Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #33,971  
RS, two cycle lawnboy? Emission control sure did them in. I bet we tried every different kind of trimming mower on our farm growing up, some didn't last one season. The toughest one of them all was a commercial version Lawn Boy, probably because all the slope cutting didn't starve the engine for oil. It was good for many years.

got some "before" pics on the woodshop now that the carpenters are out of there. Electricians coming back early next week to finish things off, hang the lights and get all the power on. Then I can go to work and have fun. Air compressor in room behind air line, air will go to Dewalt regulator bolted onto wall and then back to reel. That way I can drop the 130psi compressor pressure down to 95, which might be all that's needed or wanted for the air nailers.

Height of woodshop surprised me, lots of storage going vertically, good place to store all those bulky empty but we all keep them tool plastic boxes. The Paslode one is like a small suitcase... though the router one was equally huge. I'd rather have my tools out where I can get to them, and arranged by function. Cutting in one area, sanding in another, drilling, etc.

I told the carpenters to leave the work rough; I wanted to finish it off. Probably will put a piece of molding around the front edge of the "desk" area, at least. They were supposed to bring the maple in to the edge but it got left several inches away and I just said nothing...would have meant ripping it all apart and I can work with it. I really would have liked the maple to have come all the way to the front, it's so hard that it will wear like iron vs that soft wood now mounted there. So I think I will go over the edge with some oak molding if I can find it. I let the two carpenters use their own judgement and I'm pleased with what they did for the very reasonable amount they charged for two day's work. They both have their own woodshops so I sure didn't have to explain much to them.

Sprayed the orchard again, the leaves look much better after the last spraying but I saw something new so they all got another dousing. And then I handwatered most of them, the ones that hadn't drowned that is...seemed a bit strange, but they took the water quickly. And then I dragged water hoses all over watering things, came in, thoroughly showered that fruit spray off me, and have put up the closed sign.

however, always open for tractors. ;)
 

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   / Good morning!!!! #33,972  
rswyan wrote: "Good luck on squirtin' your loader ... and remember: pics or it didn't happen"

Before:
FELArmsPaintPrep.jpg
After:
FELArmsPaintComplete.jpg
Here's the PPG formula for the paint:
FELArmsPaintFormula.jpg

Took the guard that protects the hydraulic lines on the loader in for the paint match, as the underside was unfaded. We'll see how close it is when I get everything back together tomorrow.

Had to pause a few times to let the breeze die down, but other than that (and a run or two) things went well. :thumbsup:

Mixed 20 oz of paint and covered in two coats, so there's plenty left to do the two props and the bed on the RTV900. :stirthepot:

The real proof of the paint is in how well it holds up, but at nearly $100/qt. my expectations are high.:crystalball::crossfingers:

Enjoy your evening, folks. It's beer-thirty here! :drink:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,973  
Lookin' good, Drew. I wouldn't worry about the plywood strip in front of the maple. Might even be a good idea, as it's probably easier to replace the plywood when it becomes damaged than the maple, and the front edge will probably see a lot of use. It sure does in my shop.

If you haven't already, give some thought to how you'll run the airlines from the compressor to the tools. Keeping water out of the air tools is important, especially in high humidity environments. Here's a pretty decent guide that I've found useful in the past:

Compressed Air Piping
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,974  
Good Afternoon everyone. Cloudy and 53 here on the coast today. Spent my first day of retirement hauling my old shed to the dump to make room for a new garage. Also got the gutters cleaned out for the year we are ready!! :thumbsup:

Congrats on retirement! New garage, you are off and running. :D
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,975  
rswyan wrote: "Good luck on squirtin' your loader ... and remember: pics or it didn't happen"

Before:
View attachment 425141
After:
View attachment 425139
Here's the PPG formula for the paint:
View attachment 425140

Took the guard that protects the hydraulic lines on the loader in for the paint match, as the underside was unfaded. We'll see how close it is when I get everything back together tomorrow.

Had to pause a few times to let the breeze die down, but other than that (and a run or two) things went well. :thumbsup:

Mixed 20 oz of paint and covered in two coats, so there's plenty left to do the two props and the bed on the RTV900. :stirthepot:

The real proof of the paint is in how well it holds up, but at nearly $100/qt. my expectations are high.:crystalball::crossfingers:

Enjoy your evening, folks. It's beer-thirty here! :drink:

Looks good. You earned your suds today. :D
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,976  
Lookin' good, Drew. I wouldn't worry about the plywood strip in front of the maple. Might even be a good idea, as it's probably easier to replace the plywood when it becomes damaged than the maple, and the front edge will probably see a lot of use. It sure does in my shop.

