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Optimum workshop layout...?
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AdeV:
As I mentioned on another thread, I currently have the opportunity to re-arrange my workshop (due to the curse of having to move it to a new location); and I'm wondering what people's opinions are on an "ideal" layout. I realise that many workshops are constrained for various reasons; and, indeed, there are constraints in my new place; but I'm after ideas anyway...

So.... my current layout is roughly as per this Crap-o-Cad:



The above, being a bit of an "area in the middle of a bigger space" had no convenient walls; there's no shelving & only a couple of kitchen style overhead cupboards. The current space is roughly 25ft long by a bit under 15ft wide, which made for a nice space between machines & benches in which to stand.

The new location is, in some ways, better; as I will have 2 walls on which to mount shelves & cupboards:



The space is a similar length to my current spread (which is great - it means I know I can duplicate my current layout, if I want to); I'd prefer to take up less than 15 ft of length however. I'd planned to put the mill in the left-hand corner, at a 45 degree angle; the lathe along the back wall - basically, very similar to the current setup. I figured this would give me room to put the kitchen units between the two items. The hacksaw I plan to mount on wheels & will simply drag it to where it's needed. The carbide grinder I never use, it will probably end up in storage unless I can get a regular cup abrasive wheel for it. The desk & benches I'd planned to simply follow the walls wherever they'd fit; this would make a very "linear" shop, so I'd plenty of workspace behind for my car project; but is that necessarily a sensible layout? e.g. would the lathe be better being lined up "tailstock pointing at the wall" (90 degrees to its current axis)? That would make it easy to get all around it, for cleaning etc., but would it just be a nusciance like that?

Any/all thoughts & crap-o-cads welcomed :)
nickle:
Without specifically answering any of your questions...

When moving into my new shed I drew the space to scale including location of doors, windows  and power points (you could add lighting if you wanted) and also drew the things I wanted to put in the space to scale (well as rectangular boxes anyway).

For a while I played around in the drawing program trying to arrange them on the screen but in the end I printed out everything and then cut out the furniture and tried the different combinations and locations.

It helped me get a feel for what was feasible and what was no good without lifting bits of heavy gear around.

Cheers,

Nickle
jim:
when i built my new shed, it seamed huge, i did scale drawings of everything and thought i'd got loads of room!

now its full and could easily be twice the size!!

Mrs Jim has said i could extend, but the cost/hassle really can't be justified at the moment :( :(

i've used every single bit of wall space, i ended up boarding the roof space out (insulation and it was the only way i'd stop hanging things from beams that then end up dropping on me!)

i think its important to do a scale drawing of each machine, with the working area included, (ie where you stand and reach to).

i look forward to seeing the finished shed (and no doubt a bit of shed gloating will follow!)
Boz:
I'm afraid, despite lots of measuring and planning, I've always ended up moving things around as it never seems to work as well as planned. My shop is only 2.8m x 2.4m so when I rebuilt it, I fitted French cleats around the walls and hang shelf units and tool-boards from them. And machinery is on casters, or has "retractable undercarriage". So it is easy to rearrange. I think I'm on the third layout in two years now. Works well for me, and easy to shove stuff around when another toy... err, tool... arrives.

Boz
SemiSkilled:
Have u seen this before

http://grizzly.com/workshopplanner.aspx

Lee
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