Ask Adam Savage: Making a "Renter Friendly" Home Workshop

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  • Опубліковано 1 сер 2024
  • In this live-stream excerpt, Adam answers questions from Tested members Joelle Brooke and Matt about making at-home workshops renter friendly as well as spacing out shop lights optimally. Thank you, Joelle and Matt, for your support and questions! Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam a question:
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 312

  • @tested
    @tested  2 роки тому +17

    Thank you, Joelle and Matt, for your support and questions!
    Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam a question:
    ua-cam.com/channels/iDJtJKMICpb9B1qf7qjEOA.htmljoin
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  • @Warden409
    @Warden409 2 роки тому +226

    I think a workshop building show starring Adam would be wonderful.
    But to extend the longevity of it, I think that showing more inexperience makers how they can improve upon the space and themselves would be good.
    Maybe visit some community workshops as well to highlight those spaces.
    The possibilites are real.
    *EDITS FOR PHONE SPELLING*

    • @timothywalsh1001
      @timothywalsh1001 2 роки тому +6

      2 subject show...
      Primary >> doing a makeover specific for the person's hobby.
      Secondary building a featured item used for the makeover.
      Maybe an additional segment on tiny shop that viewers submit, either to showcase how they solved a problem or a viewer who has one.
      Another segment on tiny tools maybe ??

    • @matthewpilkington7665
      @matthewpilkington7665 2 роки тому +3

      Maker's Eye for the Creative Guy . . . or Girl.

    • @juliettaylorswift
      @juliettaylorswift 2 роки тому +1

      has to have the workshop owner HEAVILY involved showing how the viewer can fix their shop too. To add more length, maybe use the shop to build something before and after the improvements to show how much it improves ease of use and/or speed.
      The hard part is for it to find the balance between diy and the Adam showing up with $10k to upgrade your shop ($10k picked as example from other shows). I think the best form of the show would be where as time goes on, the shops they go to are higher and higher quality because people applied the stuff from the show. To an extent the show will kinda kill itself because of the increasing shop qualities (in theory, but ask this old house is still a show too).

  • @jeremybresley
    @jeremybresley 2 роки тому +195

    Love the idea of a workshop setup show. Sounds like something that DIY or HGTV should be climbing over themselves to contact you about. Would love to see some different ideas for building a shop with various budgets (i.e. just starting out, expanding the shop, going pro, etc).

    • @juliettaylorswift
      @juliettaylorswift 2 роки тому +5

      really think it should be the shop owners budget. Yes maybe they get a bit from the show, but not "surprise here's $10k". But i do really like the idea of different tiers of people (skill and budget) as i'm sure there are obvious things to a "going pro" that the lower levels might not have realized.
      But has to have the workshop owner HEAVILY involved showing how the viewer can fix their shop too. To add more length, maybe use the shop to build something before and after the improvements to show how much it improves ease of use and/or speed.
      I think the best form of the show would be where as time goes on, the shops they go to are higher and higher quality because people applied the stuff from the show. To an extent the show will kinda kill itself because of the increasing shop qualities (in theory, but ask this old house is still a show too).

    • @manythingslefttobuild
      @manythingslefttobuild 2 роки тому +1

      I would add various available sizes as a factor independent of the budget. Having a 'large' screened balcony and minimal budget vs small closet with 'unlimited' budget would both be interesting. Allowable noise is another fun variable, nod to the Ukrainian guy blacksmithing on his open apartment balcony.

    • @juliettaylorswift
      @juliettaylorswift 2 роки тому

      @@manythingslefttobuild interesting...like a 3d scale composed of skill/experience, space, and budget. Well maybe more in line with 2d because more budget would generally be correlated to more space, but yes they are both separate quantifiers. Then on top of that are the harder to measure factors like noise, fumes, renting, HOA, climate, and so on.

    • @jerryfick613
      @jerryfick613 2 роки тому

      I would watch this, If you haven't seen Returning the Favor with Mike Rowe, that was a Facebook studios produced show and it was initially shown only on Facebook. I wonder if anyone over there might be interested in producing this sort of thing.

