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Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

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Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 15:16

I haven’t posted much for a while because I’ve been living in Cyprus for 18 months and I’m currently sat in Norway with work.

However I have finally got somewhere with sorting out my workshop situation by getting a small extension on the front of the garage. I have done none of the work myself so can’t take credit but I have been away so much that my free time has been spent with my daughter and wife rather than on my hobby.

I thought I’d try and post some pictures of progress.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 15:22

So here is the front of the existing garage. The back half has been incorporated into the house so the idea was to extend out to the front to give a reasonable space. The slab has been poured here so you can see the footprint. The half of the existing garage to be incorporated is about half the size of the slab so the slab is two thirds of the size of the final floor space if that makes sense?
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 15:42

Wall frames up and roof started. Daughter for scale.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 15:45

Roof on, walls wrapped and cladding started.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 15:50

Where we are now. Clad and insulated. The plan is to reuse the electric roller door from the original garage and I’ll eventually put some wooden doors in front of that to improve the aesthetics. Currently I can’t enclose it due to the existing boiler glue coming into the garage space; we are going to move the boiler to the outside wall of the existing garage but the plumber we had lined up has not come back with a quote despite repeated attempts to chase him up so I’ll have to find someone else when I’m home again next week. Frustrating because the door could be moved by my builder but now I’ll have to wait.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby marineboy » 10 Nov 2018, 15:56

Are you still using your CH boiler? If so is the position of the terminal a problem pending your plumber moving it?
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 16:10

marineboy wrote:Are you still using your CH boiler? If so is the position of the terminal a problem pending your plumber moving it?


Yes, you can just see the flue in the last couple of pictures top left of the garage door at the back sticking out of the wall. The boiler was supposed to be moved a month ago but as I said we’ve been let down so can’t close up the front yet. The boiler needs to be moved into the existing garage onto the external wall and the flue to come out there.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby marineboy » 10 Nov 2018, 16:22

Yes, I understand where it is but I would guess that it doesn’t conform with building regs due to its proximity to the new ceiling. I don’t know whether it’s permissible to have such a situation if it is only temporary, as in your case.

The build looks very nice, btw.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 17:00

marineboy wrote:Yes, I understand where it is but I would guess that it doesn’t conform with building regs due to its proximity to the new ceiling. I don’t know whether it’s permissible to have such a situation if it is only temporary, as in your case.

The build looks very nice, btw.


No it can’t stay where it is because it would be venting into an enclosed garage. It will be moved as soon as I can.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby Malc2098 » 10 Nov 2018, 17:28

Nice space.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby marineboy » 10 Nov 2018, 17:41

Yes, I know that is your intention, but even in the short term I would worry that the position of the terminal could cause problems, eg discharge of heat so close to your new joists (regs specify it must be at least 300mm below eaves) and dangerous gases within a semi enclosed space. I don’t wish to be a killjoy and I appreciate your scheduling issue but there are safety risks as well as the chance of a passing building inspector sticking his neb in.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby Deejay » 10 Nov 2018, 17:54

Afternoon Woodstalker

Do the reg's allow you to extend the flue and run it up through the new roof?

Cheers

Dave
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby marineboy » 10 Nov 2018, 18:16

I’m no expert but that could be a solution, depending on what is above it.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby jules70 » 10 Nov 2018, 18:50

Deejay wrote:Afternoon Woodstalker

Do the reg's allow you to extend the flue and run it up through the new roof?

Cheers

Dave


A horizontal flue run straight across and out through the new extended garage wall would be the easiest solution. Prefer coming out of a wall then through the roof and making it weather tight. Certainly the length of run would be well within the regs if the boiler is indeed just the other side of the wall. (obviously there are regs on the length and the number of bends, and I believe now also any joints need to be accessible for inspection)

Got to be so much easier than moving the boiler and all the associated pipe work !!
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 10 Nov 2018, 22:27

Hi all, thanks for the feedback and advice. As I mentioned the garage door won’t be moved until the boiler situation is sorted.

