My Shop 

When Janet and I built our current house in 1996, we said that this was going to be our last one. So, in light of that, I decided to build the shop I always wanted, dictated by space and money. ( I always need more of each.) A shop and office in the basement was it.

The basement was the only unfinished part of the house. I had the electrician run a sub panel to it from the main unit and the stairs were in place when I started. I laid it all out in drawings and sketches first, then started building. At the time I was working on the road out of state and coming home on  week-ends. It took seven months of every spare minute I had to get it done. Actually, the shop is like a project car, it is never really done. It continually evolves. I did everything you see in these photos myself with some help from Janet where she could. The floor Shop Floor is a two part epoxy laid with a roller in four coats. It is the same thing NASCAR shops use, which is where I got the idea. The process is labor intensive and expensive, worse than prepping and painting a car! Would I do it again? Maybe, maybe not, there are more user friendly and cheaper products on the market now.

The refrigerator is for storing barley pops (beer) and displaying dash plaques. To the right of the fridge is one of my favorite tools, a bead blaster. Refrigerator, Bead Blaster Although I have a power cord and air hose reel on the wall, Power Cord, Hose Reel I also have outlets all around the shop at eye level. The main operating Main Bench table (bench), is bolted to the wall. Looking to the upper left you can see how I store spray cans. You just write the color on the bottom with a magic marker and stack like fire wood. However, you must be very careful when pulling a can off the bottom or you will get to know all your cans at once!

Never enough storage space! Storage Shelves That pile of Vair parts is about four engines and some miscellaneous stuff.  Another good tool is the parts washer, Parts Washer and next to it on the wall is a genuine Dale Earnhardt tire with a Corvair clock --which I made-- in it.  Something else I always needed, but could not afford in my younger days is my roll around tool box. Roll Around Tool Chesy I continually out grow it. Also I don't roll it around much either. It stays right where it is most of the time.

After all those memories of working on Corvairs with no shelter, lying on the ground in wet snow at night using a table lamp as a drop cord, trying to fix the car and get to work the next day, I think I have earned my shop, but it isn't big enough!! I can only have two Corvairs at a time with indoor storage.

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