    • @adammiller2508
      @adammiller2508 2 роки тому +1

      💯 would watch. "Savage spaces" Fridays at 8

  • @jonmktchell
    @jonmktchell 2 роки тому +84

    On carpet maybe the best alternative floor is a raised platform. That way in the end the wear and tear will merely look like a piece of furniture sat there.
    You could put edges on this platform to prevent spills/leaks and seal with multiple layers as Adam suggests.

    • @carliegriffiths6290
      @carliegriffiths6290 2 роки тому

      Yeah i was thinking something like this. I mean a strong bed frame could make a good starter base.

  • @Allofthemonkeys
    @Allofthemonkeys 2 роки тому +40

    When I was a renter, I did lots of projects either outside, at a friend or family members house, or small things I could do in my apartment like leatherwork or sewing over model building or wood working. I own my house now, but my shop space is still small (10ftx12ft) so lots of my projects are done on sawhorses in the yard or carport

  • @brianwaskow5910
    @brianwaskow5910 2 роки тому +13

    I had a few buddies that rented an apartment. They also rented a large storage unit that had power, that is where they set up there shop. They had boxes of stuff in the front to help camouflage all the tools in the back. Mini frig and an old couch. The code would for it was "The Lodge."

  • @rabbitholeaverted9373
    @rabbitholeaverted9373 2 роки тому +7

    My mini-workshop tool-tip: There is a fantastic modular powertool system sold under two brands (Black&Decker "Matrix" and Craftsman "Bolt-on") where a drill-driver is two separate quick-connect pieces; the same driver is a saw or router or pump or sander etc with a quick swap of the tool-head. This has two advantages, it means a previously space-hogging huge range of power-tools suddenly fits in a tiny space, and it also allows you to swap the driver instead of the tool-head, so all your powertools have both a cordless version and a wall-power version. I'm not associated with the products in any way, I rave because they're great when space is at a premium. (It's also cheaper to buy just a tool-head attachment than a regular one-piece tool-driver)

  • @markvanover4915
    @markvanover4915 2 роки тому +1

    I would ABSOLUTELY watch Adam setting up shops. Could be the best thing on whatever media it’s on!!

  • @DrKahnihoochima
    @DrKahnihoochima 2 роки тому +28

    I've found that old entertainment unit cabinets can be good to store a variety of tools out of sight without looking terribly out of place. Lee Valley also has plans for a nice apartment workbench that closes up on itself. Also, a show on shop builds would be awesome; from garage to spare bedroom to closet to camouflaged/multipurpose furniture.

    • @36736fps
      @36736fps 2 роки тому +1

      Old used entertainment cabinets and computer hutches are often really cheap, easy to disassemble and reassemble.

  • @zerodegreec
    @zerodegreec 2 роки тому +24

    I had setup some workshops over the years in rented places and I found linoleum ontop of some plywood (ontop carpet) worked really well. The edges curl up (normally an issue) but it ended up being like a bowl and kept any mess from spilling off the sides. Super cheap and easy to pack up and move when the time comes.

    • @DesireeWalker
      @DesireeWalker 2 роки тому +3

      Ever have any issues with humidity or mold underneath the plywood & linoleum? Currently looking into something like this for total coverage of my floorspace but not sure if trapping moisture in the carpet will be an issue.

    • @richard-likes-to-travel
      @richard-likes-to-travel 2 роки тому +5

      @@DesireeWalker never cover the entire floor, not near doors or windows so you can actually still monitor the carpet a bit? A bit like the raised platform idea. And for the liquid stuff use a mobile work area as extra precaution, like a big serving tray.

    • @zerodegreec
      @zerodegreec 2 роки тому +2

      @@DesireeWalker I never had an issue but its very dry where I live. It was never sealed so I dont know why moisture would build up, its not like its a spray booth or a place that had high moisture environments.

    • @djbassaus
      @djbassaus 2 роки тому +1

      I'd be concerned with the weight compressing the carpet fibres over time.

    • @carliegriffiths6290
      @carliegriffiths6290 2 роки тому +1

      @@djbassaus a way to help combat that is to lay some more carpet fluffy side down then put your board on top. The bristles of the two caroets will sort of mesh, rather than being completely compressed.
      Although saying that, most rentals ive known all have closed short pile carpet, as its more hardy.