The boiler has to move because of some internal works we are planning on the kitchen in the future so we want to move if now rather than extend the flue and have to make good the resulting holes.

It should have been moved already but we have been let down. It happens again and again with tradesmen coming to look at the job and never coming back to you so you waste weeks waiting for a quote before starting the process again with a new tradesman. Very frustrating. If they just said they didn’t want or couldn’t do the job then no worries I can look elsewhere. It’s the leaving me hanging that I hate.

As for the building inspector; not sure what he would say other than “that flue will have to move” and that’s what I’m doing.

Glad you like the space, I had planning for a bigger workshop in the garden but it appears that area is now a play area so don’t fancy my chances battling with my daughter. This should suit my meagre needs until I get bit better and get a bit more time...
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 02 Dec 2018, 09:06

So the boiler is now being moved and should be complete this week. I can start moving my tools and kit up from my temporary space. Does anyone have any suggestions about what I could put down as a floor covering? It’s bare concrete at the minute and I was hoping for something inexpensive but easy on the feet and legs :)

Maybe some foam tiles, if so does anyone have a cheap source?
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby 9fingers » 02 Dec 2018, 09:50

Do you have a dpm under the floor slab? If not any floor covering will need to allow the floor to breathe or fit a dpm under your proposed covering. I have used synthaprufe in the past. Messy job but effective.

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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby 9fingers » 02 Dec 2018, 10:13

My workshop floor consists of dpm 25mm tiling battens at 400mm centres as mini joists, 25 mm foam insulation and 18 mm ply on top. 2 coats water based pu varnish. I find it comfortable to stand on and yet strong enough for largish machines.
It's been done 9 years now and the varnish has worn in some places but generally acceptable.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby Rod » 02 Dec 2018, 10:35

My floor is concrete covered, where I can put it and definitely where I stand, the rubber/foam
Children’s interlocking floor mats.
My daughter gave me a load of them and I put them around my machines etc, they are very easy to cut to shape if necessary.

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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 02 Dec 2018, 22:47

Cheers Bob & Rod,

Bob The slab has a DPM under it. I was thinking something like the child’s play area interlocking tiles just straight over the concrete but I was a bit concerned about durability. Have you had any problems with them Rod?
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby Rod » 03 Dec 2018, 01:08

My bench, Table Saw, lathe and BS are pretty static so I’ve just laid the matting around them.
Other things on wheels have not caused any damage and the mats have been down for more than 5yrs.

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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 03 Dec 2018, 08:05

Great I’ll go with that option then, there’s quite a few options on eBay and Amazon so I’ll have a look there.

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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 17 Dec 2018, 12:52

So the boiler is now moved and i have bought some rubber gym matts from Amazon that seem pretty good; they are just settling in a stack in the garage now after being unrolled.

The garage door has been moved but i have a slight problem with water ingress. The water is pooling on the lip of the concrete slag at the door and there must be a slight slope and it is coming back under the door.

I was thinking of options:

1. I could try and grind/sand a slight profile on the concrete to make the water fall away; could a coarse belt sander do this?
2. I could purchase a pre-made rubber 'ramp' that meets the 12mm rubber floor i'm putting in; i could stick it down and seal the edges to create the fall.
3. I could fix some sort of weather strip into the concrete just in front of the door?

Has anyone got any other suggestions or advice?

Thanks

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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby Malc2098 » 17 Dec 2018, 13:03

I had an issue with one of my doors that was not pooling but was the wind blowing the drips backwards from the rip bar under the door. It only occurred with certain direction winds, other times the rain dripped off and down the slope of the threshold.
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Re: Woodstalker’s garage workshop.

Postby woodstalker » 17 Dec 2018, 15:09

Malc2098 wrote:I had an issue with one of my doors that was not pooling but was the wind blowing the drips backwards from the rip bar under the door. It only occurred with certain direction winds, other times the rain dripped off and down the slope of the threshold.


Hi Malc,

How did you fix it?

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