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Shed arrangements/organisation. Show us your best and worst

Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2013 10:29 pm
by T.Farm.Brumby
Great idea from 60766244 the other day. Just to get a look at everyone's set-ups and organisation for their sheds, might pick up an idea here or there :)

So here's the organisation in my outfit.

These are the shelves we made. Not the prettiest or really the sturdiest things in the world but they get the job done. The job being, getting stuff off the ground and keeping it there
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These are also a ridiculously handy thing. Couple of different ways of having them too (you can see another rack of shelves in the back of this one too, same address)
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Random bits and bobs with no other home. Plus the most damn well organised grouping of sockets you've ever seen
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Fishing/camping "storage"
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Any and every kind of idea welcome, just trying to get a bit more organised and I reckon a lot of you would have some good arrangements.

Cheers,
Tom.

Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2013 10:39 pm
by Silverbullet
Good idea! I'll take some pics of our tiny shed tomorrow. We're getting it up to quite a nice "small workshop" status now, but keeping the bench free and a decent space to walk around in is a never ending battle. More than half the floor space is taken up with my car parts :oops:

Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2013 10:51 pm
by T.Farm.Brumby
Silverbullet wrote:Good idea! I'll take some pics of our tiny shed tomorrow. We're getting it up to quite a nice "small workshop" status now, but keeping the bench free and a decent space to walk around in is a never ending battle. More than half the floor space is taken up with my car parts :oops:
Mate, preaching to the choir hahah. I'm working out of one shed, dad has another (but hates working on vehicles, the fool) so that one's full of camping and farm gear.

Half the floor space in my shed is now taken up with spare Brumby gear and bits and pieces I have yet to install. Never a free bench, always have less than half a metre of space around the vehicle inside the shed :(

Exhibit A: Roxy driven into 1 bay of my shed, other bay is entirely full of gear, and so I have to starve myself for 2 days before doing any work or I don't fit in there with the bitch :p
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Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2013 10:54 pm
by niterida
Old Shed :
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New Shed :
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Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2013 11:06 pm
by T.Farm.Brumby
niterida wrote:Old Shed :
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How do you do this???

I'll get a picture of my whole shed with no car in it tomorrow, it's to the point of embarrassing compared to this :-(

Even the bloody concrete is clean!

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 12:39 am
by 60766244
Digging this thread. :cool:

I'll post photos of mine once these new benches are done and all the tools have homes! Right now anarchy reigns. :rolleyes:

Niterida - That's superb looking!

Tom - Looks like you cram a lot in there. Reminds me of MTB92's shed before he scrubbed it out to build Nigel. Still looks fairly organized.

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 1:17 pm
by Silverbullet
This is our tiny shed as it is now, it's always changing though :)
View from the door
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Just inside, the grinder is by the door so the dust can go outside, also better light. Also where 1 set of spanners and sockets live, i've got another set in it's box.
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Shelves below where the power tools live, and my welder which needs to go on a trolley under the bench soon.
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One end of the bench with trays for all the nuts, bolts, drill bits and misc
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And the other end of the shed with my engine, gearbox, diff, bike, bee hive boxes and the shelving on the right has my twin inlet manifold, carbs and other misc car parts :p
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Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 4:10 pm
by GOD
Silverbullet wrote:This is our tiny shed as it is now, it's always changing though :)
I'll see your tiny shed and raise you one miniscule shed:
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1.4 x 2.4 m storeroom, with another couple of workbenches out in the carport.

A somewhat more impressive shed:
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http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/show ... 22&page=14

Dane.

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 5:42 pm
by Silverbullet
Reading through that thread I think it's safe to say that guy isn't short of a few bob :roll: He must run a business out of that shop, there's no way known you'd need TWO surface grinders for personal use :o

*edit* AND a plunge EDM machine! :shock:

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 7:28 pm
by GOD
Bit jealous, mate? That shed (actually a few sheds, IIRC) belongs to a retired machinist - it's quite a few decades worth of accumulation. If you've got time to read the whole thread, he tells the stories of some of his machines.

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 8:16 pm
by Silverbullet
Little bit jealous, yes :oops: I did skim through the first 5 pages or so. Being an apprentice machinist/tool maker myself that sort of workshop in a home is like porn :o

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 10:55 pm
by 60766244
Just read that entire thread on Garage Journal. :o

I feel so inadequate. My whole life feels not enough. :P

So.

Much.

Tooling!