  • @Kami8705
    @Kami8705 2 роки тому +12

    Keep everything mobile, and be prepared for a lot of set up and take down.
    As far as that TV shoe you suggested, I'd be all for it. Heck, I'd love to work on that show, I love setting up shops

  • @bryanbeasley6037
    @bryanbeasley6037 Рік тому +2

    In military barracks a friend built a workshop in a old uhaul he got. It was awesome and the renters/apartment question reminded me of this. He had solar power and a back up generator. Installed ventilation and some soundproofing. I know this isn’t for everyone, but an old used van or truck and renovate it if you have the parking space. It was like his backyard shed with no yard. Just wanted to throw that idea here for others to generate better ideas :).

  • @MoarHam
    @MoarHam 2 роки тому +6

    I've used hardwood floor slats (13'x6") that interconnect as the base for both workshop and office setups over carpet in the past. Even a couple slats are long & wide enough to evenly distribute weight and not completely crush carpet; it's less impactful than the furniture that sits on top of it would be. When I finally removed those slats, it was the cleanest carpet in my entire apartment.
    Further adding a waterproof layer, like a plastic mat, would more than suffice to prevent spills from getting through the slats themselves.

  • @dbissex
    @dbissex 2 роки тому +4

    That small/temporary workshop focused show would be incredible. I sincerely hope that becomes a reality

  • @Oldrookietrucker
    @Oldrookietrucker 2 роки тому +1

    Adam, all your wonderful anecdotes and experience sharing aside; every single time you say “That is a great question!” It not only makes me smile but I know it genuinely comes from the heart and makes people’s days, weeks, months etc… I came to this channel for the “celeb cred” but I keep coming back for the connections, human, fallible, and authentic. I appreciate your time. Sincerely.

  • @TechJeeper
    @TechJeeper 2 роки тому +2

    Another idea is to explore your local maker space. Being a member of that helps build the community as well as mitigates the risk. Plus you get access to all of their cool supplies!

  • @hannaheggert8269
    @hannaheggert8269 2 роки тому +2

    Please please please pitch a TV show where you help set up workshops in houses and apartments of all sizes. That sounds like the best show ever!

  • @F2Dcombat
    @F2Dcombat 2 роки тому +1

    That should be a super cool show - if it gets going you could have a segment where you go back and look at what worked and what did not work in a particular workshop.

  • @Cosmitzian
    @Cosmitzian 2 роки тому +1

    As someone that has done and does 'maker stuff' in a small one room appartment, my advice is to be very safe, like Adam said, just make sure if there's ANY chance of something going wrong, it's not going to screw anything up. Put down tarps, and papers and cover things up. Importantly, clean often, even while and during making. Don't let stuff sit, and try to never leave a messy workspace between sessions. Even if you're coming back to it the next day, anything can happen. I've found working at low coffee tables worked really well versus at a full table, when talking of stuff that can splatter, just because you limit where that can go really.
    Also, if you cut a lot of things.. uh... get a vise that has good rubber clamps and can attach to.. there's one way to say this, your toilet's edge. The ceramic is often very strong and sturdy, for most stuff you would want to do in an appartment, and it's probably THE most well-clamped and sturdy thing in your entire place minus the actual walls. You also have easy clean up (though try to limit it to wood if you can, and just sawdust, not chunks ofc), by just wiping the edge and flushing. Weird, but honestly, if it's between that and cutting up sawdust in the same room i sleep in? Yeah, it's going to be the bathroom, and it's going to be the toilet. I can at least wash down my entire bathroom.

  • @elizabethturner2421
    @elizabethturner2421 2 роки тому +2

    The most useful "tool" I had for working in my first apartment was a 2' x4' sheet of 3/4" plywood on which I mounted a set of folding legs, yielding a desk-high bench. I still have it, 37 years later. Painter's canvas dropcloths (over moisture-impervious sheets, like good old blue tarps) will be much less slippery than than plastic tarps alone. As CMDR Dark Light noted, the adhesive floor coverings that building contractors use to protect floors is worth investigating; a big-box hardware store should have them as well as non-adhesive kraft paper floor protection in in 3-foot wide rolls.

  • @cjbralph
    @cjbralph 2 роки тому +3

    The mini shop show sounds amazing! Please make it happen!!!!

