New Project
Moderator: rztom
Re: New Project
Hopefully you have your priorities straight and that is garage/shop space. I'll bet it is.
What is the square footage?
What is the square footage?
Ken's Garage YouTube Channel
https://www.youtube.com/c/KensGarage1
1985 RZ500 (R6 suspension & body work)
https://www.youtube.com/c/KensGarage1
1985 RZ500 (R6 suspension & body work)
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Re: New Project
It is Ken.
26 x 34. Also a 26 x 16 concrete parking pad up front. The concrete work will be finished this week. The builder will be here in about 3 weeks. 3 days to build the garage. Heat and hydro after that and then I'll fill it with expensive distractions.
26 x 34. Also a 26 x 16 concrete parking pad up front. The concrete work will be finished this week. The builder will be here in about 3 weeks. 3 days to build the garage. Heat and hydro after that and then I'll fill it with expensive distractions.
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Re: New Project
Propane. Cheap to install and cheap to operate year round.2smoke wrote:Looks great!
Long overdue. What kind of heat are you going with?
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Re: New Project
Nice job, Id love a proper workshop...
1985 RZv500
1984 RZ500 Hybrid
1986 RG500 Walter Wolf
1986 RG500 Skoal Bandit
1984 RZ350
1984 RZ350 Hybrid
1981 RD350LC
1981 RD350LC Hybrid
2009 CR500AF Supermoto 250X
2007 CR500AF 250X
1988 YSR50 (2)
1989 VFR750R RC30
1984 GPZ750 Turbo
1984 RZ500 Hybrid
1986 RG500 Walter Wolf
1986 RG500 Skoal Bandit
1984 RZ350
1984 RZ350 Hybrid
1981 RD350LC
1981 RD350LC Hybrid
2009 CR500AF Supermoto 250X
2007 CR500AF 250X
1988 YSR50 (2)
1989 VFR750R RC30
1984 GPZ750 Turbo
Re: New Project
Interesting build - you guys don't use ice walls ?
I mean they'd stiffen up the plate and reduce deformation.
I mean they'd stiffen up the plate and reduce deformation.
Bye
Martin
Martin
Re: New Project
In Canada, at least in Ontario, the building code allows you to build a garage or storage building on a floating slab. If there is loading beyond a certain point such as a second floor, or if it's a dwelling, you have to have a poured foundation that goes below the frost line, which is what I think you are referring to. I am not a builder so this is a fairly loose explanation, but the foundation adds cost and the floating slab requirements generally prevent it from breaking up.MK wrote:Interesting build - you guys don't use ice walls ?
I mean they'd stiffen up the plate and reduce deformation.
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Re: New Project
There is 2 feet of compacted 5/8 stone under the most of the pad. The footing is 12 inches thick. It isn't going anywhere.
The gravel sits on top of what is mostly rock. Bedrock here is 3 feet. Above the bedrock is more limestone than soil. You can't stick a shovel in the ground here. If you want to go deeper than 3 feet you need heavy machinery and explosives.
The gravel sits on top of what is mostly rock. Bedrock here is 3 feet. Above the bedrock is more limestone than soil. You can't stick a shovel in the ground here. If you want to go deeper than 3 feet you need heavy machinery and explosives.
Re: New Project
I'm sure you've already considered everything but it's less hassle to go all out on electrical up front than add it later, i.e.. decent panel size, welding outlet, compressor outlet, extra 110 circuits and plenty of lighting, even if you won't use it all at first. Radiant tube heaters are nice for the work area, you can keep the main temp set low and feel nice and warm at your bench without having to heat the whole shop up.
Your comment about bedrock reminded me of a someone I knew in Bracebridge who had a granite floor in half the basement, it went up at a 30 degree angle to the side wall.
Your comment about bedrock reminded me of a someone I knew in Bracebridge who had a granite floor in half the basement, it went up at a 30 degree angle to the side wall.
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Re: New Project
RuZty wrote:I'm sure you've already considered everything but it's less hassle to go all out on electrical up front than add it later, i.e.. decent panel size, welding outlet, compressor outlet, extra 110 circuits and plenty of lighting, even if you won't use it all at first. Radiant tube heaters are nice for the work area, you can keep the main temp set low and feel nice and warm at your bench without having to heat the whole shop up.
Your comment about bedrock reminded me of a someone I knew in Bracebridge who had a granite floor in half the basement, it went up at a 30 degree angle to the side wall.
Thanks Russ. Yes, I agree. A 100 amp panel and lots of electrical outlets, including a 30 amp and 50 amp. Also a connection for the generator to power the house if needed, although I suppose I could cheat and use the 30 amp receptacle. I'd rather do it properly the first time.
My house sits on bedrock. When they were compacting the gravel a few days ago I could feel every hit in the house. If they drill a water well a kilometre away I can feel it here. A couple of years ago they blasted for a dug well about 500 meters from here. We really felt that.
Re: New Project
Next time I'd build a garage I'd certainly plan a good insulation for walls, roof, door AND floor.
In my man-cave I started completely without, but even in mild 0 deg C outside it was only 5 deg inside (= too fu..ing cold to work). A small 1.5 kW electric heater had no real effect and after checking the energy dissipation I found that I needed about 20-25 kW in that state !
After adding 60 mm insulation on the outside walls, 80 mm at the roof and 20 mm at thd door, I'm down to about 6kW. A 5kW triple phase heater needs about 1 h to add 5-10 deg now.
Even the thinnest 20 mm insulation on the floor would reduce the needed output to about 2kW.
But I guess I'm not telling something new to a Canadian citizen?
In my man-cave I started completely without, but even in mild 0 deg C outside it was only 5 deg inside (= too fu..ing cold to work). A small 1.5 kW electric heater had no real effect and after checking the energy dissipation I found that I needed about 20-25 kW in that state !
After adding 60 mm insulation on the outside walls, 80 mm at the roof and 20 mm at thd door, I'm down to about 6kW. A 5kW triple phase heater needs about 1 h to add 5-10 deg now.
Even the thinnest 20 mm insulation on the floor would reduce the needed output to about 2kW.
But I guess I'm not telling something new to a Canadian citizen?
Bye
Martin
Martin
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