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Workshop Picture Thread

Large or small, tidy or chaos, post a picture of your workshop here!

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NJH02/10/2012 18:57:11
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2314 forum posts
139 photos

Hi "Durhambuilder"

You need first to upload your pics to this site.

Log in, go to the top left and click on " My photos" This will ask you to create an album. Just give it a suitable name then go to the tabs below marked "browse Images". Click on the first of these and locate the image you wish to post on your PC. Continue adding images in the other "Browse" boxes.

Go then to the thread you wish to post the image in and, at a suitable point in the text, click on the camera icon. locate the image in your album and click OK and the image will be added to the thread.

I think I'd better have a bit of a tidy tomorrow before taking some pics!

Cheers

Norman


Ah Jason

I guess your process is for pics not stored on your PC?

N

Edited By NJH on 02/10/2012 19:00:32

Edited By NJH on 02/10/2012 19:17:46

ChrisH02/10/2012 19:29:00
1023 forum posts
30 photos

Blooming 'eck, I thought my shop was bad, but I'm not in the same league as you guys, makes me feel quiet good..................

ChrisH

John Coates02/10/2012 20:20:42
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558 forum posts
28 photos

This was it before I began tidying up

Garage1

Garage2

Edited By John Coates on 02/10/2012 20:21:54

Edited By John Coates on 02/10/2012 20:22:26

John Stevenson02/10/2012 20:44:30
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5068 forum posts
3 photos

What never shows in any of my pitcures is the fact that my larger shop that holds all the metal, power saw and 3 MiG welders, 2 TiG, 2 plasma cutters and two stick welders etc is an old stable and has a hay loft.

At a rough guess that hay loft is supporting 5 CNC's [ 4 mills, one lathe ], all in storage, anywhere from 30 to 40 computers, 5 industrial compressors, 4 of which are Hydrovanes, battery charger for the fork lift truck and two pallets of giant paper rolls in case I get took short wink

John S.

JasonB02/10/2012 20:47:54
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25215 forum posts
3105 photos
1 articles

Just as well, you wouldn't want any hay above those welders and plasma cutterssmile o

John Stevenson02/10/2012 20:51:41
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5068 forum posts
3 photos

Oh forgot some boxes of pencils, 10,000 in all

John S.

Ady102/10/2012 21:05:25
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6137 forum posts
893 photos

Unfortunately the dog ate my camera so I will be unable to show you any pictures of my immaculate and orderly workshop

NJH02/10/2012 21:33:10
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2314 forum posts
139 photos

John

....."some boxes of pencils, 10,000 in all" -- !!!!!!

What ARE you doing with ten thousand boxes of pencils! Do you have some advance warning that all the computers in the country are about to fail? Are you going to use them ( like matchsticks) to build an Ark? - though that might just be a good scheme this year.

N

John Stevenson02/10/2012 22:26:38
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5068 forum posts
3 photos

Used to make pencil sharpeners and needed a few to practise on laugh

Seriously though a professional sharpener running flat out although they tend to throttle them back for quality can do 24,000 per hour.

Normal running is 12,000 to 15,000.

These pencils are rejects although they look OK, might have the lead slightly off centre or similar fault.

John S.

Andrew Johnston02/10/2012 23:05:29
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7061 forum posts
719 photos
Posted by Bazyle on 02/10/2012 18:32:03:

I like the perspective that makes the red knob as big as the Bridgeport head - or perhaps you just have really big hands. And your press is suppoting Red Nose Day.

Bazyle: It does look a bit odd doesn't it. The pictures were taken with the camera on it's shortest focal length, 28mm, which I guess is fairly wide angle, hence the distortion. Mind you, it is the weedy Bridgeport varispeed head, only 1.5hp. My hands are actually quite small, never knowingly done a hard day's work in my life. wink

Gray: Your shop may be smaller than mine, but yours is perfectly formed, whereas mine just grow'd, like Topsy. Had I known how much old iron I would acquire I would have organised things differently. I do still have a plan though; in the second picture the white shelving is due for replacement with the chipboard just to the right of it. There's also another set of white shelves off shot to the right which are also due for replacement. The one big disadvantage of my machine shop is that there is no natural light; the only possible place to put windows faces north.

Regards,

Andrew

Nobody spotted the shaper yet?

Flying Fifer03/10/2012 00:33:33
180 forum posts

Andrew,

Do you use the shaper to nudge the folding machine over a bit when you need to use it??

A few potential H & S hazards in there me boy! Must give our local inspector a nudge.

Only joking. I`ve spent the last fortnight attempting to clean out my workshop (a large double garage) (ie bin the junk & things in the cuminandy boxes) but I keep finding useful things. Don`t tell me to put a partion wall up so I can put up more shelves to to put things on or to floor the roof space cos I`ve already done that.

Now where the hell am I going to put the large sandblaster I was given today?? And no it won`t fit where the sun don`t shine.

Regards Alan

Martin W03/10/2012 00:45:12
940 forum posts
30 photos

Andrew

18" Shaper idea how about in the kitchen smile ? Could be good for making chips or slicing vegetables etc.

How is it we all seem to fill all the space available and then look for more. I bought a garden shed with the intention of putting my engineering bits in there but it suddenly filled up with other stuff not related to engineering and I now can't move in there so the workshop stayed in the tiny store attached to the house. Well I suppose it less to heat in the winter and everything is well within reach from the middle. I am really envious of the size of some of the workshops shown but then my bits wouldn't fit on one wall crying 2.