  • @Frankjallan
    @Frankjallan 2 роки тому +3

    When I was going through school to become a gunsmith, they had a blueprint for a coffee table that turned into a gunsmith bench with tool storage. It was quite nice, and you couldn’t tell that it was anything other than a table until it was unfolded. The design was for apartment dwellers with limited space.

  • @JamesCrandallPainting
    @JamesCrandallPainting 2 роки тому

    I made a large carpeted room into a painting studio. I made a “false floor.”
    First layer: Ram Board floor-protecting roll cardboard (used in filming and building trades available at some home centers), baseboard-to-baseboard, taped together with Kraft tape. It’s made to want to lie flat.
    Second layer: tongue and groove flooring plywood, held together with thin aluminum “mending plates” screwed onto surface.
    Third layer: another layer of taped Ram Board. Except for slight bumps where mending plates were, surface was stable and firm enough to roll heavy tool cabinets and easels around easily.
    Occasional spills were absorbed by top layers of Ram Board, which could be patched by fresh pieces as necessary.
    3+ years later when we moved out, we took everything up (saving a lot of it for re-use), vacuumed the carpet, and everything looked great!
    Because the plywood had covered every bit of the floor, it had been uniformly compressed, and there were no strange divots anywhere.
    We took a chance. Worst case, we were prepared to pay to re-carpet the room as a cost of doing business for those years.

  • @jeffallen3598
    @jeffallen3598 2 роки тому +11

    It would be great to get some tutorials on setting up smaller shops… what to think about, where to start, anything that would allow us, who have very different situations, to have the tools to solve their own unique situations. Right now, my problems are part of a 737 cockpit, HP Plotter and a big 3D printer all in a 10x15 space where I’m trying to work on other projects in and around these things. I’m sure with some plywood and 2x4’s there is a solution that I’m miles away from even thinking of at this point. A show or tutorials may get me or others in a similar situation there faster and make life easier. I haven’t seen many shops at all and there may be one out there that has a setup I like and could do.

  • @MichelleInMinneapolis
    @MichelleInMinneapolis 2 роки тому +9

    I didn't rent my place because of this (because I started doing miniatures after moving in), but my place has concrete floors, which is very comforting! They already look like crap and the guy who lived here before me had a vintage motorcycle in the corner and the marks are still there! I don't spray paint in here though, I go outside onto the patio and use black plastic garbage bags taped down to the patio table when I need to spray something. So, depending on the rental market and your situation, being careful about which apartment you choose can make a difference. I've seen some places that have actual craft/workshop rooms for residents to use too!

  • @86fifty
    @86fifty 2 роки тому +5

    absolutely hugely a fan of the idea of "Adam Savage Setting Up Shop" TV Show! It's like professional organizers - they love doing this one thing, cleaning up messes, so they go do it for other ppl who pay them to do it!
    Also, the internet is having outages??? It has been where I live too. I thought it was just our Local Regional Monopoly Company, which is known to be cruddy. Well, which ones aren't, I guess...

    • @ShamWerks
      @ShamWerks 2 роки тому

      A.S.S.U.S. sounds like a weird acronym though.

  • @JeffGrahamPhotography
    @JeffGrahamPhotography 2 роки тому +4

    You are doing the makeover show in a way. I’ve learned many things from you and other makers as I continue creating my shop. Thanks Adam!

  • @Penggren
    @Penggren 2 роки тому +1

    The wife and I use drop cloths, but mostly when we picked our apartment, we chose this one because the carpet is in need of replacing. We own a carpet shampooer for when things get messy (and pets). We have a private balcony I can put an outdoor rug on when I need to do sanding to vacuum the mess, or quickly roll things up if weather turns. In doors you need FANS, I've got a couple box fans that I modified so it's housing keeps it secure in the window. Tarps are great too. It takes probably 20mins to an hour some times to "set-up" my workspace everyday. It's worth the hassle to be making the things I want though. Also it helps my wife has a full time job that affords us a two-bedroom, we gave up on having a "Guest room". Our living room is the "Office", thank you pandemic for making working at home a reality. Our 60in TV for Xbox gaming is in the bed room. Our "spare room" is a Crafting area, we can keep the cats out of.

