old laptop that drove it were replaced with a smart TV and a wireless keyboard (which I can watch from my seat at the bench) That MIG to the right is next on my list. Stereo is under the bench and accessed with a remote control, keyboard/remotes on a sliding tray underneath the bench too. Cheap speakers my kids left, and a Polk 12" subwoofer - also under the bench - but still room for your legs


This the last project to come out of my 'small workshop'-



This is what's in the shop now - my wife thinks she wants one of these. Note the chop saw sitting on the floor - was using it in the shop to make a crate for shipping, but now it is going back to its storage location in the shed. All the floor expansion joints are filled to roll everything around without catching.



Gotta go to work - that MG isn't going to paint itself and Mike Patey has a new video on 'Scrappy' up on YouTube
e015475 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-11-2020, 12:13 PM   #7
e015475
Registered User
 
e015475's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Show Low, Arizona
Posts: 749
Re: *Us Little Guys*

And another thing..........

You may already know about this website, but there's lots more garage ideas at TheGarageJournal.com.

In the forums, there's a section called 'Garage Gallery' where you can just go nuts looking at other people's garage designs.
e015475 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-11-2020, 12:48 PM   #8
Zippi
Registered User
 
Zippi's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2019
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 585
Re: *Us Little Guys*

Quote:
Originally Posted by e015475 View Post
And another thing..........

You may already know about this website, but there's lots more garage ideas at TheGarageJournal.com.

In the forums, there's a section called 'Garage Gallery' where you can just go nuts looking at other people's garage designs.
Nice. Thanks for the info. My garage is only 20X24 and the wife parts in one side. Once I retire I'll have the whole garage to myself until she gets home.
__________________
If you can't fix it with duct tape, it's an electrical problem.
1949 5 Window 3100
https://zippi6.wixsite.com/adtruck
Zippi is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2020, 07:36 AM   #9
4u2nv
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Ontario Peterborough
Posts: 732
Re: *Us Little Guys*

Quote:
Originally Posted by Troy Sr View Post
I hope you didn't sell the SRX!!! We owned a 1976 SRX first year only 6 sold to public! And you had to be a top racer!! It was scarey fast!!
Yea the SRX went , it was a 78 and real nice , the offer was to good to refuse $$$
Were you the top racer ?????
Would of been very collectable today .
Attached Images
 
4u2nv is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2020, 07:42 AM   #10
4u2nv
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Ontario Peterborough
Posts: 732
Re: *Us Little Guys*

Quote:
Originally Posted by e015475 View Post
And another thing..........

You may already know about this website, but there's lots more garage ideas at TheGarageJournal.com.

In the forums, there's a section called 'Garage Gallery' where you can just go nuts looking at other people's garage designs.
Is that a jig for making headers on your bench ?????
4u2nv is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2020, 11:21 AM   #11
e015475
Registered User
 
e015475's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Show Low, Arizona
Posts: 749
Re: *Us Little Guys*

With apologies to Zippi for hijacking his tread - yes, that's a wooden fixture I made to fab the headers on the green '49 GMC in my previous post.



In the chassis for a fit check - none of the final welding done

e015475 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2020, 11:51 AM   #12
Troy Sr
Registered User
 
Troy Sr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Antioch, Ca.
Posts: 442
Re: *Us Little Guys*

Quote:
Originally Posted by 4u2nv View Post
Yea the SRX went , it was a 78 and real nice , the offer was to good to refuse $$$
Were you the top racer ?????
Would of been very collectable today .
Oh well, no I raced a few times but not much. We bought it from the guy who owned the local Yamaha dealership he was a top racer.
__________________
Take Care
Troy
Troy Sr is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-12-2020, 12:46 PM   #13
Zippi
Registered User
 
Zippi's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2019
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 585
Re: *Us Little Guys*

Quote:
Originally Posted by e015475 View Post
With apologies to Zippi for hijacking his tread - yes, that's a wooden fixture I made to fab the headers on the green '49 GMC in my previous post.



In the chassis for a fit check - none of the final welding done

e015475,

I can take a little of that type of hijacking.
__________________
If you can't fix it with duct tape, it's an electrical problem.
1949 5 Window 3100
https://zippi6.wixsite.com/adtruck
Zippi is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:40 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2022 67-72chevytrucks.com