After my dad retired, he constructed an 11'x11' shop behind his house, and bought a lathe and mill.
Dad ran a machine shop for many years, and so he had already accumulated a lot of tooling.
Dad ended up building about 38 engines, mostly steam, before his death in 2006.
I was not really into machining during his engine building years, but I did marvel at the efficiency of his little shop (efficiency being 40 lbs of machine tools and equipment shoehorned into a 5 lb shop).
I had to relocate all of it in 2006, and I used gallon baggies (hundreds of them), and many many storage boxes, to move it all.
Each baggie was labeled as to which wall or shelf the items were located on.
I started to put it all back in my shop exactly as it was in dad's shop, and considered hardwood walls, but then it became more of a shrine, and not a machine shop, so I put it in my way, and gave up on making it museum-like.
Dad's shop was always pretty clean, with very little swarf in sight, and so I assumed that machining was a clean affair.
Boy was I wrong about that.
Dad ran a machine shop for many years, and so he had already accumulated a lot of tooling.
Dad ended up building about 38 engines, mostly steam, before his death in 2006.
I was not really into machining during his engine building years, but I did marvel at the efficiency of his little shop (efficiency being 40 lbs of machine tools and equipment shoehorned into a 5 lb shop).
I had to relocate all of it in 2006, and I used gallon baggies (hundreds of them), and many many storage boxes, to move it all.
Each baggie was labeled as to which wall or shelf the items were located on.
I started to put it all back in my shop exactly as it was in dad's shop, and considered hardwood walls, but then it became more of a shrine, and not a machine shop, so I put it in my way, and gave up on making it museum-like.
Dad's shop was always pretty clean, with very little swarf in sight, and so I assumed that machining was a clean affair.
Boy was I wrong about that.
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