Martin

Edited By Martin W on 03/10/2012 00:53:12

Nicholas Farr03/10/2012 00:51:23
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3988 forum posts
1799 photos

Hi, well my camara don't seem to want to work in my garage at the moment, 'cause it's so cluttered up it might evoke some elf-n-safety issues. (not only that, but someone might say something too)

I do have one end of a small room just off my kitchen though, where I have an old office desk where I can tinker and fiddle with small items. (I think is was a pantry in the olden days) It also has some handy shelves in there as well, where I keep all me mics, verniers, levels, twist drills and other stuff that I don't leave in my garage. This room has also got a bit cluttered of late as well, with stuff starting to build up on top of one of the two fridge/freezers that I have in there also. There is not a lot of visable space to be seen on the office desk at the moment. Not at all orginised at present

pa040536.jpg

Andrew, I think I might have spotted your shaper in the far corner behind that bench thingy in the first picture, but I'm probably wrong.

Regards Nick

Another JohnS03/10/2012 03:05:08
842 forum posts
56 photos

Thor - like you Emco Compact-8 lathe. It's my favourite lathe that I've had; not too big, not too small, and I don't have to wear ear plugs to use it, like I do with my Kerry 1124 lathe.

8-|

I, too, like a tidy workshop, but it does take time to tidy it, so mine goes from "eat off the floor" (well, not quite) to being "where's the floor" especially when wearing ear plugs and using my Kerry.

Another JohnS.

Terryd03/10/2012 05:59:32
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1946 forum posts
179 photos

Hi all,

I now feel happier about my own workshop having seen some of the pictures here.

Regards

T

Edited By Terryd on 03/10/2012 06:02:42

Terryd03/10/2012 06:18:08
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1946 forum posts
179 photos

Hi DB,

Jason's solution is best but you could also use your links as in your first post but delete the [IMG] and [/IMG] html commands, theninsert the pistures by clicking on the square 'insert image' icon next to the 'camera' icon and paste the url in the labelled space. Also set the width (I used 350 px - it depends on the original size of the image) otherwise you will get those elongated pictures you sometimes see in these pages. Why the software doesn't do it as a matter of course is beyond my ken.

 

 

Best regards

Terry

PS  I forgot - click the 'padlock' icon when setting the width, that locks the aspect ratio of your picture

T

Edited By Terryd on 03/10/2012 06:26:43

NJH03/10/2012 11:02:00
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2314 forum posts
139 photos

Jason

Looking at your very functional workshop I can't help noticing what look like a couple of crates of beer stored under your lathe..... !

I agree with you - I like a bit of tidyness as searching for stuff or struggling to find somewhere to put something down is a pain. Stuff on the floor is just plain dangerous. I do find however that "life" is inclined to take over and divert me so one job is put down when another, more urgent ( and probably D - I - Y ) , takes over. You have pricked my conscience however so workshop tidying is my task for today!

Watch this space (maybe!)

N

Andrew Johnston03/10/2012 11:46:09
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7061 forum posts
719 photos

Some people have found the shaper, well done! Here's a picture with the shaper identified for those who haven't found it yet:

machine_shop_1_shaper.jpg

Alan: The shaper is positioned so that it just misses the box and pan folder, but I do need the garage door open to use it, likewise for the guillotine to the right of the shaper. My workshop doesn't meet H&S, but it's for personal use, so it doesn't need to. wink I wired up the lighting myself, but the 3-phase supply and ring main for sockets were done by a friend who trained as a professional electrician. As well as the 3-phase distribution board he also installed a new consumer unit for the house, to replace the old 'wind yer own fuses' one. One useful aspect of the tight packing of the machines is that it keeps me slim. If I put on too much weight I won't be able to get through the gaps! I do have a fire extinguisher, first aid kit, eye wash kit and a 'phone to hand.

Martin: Even I might draw the line at having a shaper in the kitchen; anyway the kitchen is already full of traction engine castings and parts. Mind you, if I ever buy a CNC lathe it'll have to go in the kitchen.

Nick: Is the shaper where you thought it was?

I would like to say thanks to Neil for starting this thread. It's a fascinating insight to see other workshops and what is often a very personal space.

Regards,

Andrew

Ian S C03/10/2012 12:05:08
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7468 forum posts
230 photos

Thats all you get,just multiply it, the workshop is 54sq m. Ian S C

JasonB03/10/2012 12:33:35
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25215 forum posts
3105 photos
1 articles

Norman, sorry to disappoint you but they are not beer crates under the lathe, even if they were it would be no use to me as I don't drink. You can also see the most used tool in the workshop just to the right of the two boxes

imag0882.jpg

And just for those that thought I had all the jumk piled up in the other corner I'm also sorry to disappoint. The shed is a 16x8 but that partition separates my wood lathe which takes up about 5ft of the shop, may move it about some time as I don't do as much woodturning as I used to.

imag0884.jpg

Oh and the junk is not all piled up in the garage either although I can't get a car in there and before you ask Norman those are six packs of dogfood!! For an idea of some of what comes out of the garage look here and here

imag0888.jpg

imag0889.jpg

J

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