If you haven't already, give some thought to how you'll run the airlines from the compressor to the tools. Keeping water out of the air tools is important, especially in high humidity environments.
Thank you.
not going to pipe air in. Having the reel there allows me to pull the air hose pretty much wherever I want to.
What I might pipe in...is vacuum hose and hook the cutting and sanding machines up to that, although honestly rolling the shop vac over on a concrete floor is not hard duty. Not elegant, but sure works. So possibly yes to piping, but the sucking kind. Maybe a compact 2hp fine bag dust vac over in the corner, hooked up to piping on the one long side. The other side is where the vise and bench grinder is, and I positioned the bench grinder almost under the exhaust vent though the mess extended grinding makes would sure warrant an intake there, and I have a big plastic dust vac collector attachment that would work quite nicely on the grinder. Lot more piping for just that, nice idea but unlikely. However the dust vacs have at least two ports so adding a second line is easy, though it would have to go way up high over the door and then drop back down to the grinder.

yes to opening the drain line at the bottom of the compressor every couple of months. I don't run the unit enough to warrant more than that but my smaller one hp air pump in the garage spit out a nice deposit of water when drained recently. I turned the Quincy compressor off and came back in a week and the airpressure had only dropped ten psi and not enough to even turn the machine back on when I flipped it back on auto. Well, seems pretty tight. But that room is open to the outside humid air so you bet, blow it out. Or rust it out.
 
   / Good morning!!!!
  • Thread Starter
#33,977  
Great looking projects, guys. I spent the day with my brother in law, moving their stuff from Big Rapids to Howell. Real pretty country up thru their, but in winter, they get more snow than we do.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,978  
Drew, You may want to move your vise forward a bit so you can have clearance if the work is mounted up and down. Make the back jaw a bit over the edge of your Bench front.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,979  
Drew wrote: "yes to opening the drain line at the bottom of the compressor every couple of months. I don't run the unit enough to warrant more than that but my smaller one hp air pump in the garage spit out a nice deposit of water when drained recently. I turned the Quincy compressor off and came back in a week and the airpressure had only dropped ten psi and not enough to even turn the machine back on when I flipped it back on auto. Well, seems pretty tight. But that room is open to the outside humid air so you bet, blow it out. Or rust it out."

Every couple of months probably isn't frequent enough, especially in your humid environment. Might want to open that drain after every big project at least. You'd be surprised how quickly water accumulates in a compressor tank. I just worry that the lines you have planned will deliver lots of compressed, moist air to your tools. The moisture doesn't condense out until it expands and cools. The right angle taps and drain lines shown in that document show how to separate the moisture from the compressed air (by inertia as the air negotiates the right angle bend and the moisture condenses on the pipe wall), before it's delivered to the tool. Just file that link away, and if you start seeing water coming out of your air tool exhausts, you'll know what to do. :thumbsup:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #33,980  
lots of really good ideas. Vise just plopped in general area, agree completely to repositioning. This is all before...
I wanted the vise on that corner in case something had to go out the door. Going to put another support under that section plus under the drill press on the other side. Have lots of 4x4's left over from prior garden. Might as well make it sturdy.

never thought of water in the hose lines but yeah...fifty feet of line plus another ten say of various lead in lines and connecting lines. So sixty feet of hose offering a chance to condense, should one blow out the line before connecting a tool?
remember, never used air tools before but if there's moisture in there either trap it or blow it out.

Ok, I'll go blow out the air tank tomorrow, that should make a nice noise, and see how much water comes out since I first installed it. The tank valve is on the very bottom and ok to get at, though i'm not putting my face down there while opening that valve.

If I do build the new garage storage building next door, and needed a good air compressor, like an Ingersoll Rand type 30 or a US made Quincy to power equipment lifts, things I really want to work properly, and also higher air use tools, I would think about installing one of those air filter/drier kits in line. Kind of stuff is standard on rotary screw compressors, clearly the water should be religiously prevented from accumulating or damage will ensue. if the expensive compressors have this stuff standard, says something about the general need on smaller compressors. Even low hour ones.
Point well made and taken.
 
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