[AT] Talking about shops/sheds (hot water heat)

charlie hill charliehill at embarqmail.com
Tue Feb 15 05:17:25 PST 2011


Al and Mike,  There are some new outdoor wood furnaces on the market that 
are EPA compliant, use gasification  technology and are highly efficient. 
Al you could heat the house and the shop with one of these.   The link is to 
a model I'm familiar with (familiar from the Internet, not from actual 
experience).  I'm sure there are many others. 
http://www.woodgasificationfurnace.com/

-----Original Message----- 
From: Mike 1countryguy
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2011 7:13 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] Talking about shops/sheds (hot water heat)


If you build, consider hot water (in floor heat).  Yes, extra expense, but 
unless you are getting younger the warmth is constant, the temp recovers 
quickly, and snow melts of equipment overnight, and YOUR feet are warm on 
concrete.

My building went up 3 months after my two century old barn built in the 
1860's went down in the wind.  It is 48 by 88, has a 32 by 48 shop with 16 
ft ceiling (too low now), and a 16 by 14 insulated overhead door (to little 
now).

Plan, plan and plan.  Get some graph paper and then cut out the equip. size, 
shop tools, work benches and storage and move the cutouts all over the shop 
as you plan.   Find a jib hoist somewhere and build the shop around it or 
even some steel out of an old factory and go to an overhead hoist, but do 
either of these first then build.

Even if u have to only build the heated shop part first, with deep concrete, 
insulated under it and the the heated pipe (antifreez) (sealed system).  Use 
lots of rebar and a 6 bag fiber mix.  (my floor has never cracked in ten 
years).  But took a yr of heat in the floor to get it Not to look like a 
holstein with spots!

If you are a farmer/and/or have access to wood and want to heat your home 
along with the shop, an outdoor wood furnace is a must (unless u have free 
gas).

Just my thoughts about a building and yes, i did plan and plan, but plans 
change too.  Oh, plan for expansion....trust me the heated shop will save u 
money, cause you can disappear whenever to a place that your wrenches are 
still where u left them and (no snow on them).

I would be glad to share any thing else if anybody is interested (after I 
get back from the National Farm Machinery show in Louisville, Ky.)

> From: jerry38 at windstream.net
> To: at at lists.antique-tractor.com
> Date: Mon, 14 Feb 2011 23:39:04 -0500
> Subject: Re: [AT] Talking about shops/sheds
>
> Al, just helped a friend finish out a 30x60 here in NW Ohio, $15,700 for
> the polebarn with a 16x14 slider, a 16x14 overhead door, he has 14' eves,
> one walk door and 2 windows.
>
> He floored 30x30 with hotwater piping, inside wall has a 16x14 slider
> between the shop area and the storage area.
> Concret is about $90 a yd or about $5 sq ft for finished floor, $4500
>
> Check around your area and see what is being put up, talk to the owners, 
> if
> you see a new one going up stop and talk with the builder, it's the best 
> way
> to see what is going on in your area, I'd bet you will not see any block
> one, hope this helps
>
> Jerry NW Ohio
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Al Jones" <farmallsupera at earthlink.net>
> To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" 
> <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> Sent: Monday, February 14, 2011 6:59 PM
> Subject: [AT] Talking about shops/sheds
>
>
> > Not to go into too much detail, my wife and I hope to build a house 
> > soon.
> >
> > Along with it, I want a real, concrete floored, maybe with a woodstove,
> > place to work on my relics out of the rain, shop. A good 
> > friend/colleague
> > and I were talking today, he's a licensed electrician and has done
> > masonry/construction most of his life before he started teaching. We got
> > on the subject of shops and I asked him what was the "best" in terms of
> > cost.
> >
> > He's a big fan of cinderblock construction. I have always leaned towards
> > pole barns, mostly from all of those beautiful Morton Buildings ads in
> > Successful Farming magazine I have looked at since I was a kid....he 
> > said
> > by the time I bought the metal for the siding, I could spend about the
> > same amount for cinderblocks.
> >
> > So I know this has been hashed and re-hashed in some way or another, but
> > what's the "best?" Pole barn, masonry, or what? I want this to be my
> > "forever" shop, and want it to last. I know it won't be big enough, etc.
> > etc. etc. BTW I'm thinking about something like a 30x50 or 30x60, with
> > part of it being bona-fide shop and the rest storage/machinery parking. 
> > I
> > want at least a 12' high door, for "real" farm equipment as well as
> > antiques, 14' if I can afford it. What kind of cost/square foot to 
> > build,
> > etc?
> >
> > One thing I am thinking on is pouring the floor only for the actual
> > "shop," (about 30x30)and having a wall separating the rest from the 
> > "shop"
> > and then gravel for the rest of the floor as a way to cut costs.
> > Thoughts?
> >
> > This is a bit rambling I know, but I'd like to get some thoughts and
> > Ideas. The #1 consideration is cost, but the building must be durable.
> > The whole thing may be a pipe dream but if we build a home as we plan,
> > this may be my only chance....
> >
> > Have at it,
> > Al
> > _______________________________________________
> > AT mailing list
> > http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
>
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at

_______________________________________________
AT mailing list
http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at 




More information about the AT mailing list