TheDudester
Established Member
My 'workshop' is in a garage attached to the house.
The garage is just a little over 17ft long, a little under 12ft wide and just about 8ft in height. The floor is concrete. There is only one wall that isn't interrupted by either a garage door, a door leading outside or a door to the house. Fortunately, this wall is 17ft long.
At the moment amongst other semi-stationery tools and hopefully a new Makita thicknesser tomorrow, there are three bikes (soon to be 4), a petrol lawn mower, roofbox suspended from the ceiling and a number of garden tools.
Occasionally SWMBO likes to store bottled water and glass jars used in jam making. She also reminds me every now and again that we built the garage onto the house so the car could be driven inside with the children and the shopping unloaded whilst it is pouring with rain outside.
Getting to my questions in a moment but first.....
A shed will probably take care of the bikes, lawn mower and garden tools.
My mother-in-law has agreed to store the roofbox in her garage if I can suspend it from the ceiling.
The bottled water and jam jars is a tricky one.
The car in the garage! It has been done, the doors even opened on both sides but at the moment it's a pipe dream.
So my questions.
1) The door leading to the house is a fire door and shuts tightly. I have used some sticky foam draft excluder to try and make it airtight but there is still a gap at the bottom. Does anyone have any ideas about what I could do with this? I do use a vacuum attached to most of the tools I use and try and sweep and clean up often.
2) I was contemplating using the long wall to build floor standing cupboards with a counter top and wall cupboards to keep things in. Is this a good idea or would I be better off with standalone work tables. I would intend to store things like the thicknesser and drill stand in them and bring them out when needed. I would also use the counter top with a SCMS (if I ever buy one).
Using just one side of the garagel would still allow a car to be brought inside although goodness knows where everything else would go.
I should declare at this point that I am a huge fan of the NYW, love all things Festool don't know how to use a hand plane properly (but after finding these forums I do really want to).
Thanks
TheDudester
The garage is just a little over 17ft long, a little under 12ft wide and just about 8ft in height. The floor is concrete. There is only one wall that isn't interrupted by either a garage door, a door leading outside or a door to the house. Fortunately, this wall is 17ft long.
At the moment amongst other semi-stationery tools and hopefully a new Makita thicknesser tomorrow, there are three bikes (soon to be 4), a petrol lawn mower, roofbox suspended from the ceiling and a number of garden tools.
Occasionally SWMBO likes to store bottled water and glass jars used in jam making. She also reminds me every now and again that we built the garage onto the house so the car could be driven inside with the children and the shopping unloaded whilst it is pouring with rain outside.
Getting to my questions in a moment but first.....
A shed will probably take care of the bikes, lawn mower and garden tools.
My mother-in-law has agreed to store the roofbox in her garage if I can suspend it from the ceiling.
The bottled water and jam jars is a tricky one.
The car in the garage! It has been done, the doors even opened on both sides but at the moment it's a pipe dream.
So my questions.
1) The door leading to the house is a fire door and shuts tightly. I have used some sticky foam draft excluder to try and make it airtight but there is still a gap at the bottom. Does anyone have any ideas about what I could do with this? I do use a vacuum attached to most of the tools I use and try and sweep and clean up often.
2) I was contemplating using the long wall to build floor standing cupboards with a counter top and wall cupboards to keep things in. Is this a good idea or would I be better off with standalone work tables. I would intend to store things like the thicknesser and drill stand in them and bring them out when needed. I would also use the counter top with a SCMS (if I ever buy one).
Using just one side of the garagel would still allow a car to be brought inside although goodness knows where everything else would go.
I should declare at this point that I am a huge fan of the NYW, love all things Festool don't know how to use a hand plane properly (but after finding these forums I do really want to).
Thanks
TheDudester