gorman
Addicted to ArboristSite
I'm in the market for building a workshop at my home address. I have some room to work with but not a ton. I have to be smart about it.
Anyone have any advice?
Anyone have any advice?
i.e. ....small wood stove . If you run window units with heat strips, small tonnage condenser unit/heat pump, anything electric for heat, and you start hearing a distinct 'humming' noise, there's nothing wrong...it's just your electric meter running so fast, trying to come out of its base, your power company will love ya, while you hate them even more...can you say $$cha-ching cha-ching$$. Burn wood and be done with it, only cost then is a little time, sweat, and backache.And make sure it has a heater of some sort.
I have hot water supplied outside my shop door and you want to see that clean vehicles and sawsi.e. ....small wood stove . If you run window units with heat strips, small tonnage condenser unit/heat pump, anything electric for heat, and you start hearing a distinct 'humming' noise, there's nothing wrong...it's just your electric meter running so fast, trying to come out of its base, your power company will love ya, while you hate them even more...can you say $$cha-ching cha-ching$$. Burn wood and be done with it, only cost then is a little time, sweat, and backache.
...hot water feed to a shop would certainly be a plus, no doubt.I have hot water supplied outside my shop door and you want to see that clean vehicles and saws
It really cleans man....hot water feed to a shop would certainly be a plus, no doubt.
Price them out accordingly, get material estimates if you can't figure it on your own...no idea you were talking a shop that size. That'll be a helluva nice shop...Yeah thanks guys. I'm looking at about 55'x55'. I'm building probably at my house so I can run hot water one way or another.
Anyone have a preference on steel or wood?
Absolutely have a separate meter set...any high amp draw of that nature...welders, two-stage compressors, etc, etc would simply tax an existing 200 amp main that's already on the house.i ended having the electric company set a separate meter for mine. My house meter is on the other side and I would have been pushing the main breaker with my welder in the shop... Plus it was going to cost around a grand for the copper... Just something to think about... The electric company around here will set one for free if it's for commercial...
Keep one meter that get the line split to different services. Here if you have a separate meter you will have another monthly service fee.Absolutely have a separate meter set...any high amp draw of that nature...welders, two-stage compressors, etc, etc would simply tax an existing 200 amp main that's already on the house.
They don't 'lug up' two feeds off the same base meter here. Power companies can do it...they simply know how to get your ass for a few more bucks a month. They ain't no dummies, lol. But I understand fully whatcha sayin.Keep one meter that get the line split to different services. Here if you have a separate meter you will have another monthly service fee.
Something you may not have thought about is doing heated floors. Would be great not to have to lay on a cold concrete floor working on something. Put the compressor outside so you don't have to listen to it. That's how I have mine and it's much nicer than the previous shop where it was inside. Big as you can afford. I have a 30x40 and it's overfull. I also have a 40x45 that I'm working on setting up now. Once you have a workshop like this, you'll wonder how you functioned without it.
I don't have one, and I've been wondering how I function without it lol.Once you have a workshop like this, you'll wonder how you functioned without it.
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