I agree! I also have "age appropriate tripping syndrome."! I am trying to be conscious of that issue. I'm working on it!Messy is fine but trip hazards at my age are a no-go.
The ceiling insulation looks concerning, but besides that, creative minds work with no stopping, even to clean up!The say "A messy desk is a sign of intelligence!" Does this apply to our shop or am I just a slob!
Ya I've fixed that a few times after a closed form explosion. I just began turning again after a thirty year life "walkabout". It's on my list.The ceiling insulation looks concerning, but besides that, creative minds work with no stopping, even to clean up!
Greetings Paul from our common experience in the early nineties at the Central New England Woodturners! I've followed your work over the years. It just keeps getting better and better. I'm back from a career as a vocational teacher. Returning after a thirty year absence, new forms same old finish.Tom,
A few comments:
Your shop looks like things get done there. No other comments about its appearance necessary!
Once, my shop had a similar appearance as yours, and my wife took one look and asked, "How do you find anything?" "Simple," I said, "It's in this room somewhere."
Another time, unannounced, a collector of my work called and said he was in town and asked if he could come by for a short visit. My shop looked like it was nuked, and when he arrived I apologized about its condition. No apologies necessary, he said--I would have been disappointed if it was any other way. Chaos works...!
PS: I remember you from Central NE Woodturners...Paul
The say "A messy desk is a sign of intelligence!" Does this apply to our shop or am I just a slob!
Looks like mine. Maybe cleaner than mine, actually...The say "A messy desk is a sign of intelligence!" Does this apply to our shop or am I just a slob!
Messy is fine but trip hazards at my age are a no-go.
Yeah Odie that's the feed to the lathe. Need conduit imbedded in the concrete floor for that one. The biggest pain is when trying to sweep up the floor. I don't walk through there much, too much junk in the way!
When I die I told my son all my buddies have permission to riffle through the shop and take whatever they want, it's all up for grabs except that machinist tool box in the pic. That was my dads, he was a mold maker. He close the lid on that when he retired in the early seventies. It is just the way it was the day he retired. A real time capsule, sacred space in my shop. I told Eric you need to take that one it's your legacy!
What I need to do is hammer chisel a trench and lay some conduit for both the feed and the air supply. The lathe has some pneumatic controls for a foot operated clutch. The insides of my closed forms are turned from the end of the lathe and that hose is in the way all the time! I pored that floor in 1977 by my self. To spread it fast enough I had the driver give it a good drink to lower the slump. Should be very easy to hammer it out. It's just another one more item on the list!They make electrical cord floor covers in various sizes for that situation. If its somewhat permanent you can get them with adhesive bottoms to secure them to the floor.
Here ya go Odie. Notice all the cardboard calculators and hand math calculations, no calculators back then!We need to see some pics of your Dad's tool box and contents.....that sounds very interesting!
As for the power cord to the lathe......instead of embedding it into the concrete floor you could easily install electrical outlets in the ceiling and hang the power cords straight down. That's what I did.
=o=
You could also run conduit along the rafters and drop your power to the lathe from above.What I need to do is hammer chisel a trench and lay some conduit for both the feed and the air supply.
My shop turns into a dump during anything other than turning a lump of wood. The bench is a mess (almost unusable), the floor is a mess, and it just becomes frustrating. And dangerous. High schools shop teachers and manufacturing settings, they'll 'insist' that you keep your workspace clean, tidy, and organized. I really need to adopt that same attitude in my own shop. It's just so much more of a pleasant place to be when its clean and organized. And, well, safer.It only takes one good fall and you’ve injured yourself out of the shop!
I think I'll go with the trench. like I said earlier, When I poured the floor in 1977 I had the driver give it a good drink to lower the slump. You know how that will weakens the mix. Shouldn't be a big deal. The hanging hose gets in the way all the time.I had to wire in a PM 24 inch planer. The electricians said best bet would be to run it through the ceiling. That is the most practical. They left a cord hanging from the ceiling and I can roll it up and out of the way if needed. Since I did residential concrete work for 30 years, you could do the trench and then install conduit, and then pour the concrete back in, or run it through the ceiling. Ceiling is the easiest/less work option.
Wonderful looking tool box Tom! An heirloom for sure!
robo hippy
Just get a concrete saw and make two cuts the width you need and it should break out fairly easy. Probably easier than hammer and chisel.What I need to do is hammer chisel a trench and lay some conduit for both the feed and the air supply. The lathe has some pneumatic controls for a foot operated clutch. The insides of my closed forms are turned from the end of the lathe and that hose is in the way all the time! I pored that floor in 1977 by my self. To spread it fast enough I had the driver give it a good drink to lower the slump. Should be very easy to hammer it out. It's just another one more item on the list!
Here ya go Odie. Notice all the cardboard calculators and hand math calculations, no calculators back then!