Here's me getting all excited about having grinders and a drill press. :rolleyes:

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 11:01 pm
by T.Farm.Brumby
All these professional and organised sheds :(

I've found this is a great use for welding rods which are either too rooted to use, or cracked and broken
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And this is a car-port we made about 6 or 7 years ago. Very handy considering there's no space for the vehicles inside the actual shed. Plus the height is brilliant, can stand on the roof of any car and pack all our gear+boat and everything without hitting our heads (considering at 6 foot 1 I'm the runt of the men in our family hahaha) and still be out of the rain :cool:
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Posted: Mon Mar 25, 2013 12:08 pm
by Rodeo4jake
That carport is nice, I need to get onto something like that.
Here's my disorganised disaster, I have just about everything you need for most projects, but then put all my Dads toys in there, plus the Cruiser & your out of room. I generally do all my work out the front of the shed now.

[ATTACH]4033[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]4034[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]4035[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]4036[/ATTACH]

Sometime it's neater than this, but I can find most things I want.

Cheers Jake

Posted: Mon Mar 25, 2013 2:20 pm
by T.Farm.Brumby
Rodeo4jake wrote: Sometime it's neater than this, but I can find most things I want.
Always the way haha, mine's about the same about 80% of the time.

This is about the strength of my organisation, the only complete kits I have organised right now. About 4 times this strewn around the sheds waiting to be sorted.
(in order)
Metric spanners - screwdrivers - mini socket set - red and blue are imperial socket sets - on top metrinch socket and spanner set - metric socket set - imperial spanner set

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Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 6:02 am
by Cliff R
Well, I can only look on with envy.
I have a 6 x 6m shed that is about 6 years old, professionally built and I can only just get into the door.
I mean, I can only get in about 3 metres and thats it.
If I want to go any further I have to climb over stuff.
The poor MY sits outside under a car cover (a good quality one though)
I think a smaller space is easier to keep clean.

Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 7:00 am
by steptoe
mmm. minimalist was my theory too :( . I am sure if I had more shed space I'd have more crap (all very useful of course)
In trying to keep some sort of order of small stuff I use Aussie made Starmaid 1 litre lunch boxes @ about 3 for $2.50 - got a heap at a 50% off sale. Have about three empties and 70 full of stuff. Then the bigger 15 or so litre clear plastic boxes made somewhere in Victoria. Keeps their filth inside or outside filth out, keeps things together, easy to see trough the clear plastic!.

Shees, don't even think of moving !

Posted: Sun Apr 14, 2013 10:41 pm
by 60766244
I think this is the right thread to put it, as well, this thread inspired the line of thought, as well as the GJ site linked here too.

I have a question:

If you could have the "Ultimate" shed - how would you have it?

On a practical level. Think of it for your block, or where you eventually want to live or how you eventually want to work in it. Push the idea of $$ imposed impossibilities and let that imagination flow... :D

Maybe we can all divine some inspiration and ideas.

I know some of you here have mad skills drawing/drafting and some can do 3D modelling (Google Sketchup) so I'd like to see your ideas.

I'll post my idea up tomorrow once I've done the finishing touches. :)


Edit: P.S. I hope you don't consider this a thread hijacking T.Farm.Brumby. ;)

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 7:43 am
by steptoe
a pit and a hoist for starters. Haven't used a pit since my L Sedan was waiting to be sold new but gees always wanted access to one since - no creaking hoists for starters :D , hoist legs to bang head on but they were a little dusty sweeping up the kitty litter :(

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 5:37 pm
by Silverbullet
Oh man, dream sheds? Where do you even start with that? :rolleyes: I guess imposing cost and viability limits on it makes it a bit easier hehe.

I would have at least a double garage with roller doors, ideally with a large space in front of the cars for the rest of my shed/workshop. In the workshop I would have a section with benches and storage dedicated to automotive work and repair with things like spanners, sockets, compressor, air tools etc. Part of this would be a large storage rack with big organized tubs for spare parts and bits.
The bench would follow a wall around the back of my "shed" to the other side which would be my mini engineering workshop. So stuff like my welder (with a special metal top flat welding bench for fab work) Drawers and toolboxes full of measuring and metal cutting tools, misc engineering tools. Then at the end of this bench I would have a decent sized lathe with shelving for associated metal stock and turning tools. Also a large pin board or whiteboard for sketching up ideas and notes.

Somewhere in there would be 2 big speakers and a stereo system, fridge and sink :) And of course ample power sockets and lighting. Maybe I'll have to re-install and re-learn sketchup and draw this out...