  • @warpspeedmage7182
    @warpspeedmage7182 2 роки тому +1

    The Maker Space show idea would be freaking amazing. Everyone has so many great ideas here in the comments! I think the most beautiful process for me would be learning more about the maker first, what they like to "make" so you can have a focus driven shop plan. Then in figuring out the layout and design for the shop, the Maker gets to plan a project to work on in that new shop for the show...and Adam gets to hang out after the shop is built to help with that project as well as learn new Maker processes directly from the person they are helping. Real give and take stuff...I believe we would all adore that.

  • @danon-theautisticmaker8112
    @danon-theautisticmaker8112 2 роки тому +1

    It's like the building I was in got condemned so because of the housing cost skyrocketing & housing shortage I'm in a motel, but I still needed/wanted & set up a making space here in my motel room. Made my own free standing furniture with drywall screws, 2x4's, 4x4's, sheet of melamine etc. All very ruff & basic, yet functional. Super super careful everything that I do & work with.

  • @sadville13
    @sadville13 2 роки тому

    I have a carpeted room that I use.
    What I did was I took those foam tiles that you can get from the hardware store.
    They're really easy to cut and fit to the room perfectly.
    On top of that I took clear computer chair mats and laid them down.
    The landlord was happy with this.
    My shop light I attached to some timbers than connects to the top of my paints/glues etc shelf.
    I only really needed one shop light above my work desk as I don't do a lot of big works, mostly miniatures and stuff like that.
    Running electricity for long periods of time can also be very expensive when you're renting and already on a budget.
    Running more than one light along with the computer, sound system, other electronics you use to make with can really add up.
    There's a lot to think about.

  • @jwcph
    @jwcph 2 роки тому +2

    My immediate thought: Build a "cabin" inside the room - basically, a free-standing box with your workstation inside. A bit like a practice box for a musician, except it doesn't need to be sound-proof (unless you use noisy power tools), and therefore it isn't necessary to build it fully enclosed.
    The biggest challenge I see with that is making it stand on the carpet without ruining it too much. The best would probably be for it to rest on as few points as possible - perhaps just one large, flat "foot" in each corner, with a floor built basically to code resting on those. The walls could just be something like 0.8 inch OSB, which would also be lovely to screw stuff into. I would include a ceiling, too, for the "screwing stuff" reason, and to give some strength and stability to the walls.
    I would also probably use noxious paints etc. as little as possible. I have a small workshop in my own apartment (owner, not renter, though), and try to use water-based paints and sprays as much as I can - for my health, of course, but also because the smell of it can really travel and bother my neighbors.

  • @littlekong7685
    @littlekong7685 2 роки тому

    I have a home secretary desk with an attached side table. On the side table I have glued a thin metal L piece along all 3 edges (the fourth is attached to the raised desk). This adds a 1.5 millimetre lip and creates a robust protective edge, and because it is black it actually looks good too, I wish I had known about glue accelerators, because it took me an hour to set everything flush without gaps so as to 100% prevent minor spills from finding a hole and dripping.
    A friend bought some cheap dollar store plastic bins (3ftx4ft) and cut them down to only be a shallow 2 inch pan. She used these for doing all of her resin work from filling, moulding, setting, carving, and gluing. Everything was done in these $4 bin trays, which were sturdier and larger than any painting or automotive tray for a tiny cost and were essentially disposable. Large enough to work in, small enough to move around and stackable for storage as she had to use the dining table or outside table on nice days.

  • @Oldcarnut63
    @Oldcarnut63 2 роки тому +19

    A show on setting up workshops is cool but also going to people's workshops large and small across the country wouldn't be a bad show either people could see other people's workshops and get some ideas from it

  • @MorningDusk7734
    @MorningDusk7734 2 роки тому +1

    For those too young to have their own place (i.e. living with their guardians still), whatever small garage corner you can get, remember that verticality is your friend. Some cheap 1'x2' shelving, a small work table, maybe a collapsible table for temporary work, and some hook board can go a long way. Overhead hooks and finding ways to nest things is also critical to maximizing space.

