I have an opportunity to pick up a decent bandsaw cheaply. Problem is that
I literally have no room for it. I can barely get around my workshop since
I replaced my tabletop jointer with a real one; a bandsaw is out of the
question.
The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back a
car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of salt
and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very well.
Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
On Mon, 1 Nov 2004 08:11:13 -0600, "RonB" <[email protected]> wrote:
>If
>your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away from
>the tool areas.
If your vehicles are melting salty ice, then IMHO leave them outside
and keep them cold and frozen. I'd rather dig my way into the
driver's seat then have to patch rust.
"Doug Kanter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> The only thing I'd wonder about are stiff rubber belts in the winter. If
> your saw has belts, I wonder if the pullies might spin, and glaze the
> belts...or some such thing.
I've not experienced that. Of course, Craftsman tools are superior than
most anyway.
OTOH, I've never had that problems with belts on any of my vehicles and they
sit out in very cold temperatures.
"Andy Dingley" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Mon, 1 Nov 2004 08:11:13 -0600, "RonB" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >If
> >your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away
from
> >the tool areas.
>
> If your vehicles are melting salty ice, then IMHO leave them outside
> and keep them cold and frozen. I'd rather dig my way into the
> driver's seat then have to patch rust.
>
Wash the vehicle every week or two in the winter time and it won't rust any
faster than if you never parked it in a garage. Today's cars are protected
in one way or another - either undercoated from the factory, zinc coated, or
they use plastic inner fenders. No need to shovel out the car anymore just
in the hope of preventing rust. In fact - that never really was much of a
way of preventing the rust. Now, if you're looking for a reason to justify
expanding the shop into the car bay...
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
In article <Ztrhd.40859$EZ.9487@okepread07>, [email protected] says...
> A lot of us work from garages or have to share our shops with other
> machinery including vehicles. Just keep the tools clean and the bare metal
> protected. You'll get table top rust even without vehicles and salt. If
> your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away from
> the tool areas.
>
>
>
Yup me too. Garage full of tools in Western MA. Just get a can of
Johnson's Paste wax for the unpainted cast iron and you should be fine!!
In article <ky6ld.3$iR.0@lakeread04>, [email protected] says...
> Johnson's Paste wax.. That works?
>
> I had a real problem with a new cast iron table saw rusting last year.
> Ended up sanding it down, and clear coating it. Which made it look
> fantastic - until I actually began using it.
>
> Dave
>
>
>
>
> "WhoKnows" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > In article <Ztrhd.40859$EZ.9487@okepread07>, [email protected] says...
> >> A lot of us work from garages or have to share our shops with other
> >> machinery including vehicles. Just keep the tools clean and the bare
> >> metal
> >> protected. You'll get table top rust even without vehicles and salt. If
> >> your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away
> >> from
> >> the tool areas.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> > Yup me too. Garage full of tools in Western MA. Just get a can of
> > Johnson's Paste wax for the unpainted cast iron and you should be fine!!
>
>
>
It works surprisingly well. I have to re-coat about every 2 to 3 weeks
in the winter, (I run an unvented heater that creates a lot of
moisture). In the summer I coat it once and I'm good until fall.
Another good byproduct of waxing the cast is that the material glides
over the surface. Try it out. I don't think you'll regret it!
Later,
"toller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have an opportunity to pick up a decent bandsaw cheaply. Problem is
that
> I literally have no room for it. I can barely get around my workshop
since
> I replaced my tabletop jointer with a real one; a bandsaw is out of the
> question.
>
> The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back a
> car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of
salt
> and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very
well.
>
> Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
>
>
I kept a table saw in the garage for two years. No harm done. However, I
picked up a used shipping pallet, but a cheap ply top on it, and kept the
saw on that. That took care of wet, salty puddles. Fortunately, moisture
never travels sideways in my garage. If it does in yours, someone's driving
the cars in MUCH too fast.
The only thing I'd wonder about are stiff rubber belts in the winter. If
your saw has belts, I wonder if the pullies might spin, and glaze the
belts...or some such thing.
"Steven and Gail Peterson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have had tools - RAS, surface planer and others in a garage for years.
I
> got some cheap painters drop clothes, and cover them up. Dew and moisture
> settle, so covering over seems to keep them rust free. On the other hand,
> my jointer was in the basement, but under a water pipe that sweated and
> dripped. Result, rust. Sometimes you can't win.
Must have been a pain the butt hauling wood between the garage and the
basement when you were milling wood. :-)
Bob
A lot of us work from garages or have to share our shops with other
machinery including vehicles. Just keep the tools clean and the bare metal
protected. You'll get table top rust even without vehicles and salt. If
your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away from
the tool areas.
Ba r r y <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 17:59:46 GMT, "toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> >The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back a
> >car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of salt
> >and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very well.
> >
> >Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
> >
>
>
> Mine, along with the rest of my tools are in a basement. Also in the
> basement is the laundry facilities, a furnace, and a kerosene heater.
>
> According to my Garret Wade humidity clock, I run about 75-85%
> humidity in the summer and 45-50% in the winter.
>
> My tools seem to be OK, but I'm pretty good about waxing them.
>
> Barry
A quick wipedown of the bright parts with WD-40 and then put a plastic
bin liner over the saw between uses. No worries.
FoggyTown
"toller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have an opportunity to pick up a decent bandsaw cheaply. Problem is
that
> I literally have no room for it. I can barely get around my workshop
since
> I replaced my tabletop jointer with a real one; a bandsaw is out of the
> question.
