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sjoemie himself

Sjoemie's Workshop updates

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ri702bill

I too have switched to linkable LED 4 foot shop lights for a couple of reasons. They last a long time, they ARE bright, they do not buzz - and they start up full brightness in the cellar or garage when cold.

Door frame looks great - not a fan of full size glass for security reasons. (Unless that frame behind it it steel flat stock)

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ebinmaine

Excellent work there Mark.  

 

You'll like that LED lighting more and more every time you flip the switch.  

 

In the house and old shed we've been changing over to LEDs for years. When the barn shop needed lights of course that's what we put up. 

I had two friends from Redsquare in different parts of the country that recommended the exact same lights. 

We now have  8 foot shop lights on the high ceiling and some 4 footers in other areas. 

I went with these particular 8 ft  lights for several reasons. 

Angle of LED. These have 2 rows that aim out, not straight down. 

Color. White. VERY white. 

Brightness. Over the last few years I've been finding I need more lumens. 

And of course, cost. I'mma cheapskate.  ;)

 

I got a box of 10. 

There's 5 up now and the area is like daylight. 

 

On that door I really like the "use what ya have!" 

Will you be (re)-finishing that?

If that bottom piece is removable that should be done.  

Repaint and reinstall. 

 

Thanks for posting this!

Lookin' forward to seeing what develops.  

 

 

 

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sjoemie himself
10 hours ago, ri702bill said:

steel flat stock

Thanks! That is exactly what that is. 

 

About the lights buzzing, funny you mentioned that. I thought I was the only one that finds that annoying considering all the other noises in the shop :D

 

1 hour ago, ebinmaine said:

Will you be (re)-finishing that?

If that bottom piece is removable that should be done

 

Thanks Eric, I'm liking the lights already.

Door and frame will be repainted. The door had some spots where the paint was coming off so I sanded those parts down to check if the wood was still good in those areas.

 

I'm not 100% sure what you mean with the bottom piece? You mean the door or the doorframe?

I removed the old concrete sill/doorstep since the stainless doorframe has a built in doorstep.

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ebinmaine
Just now, sjoemie himself said:

Thanks! That is exactly what that is. 

 

About the lights buzzing, funny you mentioned that. I thought I was the only one that finds that annoying considering all the other noises in the shop :D

 

That buzzing is something I don't hear until I do... Then I can't stop hearing it. 

Definitely glad the new lights are silent.   

 

 

Just now, sjoemie himself said:

 

 

Thanks Eric, I'm liking the lights already.

Door and frame will be repainted. The door had some spots where the paint was coming off so I sanded those parts down to check if the wood was still good in those areas.

 

I thought you may have done so. 

 

 

Just now, sjoemie himself said:

 

I'm not 100% sure what you mean with the bottom piece? You mean the door or the doorframe?

 

The door itself.  

On SOME doors the lower flange (circled in red) is removable at the yellow line. 

Yours may or may not be.  

 

If it is you should pop that off and refinish, then reinstall.  

If not, just scratch around the edges a little (carefully) to be sure it's attached well protected by paint and/or sealed up right. 

 

Screenshot_20231126-053157~2.png

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sjoemie himself
3 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

lower flange (circled in red) is removable at the yellow line. 

Aha! Thanks I did'nt know that. I'll check that when I get to painting the door which might be a while since the weather is pretty sad at the moment. 

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sjoemie himself

The weather has been terrible so no progress on (painting) the door yet.

I did however start working on something I wanted to install for a long time which is a dust/fume extraction system. With all the welding, grinding and cutting going on it's sometimes not a very healthy environment despite using respiratory filters etc.

 

The system will have one central suction fan and 3 extraction points each with a valve.

One valve/hole will go above my welding area, one above my plasma cutter and a small one will get connected to a dust seperator on my blasting cabinet.

 

Christmas came early! A whole bunch of parts arrived last week.

20240127_170820.jpg.902cd45c1842a0405565300a8241b8c0.jpg

 

20240127_170830.jpg.922a4b3f80257f10987cf2d56f8254e4.jpg

 

I pre-fabbed the two big extraction points consisting of a 45° bend, a ring, a valve and a shroud(?) I think it's called. Cut holes in the ceiling and mounted the parts. That's a 200mm (~8") opening by the way.

20240129_205955.jpg.96d1b1469cf87e30e13fbeb4b276f232.jpg

 

20240129_210045.jpg.9a12136e09f2c27e5c47f09b9cd2875f.jpg

 

It was a busy weekend so I did'nt have too much time in the workshop but I did manage to prefab some more pieces.

This is the main section that will attach to the fan and where all the extraction points will connect to. Again, main section is 200mm/8" and the small end is 80mm/~3" which will go to the blasting cabinet (pictured below).

20240203_160132.jpg.b1459818617acc6d3376566a524e6093.jpg

 

20240203_194323.jpg.ab1298c96b199b9af3c07b64fd440ac8.jpg

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sjoemie himself

Lots of other things had to be done but some time was found to work on the dust extraction again. 

Making a 200mm hole without a holesaw was not a fun job. Plumbing the rest was though.

 

Center marked near the top of my garage/workshop.

20240210_100408.jpg.dc84ada90bcfe01828da89ff01d259c2.jpg

 

Lots of drilling.

20240210_102512.jpg.d262e59224a6d2d674a655bc4353b92e.jpg

 

We have a breakthrough. Nicely lined up with the fan.

20240210_110024.jpg.a2b3dd4b6cca77562c359b7aff75a85e.jpg

 

Exhaust weather cap installed.

20240210_110044.jpg.351b5c51278432f1ce33a40701c4ef96.jpg

 

Fitted with a nice coverplate.

 

20240210_163830.jpg.cecf83f1d271ee8b59c614478c38f29d.jpg

 

Tubing from the blasting cabinet making it's way up.

20240210_193451.jpg.53526828399d0e90ad4566733625fe3d.jpg

 

And the main collection tube hung in place.

The fan flows 930m3/hour or 547cfm. Should be enough.. I think..?? We'll see.

20240210_193520.jpg.a38e953c810e5043d6e9f1d683fcdafa.jpg

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