MD

"Morris Dovey"

18/07/2007 10:57 AM

Arrgh! - Almost had a new shop location...

Spotted in the paper last night:

GREAT STARTER HOME, 2-story, 3BR,
gutted, new roof & sided, fixer-
upper located in Red Oak, Iowa,
$2,800.

It was, of course, sold before I could get through on the phone. :-(

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/


This topic has 10 replies

Jj

Jeff

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 10:03 AM

On Jul 18, 11:57 am, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Spotted in the paper last night:
>
> GREAT STARTER HOME, 2-story, 3BR,
> gutted, new roof & sided, fixer-
> upper located in Red Oak, Iowa,
> $2,800.
>
> It was, of course, sold before I could get through on the phone. :-(
>

Damn! They're giving away houses in Iowa.....

Po

"Pounds on Wood"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 3:37 PM


"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>> Back to my cramped shop,
>
> I'm dreaming of one of these days being able to rip an 8' board without
> cutting it down to 95" AND removing the top drawer out of the built-in
> cabinet on the wall on the outfeed side.
>

Home Depot will cut your lumber for you :-)

--
********
Bill Pounds
http://www.billpounds.com

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 6:08 PM

"Pounds on Wood" wrote in message
>
> Home Depot will cut your lumber for you :-)

Sure thing ... with a tolerance of 1/8" a foot, I'll be sure to bring the
next load of QSWO straight over there. :)

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 6/1/07
KarlC@ (the obvious)

AR

"Allen Roy"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

18/07/2007 9:05 PM

I feel your pain. ;-) My wife and I have been looking at houses for about a
year. Either the house is too small, out of our price range, no room to
build a shop, etc. We go to an open house this past weekend. Nice big house,
30x40 shop (with DC to stay with), pool, and plenty of storage barns (4 of
them at a minimum of 12x20). We fall in love and confirm our mortgage amount
and make an offer the next day. I almost cried when they accepted an offer 2
hours before us.

Back to my cramped shop,
Allen

"Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Spotted in the paper last night:
>
> GREAT STARTER HOME, 2-story, 3BR,
> gutted, new roof & sided, fixer-
> upper located in Red Oak, Iowa,
> $2,800.
>
> It was, of course, sold before I could get through on the phone. :-(
>
> --
> Morris Dovey
> DeSoto Solar
> DeSoto, Iowa USA
> http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/
>
>

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 12:19 PM

Jeff wrote:
| On Jul 18, 11:57 am, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote:
|| Spotted in the paper last night:
||
|| GREAT STARTER HOME, 2-story, 3BR,
|| gutted, new roof & sided, fixer-
|| upper located in Red Oak, Iowa,
|| $2,800.
||
|| It was, of course, sold before I could get through on the phone.
|| :-(
|
| Damn! They're giving away houses in Iowa.....

Not very often. Average price of a new home in the Des Moines area is
something like a quarter-million.

From the description, I guessed that this house had been fire-damaged.
Red Oak, however nice a town it might be, has a population about 6000
and is a fair distance from almost anywhere that might show up on a
map of the USA (the closest such features would be the Missouri River
and Omaha).

Remote is nice until you think about such things as TV, internet
connectivity, theaters, restaurants, car repairs, lumberyards,...

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

wn

"woodstuff"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

20/07/2007 12:23 AM

<snip>

| I'm dreaming of one of these days being able to rip an 8' board without
| cutting it down to 95" AND removing the top drawer out of the built-in
| cabinet on the wall on the outfeed side.

I don't have such a small space, but me and most everyone and every type of
shop has "real estate" problems.
It just comes with the territory. I'm thinking I will have to build on to
the rear of the shop to accomodate the dust collector and compressor and
have more storage space for sheet stock. But I know that I will still be
rolling around machines for the rest of my life.

woodstuff


Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 9:53 AM

"Patriarch" wrote in message

> It's a law of the hobbyist workshop. One to 4 dimensions of the space
will
> be inadequate at any given time. And that doesn't account for the next
> generation working on a 'small project', and leaving huge disorganization
> behind in their wake. ;-)

Yabbut, I routinely build _entire_ kitchens in this palatial space. :(

But it does get hilarious to watch, I'd bet.

Where there's a will!... and I'm happy to have a shop to do it in, and bitch
about. :)

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 6/1/07
KarlC@ (the obvious)

Pg

Patriarch

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 8:38 AM

"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
<snip>
>> Back to my cramped shop,
>
> I'm dreaming of one of these days being able to rip an 8' board
> without cutting it down to 95" AND removing the top drawer out of the
> built-in cabinet on the wall on the outfeed side.
>

It doesn't necessarily get better. The problem just moves around. To rip
a 12' board, I have to clear the west end of the workbench, and roll the
Unisaw out into the driveway. That generally ends up being a 45 minute
task, because of all the related 'stuff'.

It's a law of the hobbyist workshop. One to 4 dimensions of the space will
be inadequate at any given time. And that doesn't account for the next
generation working on a 'small project', and leaving huge disorganization
behind in their wake. ;-)

It's my mess. I used to know where my stuff was.

Or maybe that's a different problem.

Patriarch

md

mac davis

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 9:58 AM

On Thu, 19 Jul 2007 08:38:16 -0500, Patriarch <[email protected]>
wrote:

>"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in
>news:[email protected]:
><snip>
>>> Back to my cramped shop,
>>
>> I'm dreaming of one of these days being able to rip an 8' board
>> without cutting it down to 95" AND removing the top drawer out of the
>> built-in cabinet on the wall on the outfeed side.
>>
>
>It doesn't necessarily get better. The problem just moves around. To rip
>a 12' board, I have to clear the west end of the workbench, and roll the
>Unisaw out into the driveway. That generally ends up being a 45 minute
>task, because of all the related 'stuff'.
>
>It's a law of the hobbyist workshop. One to 4 dimensions of the space will
>be inadequate at any given time. And that doesn't account for the next
>generation working on a 'small project', and leaving huge disorganization
>behind in their wake. ;-)
>
>It's my mess. I used to know where my stuff was.
>
>Or maybe that's a different problem.
>
>Patriarch

I hear the part about clearing the bench... *sigh*

It must be some kind of law of physics or something that says that the more flat
surfaces you have in the shop, the more things you find to lay there
"temporarily"..

My saw is in a 15' x 40' carport and I still have to move junk and roll tools
out of the way to cut long stuff..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 18/07/2007 10:57 AM

19/07/2007 7:03 AM

"Allen Roy" wrote in message

> We go to an open house this past weekend. Nice big house,
> 30x40 shop (with DC to stay with), pool, and plenty of storage barns (4 of
> them at a minimum of 12x20). We fall in love and confirm our mortgage
amount
> and make an offer the next day. I almost cried when they accepted an offer
2
> hours before us.

Hell, that made me cry!

> Back to my cramped shop,

I'm dreaming of one of these days being able to rip an 8' board without
cutting it down to 95" AND removing the top drawer out of the built-in
cabinet on the wall on the outfeed side.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 6/1/07
KarlC@ (the obvious)







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