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Workshops
and Machines
This page is about my small workshop and I'll also want to walk you through
some of the excellent workshops others have created. There is a lot of
inspiration to be had there.

I'm usually behind the camera, but I thought you
should see it really is me running the machines!
My
Home Shop
As I write this, my shop
is about the size of a 2 stall garage, though it is not laid out as such.
I have a small room (actually slightly smaller than one stall) where the
machines live that is adjacent to my garage. The garage itself is three
stalls wide, but my show borrows an additional single stall of space at present.
Of course it is in constant need of organizational upgrades, and so it
is a work in progress like a lot of shops.
I build all sorts of things in the shop, but mostly tooling. Aside from tooling I've done gunsmithing, automotive, PC customization, and whatever strikes my fancy. When you have a machine shop in the garage there isn't much holding you back!
The best feature so far
has been the wall organizer system which is bar none the nicest help to
getting organized I have yet seen. In fact, I'm going to wind up blowing
the budget putting this stuff in a lot more places than I had originally
planned. Still, a well organized shop is a happy, clean, and neat shop,
or at least it could be if I would keep it so. Hmmm.
Most of these pictures are
a bit dated. There's a lot more junk in the shop, the wall organizer system
is loaded with goodies, and I desperately need to give the shop a thorough
cleaning followed by rephotographing everything. Too many other projects
ahead of that pious effort though!
Floor
Plan

Above is the
general layout of the machine room. The door at lower right opens onto
the big garage. There are several machines in the room, including a lathe,
a mill, a bandsaw, a tool grinder, and a drill press. There is an area
dedicated to layout, with a granite surface plate as well. There is a
fantastic view of Monterey Bay right out the windows. Very inspirational!
Wall
Organizer

That red wall organizer system works as well as
it looks!
This cool product
can be found at WallOrganizer.com.
I had originally intended to install ordinary pegboard, and was looking
for a site that had tons of cool pegboard accessories. This stuff is much
better than pegboard! With it, you can really organize your shop nicely.
It's not cheap, but I thought it was worth every penny. The panels are
galvanized heavy gauge steel, and can be had in a variety of colors. I
like my "Racer Red" because it matches a lot of red accents
in the adjoining garage. A variety of accessories are available, and the
panels accept normal pegboard items as well. So far I have exclusively
been using the slots, which seem a lot stronger.
I started with
their deluxe workshop kit and some extra panels. You will find it isn't
enough, but it will get you a prototype to help you plan the remainder
of the job. In other words, it has a smattering of all their basic wallboard
fixtures that you can play with to decide what kind of layout works best
before ordering more.
Measurement
and Layout Area

The Measurement and Layout Area with Surface Plate...
There are
a lot of specialized tools involved in measurement and layout, and I like
to keep them all together where they can be organized. The center piece
of this area is my granite surface plate with digital height gage. If
you don't have one of these, you're missing out because they really expand
your capabilities for precision and are not all that expensive. I don't
know what I'd do without the gadgets in this end of my shop.
Small
Parts and Cutting Stock Organizer

Parts and Material Storage Rack

Any home shop
accumulates a ton of little bits and pieces that need to be organized
as well as needing to organize the raw materials. My brother and I built
this rack from hardboard and pine in a quick few hours with a circular
saw and dado blade. The idea was to create small cubbies that are perfect
for the small plastic parts organizers you see on the far left. It's a
very efficient utilizer of space that gives me a lot of capacity. Of course
the red matches the wall organizer and looks good in the shop as well!

Label the plastic parts organizers on the top and
side...
Here's something
else I started doing that saves me a step. I keep my hardware in the organizer
boxes by size. I find it saves me time if I keep the tap and die in the
box instead of in the tap and die set:

Taps and Dies are kept with the hardware for easy
access. Eventually I'll keep the correct bit for the tap there as well
when I get some extras.
PC and CNC Mini-Router

Lathe

Industrial Hobbies Mill and Drill Press

A manual mill...

And a CNC mill...
Tool Boxes

Two toolboxes are full of tooling for lathe
and mill. Gray boxes on left are a stack of Huot holders for drill bits,
end mills, and taps. The desk organizer on the left keeps the little bits
straight, and the plastic box is one of several I use to keep parts together
for projects that are in progress.
Welding Station

A welding
station I built on top of a rolling tool chest.
Machines
I Have Known
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Machine
Lathe
Notes,
tips, modifications, and reference materials for the machine lathe.
Mine is a Lathemaster 9x30.
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Milling
Machine
My
notes, tips, modifications, and reference materials for my Industrial
Hobbies milling machine.
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Tooling
Whaddya
know: those guys that said you'd spend more on tooling than machines?
They were right! Doh! I hate when that happens...
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Measuring
and Layout
Measuring
and layout are the foundations for precision.
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Welding
Kit
Welding
Kit. I've always liked that English turn of phrase, which does not
mean "some assembly required", but rather, "here's
all my welding related stuff." I've picked up a nice Miller
Tig on eBay, an ESAB plasma cutter that is probably too powerful,
and an oxy-fuel rig I've had for years for heating up stubborn rusted
stuff I needed to get loose. I took two semesters of community college
course of welding self-enrichment, which I enjoyed tremendously.
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Other
Machines
Drill
press, grinders, buffers, air tools, and bandsaws: Oh my!
And
don't forget Blanch, the mini-Blanchard
"swing" grinder I got to use as a surface grinder
until my shop space can be expanded enough for a regular surface
grinder.
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Home
Shop Hall of Fame
What consitutes a Great
Home Shop worthy of inclusion in the Hall of Fame? These are photos and
short bios I've collected during my Internet travels of fellow home shop
machinists that I was really impressed by. Hopefully
they don't mind the hero worship!
Note that
there are many more great home machinists I list on my web
links page. It isn't that those on this page are better machinists,
but rather that they presented their workshops and it is those shops that
really appealed to me. Some of the great machinists never show a photo
of a shop, so it would be hard to credit them here. I wish someone would
publish a coffee table book about great home workshops, similar to the
Ultimate Garages book which
I enjoyed so much.

A Home
Shop Hall of Famer...
The Hall of
Fame is a photo tour. Take the tour by clicking
here to go to the Hall of Fame Home Page.
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