>
> The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back a
> car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of
salt
> and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very
well.
>
> Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
>
>
My wood shop is also my motorcycle garage/shop. My stuff's doing fine thus
far.
I would think that a plastic cover would cause condensation to be trapped
inside, and thus would use a cloth cover. This is what is recommended for
storing items such as outboard motors over the winter ... cover in cloth -
like an old sheet.
I am in a similar situation as Mike - in that the only place to put a
bandsaw would be in my garage - and wanting to use it through the winter.
"Mike Girouard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Ba r r y <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:<[email protected]>...
>> On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 17:59:46 GMT, "toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>> >The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back
>> >a
>> >car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of
>> >salt
>> >and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very
>> >well.
>> >
>> >Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
>> >
>>
>>
>> Mine, along with the rest of my tools are in a basement. Also in the
>> basement is the laundry facilities, a furnace, and a kerosene heater.
>>
>> According to my Garret Wade humidity clock, I run about 75-85%
>> humidity in the summer and 45-50% in the winter.
>>
>> My tools seem to be OK, but I'm pretty good about waxing them.
>>
>> Barry
>
> A quick wipedown of the bright parts with WD-40 and then put a plastic
> bin liner over the saw between uses. No worries.
>
> FoggyTown
On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 17:59:46 GMT, "toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back a
>car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of salt
>and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very well.
>
>Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
>
Mine, along with the rest of my tools are in a basement. Also in the
basement is the laundry facilities, a furnace, and a kerosene heater.
According to my Garret Wade humidity clock, I run about 75-85%
humidity in the summer and 45-50% in the winter.
My tools seem to be OK, but I'm pretty good about waxing them.
Barry
Johnson's Paste wax.. That works?
I had a real problem with a new cast iron table saw rusting last year.
Ended up sanding it down, and clear coating it. Which made it look
fantastic - until I actually began using it.
Dave
"WhoKnows" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <Ztrhd.40859$EZ.9487@okepread07>, [email protected] says...
>> A lot of us work from garages or have to share our shops with other
>> machinery including vehicles. Just keep the tools clean and the bare
>> metal
>> protected. You'll get table top rust even without vehicles and salt. If
>> your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away
>> from
>> the tool areas.
>>
>>
>>
> Yup me too. Garage full of tools in Western MA. Just get a can of
> Johnson's Paste wax for the unpainted cast iron and you should be fine!!
On Sat, 30 Oct 2004 19:24:06 -0400, "Matt" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I would think that a plastic cover would cause condensation to be trapped
>inside,
Depends on your climate.
In Canada it's cold - too cold for winter condensation to be a big
problem. Move South though and winter is wet enough to be damp, and
cold enough to condense - so your concern over plastic covers becomes
a real issue. Here in Rightpondia though, our winters are wet and
barely cold. My workshop doesn't have condensation problems _on_ the
machines, but it certainly does up near the roof. My bg problem for
January is indoor rain dripping off the roof. So my plastic covers go
on every night.
"toller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have an opportunity to pick up a decent bandsaw cheaply. Problem is
that
> I literally have no room for it. I can barely get around my workshop
since
> I replaced my tabletop jointer with a real one; a bandsaw is out of the
> question.
>
> The only place I could use it would be in my garage; easy enough to back a
> car out when I need the bandsaw. However, the cars bring in plenty of
salt
> and moisture (upstate NY) and I am concerned it will not survive very
well.
>
> Anyone doing this successfully? Or, anyone destroy a tool trying it?
>
>
Hey toller, I'm in upstate also - Syracuse area. My tools are all in my
garage and no problems at all. They've been out there for over 10 years.
Obviously you don't want your equipment to stand in water that drips off the
cars, but other than that you should have no problems at all.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
I've got my tools in my garage here in Michigan and have never had a problem
with the cold and the belts on any of my tools. Usually, I'm the one that
gets too cold to work and I go in for a cup of coffee and never make it back
out. Oh! for a heated shop.........
"Doug Kanter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> The only thing I'd wonder about are stiff rubber belts in the winter. If
> your saw has belts, I wonder if the pullies might spin, and glaze the
> belts...or some such thing.
>
>
I have had tools - RAS, surface planer and others in a garage for years. I
got some cheap painters drop clothes, and cover them up. Dew and moisture
settle, so covering over seems to keep them rust free. On the other hand,
my jointer was in the basement, but under a water pipe that sweated and
dripped. Result, rust. Sometimes you can't win.
Steve
"dave" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:ky6ld.3$iR.0@lakeread04...
> Johnson's Paste wax.. That works?
>
> I had a real problem with a new cast iron table saw rusting last year.
> Ended up sanding it down, and clear coating it. Which made it look
> fantastic - until I actually began using it.
>
> Dave
>
>
>
>
> "WhoKnows" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> In article <Ztrhd.40859$EZ.9487@okepread07>, [email protected] says...
>>> A lot of us work from garages or have to share our shops with other
>>> machinery including vehicles. Just keep the tools clean and the bare
>>> metal
>>> protected. You'll get table top rust even without vehicles and salt.
>>> If
>>> your vehicles melt salty ice onto the floor overnight, keep swept away
>>> from
>>> the tool areas.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> Yup me too. Garage full of tools in Western MA. Just get a can of
>> Johnson's Paste wax for the unpainted cast iron and you should be fine!!
>
>