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  1. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    That's the absolute worst; cold with a major dose of damp on top. That's why you need something to keep the temperature from getting too low, regardless of whether or not you are in the shop.
  2. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    lol All this talk about power bills and mine just went over 4 digits. We don't keep the house temp very high in the winter but we had some really cold days in a row in January. That's the downside to heat pumps for living space.
  3. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    Thanks. Considering what the total bill is monthly it’s almost academic.
  4. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    My shop bill is included in the house bill so I have no idea.
  5. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    This is a quote from you in Jon's thread: I don’t like to hear the meter spin… in fact I pride myself in seeing the bill under $15.00 average for the last year😂 although for me, I spend a few hours on the weekend and an hour or two a day? You won't be able to let the shop get really cold and...
  6. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    I am not an HVAC expert but I would think a 3 or 4 ton heat pump would be fine in that shop. You could put the compressor unit outside by the power feed and suspend the air handler just inside, under the peak and run a central plenum. Just a thought. Here's a photo of my indoor plenum and air...
  7. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    Rather than continuing to add your HVAC questions to Jon's thread, I thought I would post something here but I don't know the dimensions of your shop. It looks about like 20x30 (enclosed) but I didn't see you mention the size in the first few posts. Give us the size and wall height and that...
  8. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    That doesn't look very easy to do by yourself. I was pretty impressed with the two guys that installed my two post lift. They just slid the posts off the flatbed truck until the bottom flange end was on the floor. That gave them enough leverage to stand them upright without too much effort...
  9. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    If you do add water to the rear tires, it needs to be an appropriate antifreeze mix.
  10. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    Very nice. That bucket is unusually large. Maybe they moved loose hay with it? Definitely couldn't fill it up with dirt.
  11. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    Spent all my teen years on a farm and many, many hours on a Ford 4000.
  12. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    So I noticed your drops are quite close together. Is the intention to never have to use more than a few feet of hose or are those drops going to specific pieces of equipment (eg. blast cabinet)? I have a 40'x40' shop and was actually not going to put in any drops unless it was for specific...
  13. WarDamnEagle

    35 Years in the Making!

    Nicely done. I have had the flake system (polyaspartic though) in two garages and I really liked the way it cleaned up. What I didn't like was finding an M4 nut after I dropped it. For some reason that flake tends to camouflage everything.
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