A question on one of my other shop-related threads brought me back here, so let's go through an update.
The focus of work shifted to the house (new kitchen, etc) so work stopped on the shop. But it's good enough that work can happen - I did a bunch of random work on the underside of the M5 and the Mini and the Targa Miata so the lift has been earning its keep. The big welding bench is covered in a Subaru engine build that will hopefully go into the Westie this weekend. It's still a little chaotic but the shop is functional. The rolling cabinet/workbenches have allowed me to reconfigure a few different times which is handy. More on that in a bit.
This necessated the buildup of the "house shop" up on the attached garage, I'll put up some info about that shortly. But this post is about the big shop.
The big thing has been heat. I realized late in the fall that I needed to do something about getting the heater up and running. If it was ever used before, it was probably propane powered. There are some concrete pads outside the shop that would take a tank or two. But the orifice size on the heater appears to be correct for natural gas. Weird. I looked at bringing in a big propane tank. I looked at using smaller tanks and swapping them out. I looked at running gas down from the house. Upon talking to a plumber, he recommended getting a new meter on the shop instead. Multiple reasons that were good ones, so that's what I decided to do. Running propane would be far less expensive to get going, but in the very long run simply having gas in the shop was the easiest option. I probably won't want to hump around 100 lb propane tanks in the middle of winter when I'm 20 years older. I'm not sure I want to do that now. Having the gas line responsible for the underground lines on the property means that breaks aren't my problem.
Step 1: call Xcel (the utility company). In order for the shop to have its own meter, it needs its own address.
Step 2: call the county. In under 10 minutes including pleasantries, I had a new address for the shop: Unit B. Seriously. That's all it takes.
Step 3: Call Xcel, give them the new address and request a new service. This was around Thanksgiving. I pulled anything that couldn't freeze out of the shop. Race tires, paint, fluids, etc. I even drained the coolant from the Targa Miata.
Then it gets slow. We got into a design phase with a shop in Denver. Then the design was submitted to Xcel and they gave me a quote that made me seriously question this. Still, you only pay once and you benefit for years, so I paid up. Then we waited. And waited. And waited. Finally, on April 26 I had a date for the work. I took the day off work and nobody showed up. Some phone calls and I was informed that it had been rescheduled and nobody had told me. I pointed out that nobody had ever actually come to lay eyeballs on the land, so the supervisor swung by. Once he actually saw the lot, he changed his plan from trenching to boring. A couple of days later, some really cool hardware showed up and they poked holes in my ground and ran some pipes. Done, right?
Well, no. Now the existing heater has to be inspected and tested, then a permit has to be pulled and the county has to sign off and then Xcel can install the meter. Then I can turn on the heater. Hopefully by next Thanksgiving. The weird thing is that the heater that I thought was running propane has an orifice sized for gas. We'll check pressures before lighting it up.
Phew. More later.