  • @reidarcomposano317
    @reidarcomposano317 2 роки тому

    I am currently a law student, and woodworking is my primary hobby. I have an office space where I both woodwork and do school.
    My first recommendation is that just about every piece of furniture be on wheels. My entire office is on wheels with the exception of an old metal barrister bookcase.
    Next, make sure everything has a home so that you can entirely switch gears and separate the two use-spaces when necessary. I have a medium sized tool chest, two shelves in my barrister, and around 1/2 of the floor of the closet reserved for tools, etc.; I also have a large pegboard that I mounted (this did require 4x screws in wall, but I made a design where the entire board can lift on/off the wall, leaving only two wall-matching mounts on the wall for when I need to video call).
    My workbench, while not ideal, gets the job done. I have a file cabinet under my desk (on locking wheels ofc) that I roll out. I place a thick table on my file cabinet. The table has a “border” underneath that I sized to the top of my file cabinet to avoid the table sliding. The table is stored behind my tool chest.
    As far as lighting goes. I live and die by the headlamp.
    Next comes the cleaning supplies and PPE. I have ready access to all sorts of cleaning devices: all types of wipes, compressed air, shop vac, dust buster, etc. I also have a box fan by my window and plenty of high quality masks for when I do any spraying (I also cover my furniture with a sheet when spraying).
    There are lots of other little gadgets that I have in here (3d printer, mounts, etc.). I also have a strict rule to return the space to “office” at the end of every day. Everything goes back to its home. This is annoying, but I have the clean-up down to a science at this point.
    That’s all! Good luck.
    Edit: accidentally said “for study and school” rather than for “woodworking and school.” Yes, I need to study 😬

  • @joseesparza4133
    @joseesparza4133 2 роки тому +1

    Perfect timing for this topic. Thank you Adam and thanks to those who wrote in with the questions.

  • @RadicalEdwardStudios
    @RadicalEdwardStudios 2 роки тому +12

    My advice for renters who want a shop is to join a hackerspace, if you can find one nearby.

    • @TonyPowell_Munich
      @TonyPowell_Munich 2 роки тому +1

      That was what I was going to suggest too. They likely have other tools you don't have/can't afford as well!

    • @RadicalEdwardStudios
      @RadicalEdwardStudios 2 роки тому

      @@TonyPowell_Munich Yeah, and no matter how hard you try, if it's an apartment and you're running a chisel or a saw at 2am, your neighbors will throw you out the window. So like, buildings where you can be noisy matter, too.

  • @PeterIsATeacher
    @PeterIsATeacher 2 роки тому +3

    Oh this is the perfect vid for me right now! This problem is a great one to tackle because it really breaks down what the most important aspects of a home workshop are.

  • @naseausderhuette
    @naseausderhuette 2 роки тому

    We’re renting in the east bay with a small garden.
    We fit a 8’x12’ shed, 9’ high in there.
    A outdoor 20amp extension cord feeds power through the dryer vent all the way to the shed, going to into a male nema inlet (marina stuff), all inside an electrical bubble.
    It’s a paradise for me. I found a 8’ long massive oak table in a Berkeley university outlet warehouse for $60 which I put on top of two husky toolboxes from Home Depot.
    It’s a significant but cheap workbench that will last a long time!
    A used medical chair from Craigslist is a perfect shop chair! So far I fit a 10” drill press, a 12” disc sander, a vise and a 7” evolution steel chop saw in there.
    My little attic is my storage!
    Man I love this thing

  • @Gazongola
    @Gazongola 2 роки тому

    My general go to is a large rug I don't mind getting stuff on, with a decent backing, and a 4-6 person dining table. It's a pretty good base. And then plenty of movable storage, like boxes, tool boxes, and drawers etc.

  • @Dan_Murphy
    @Dan_Murphy 2 роки тому +2

    I would love to watch you make workshops for people! That would make a great show.

  • @alexandramahairas2337
    @alexandramahairas2337 2 роки тому

    As a young renter, I do suggest keeping some cardboard boxes (from moving) for doing any spray painting. They make for excellent makeshift painting boxes and are reusable as patten-piece mockups. I personally love painting trays and cups for liquids cause you never know when you're going to need to put something down. Apart from that drop mats and blankets are always your best friend. Picnic blankets do a good job as they have a built-in absorbent layer and plastic layer. Try working off the floor as much as possible and always keep in mind spills, fumes and ventilation. Good luck

  • @scarletlightning565
    @scarletlightning565 2 роки тому +2

    I'm currently in the proccess of hunting for a house to rent on my own. I have thought of some ideas for a rent friendly machine shop to be built in a single or double car garage. Mainly to do with the benches: rubber feet and heavy frame for rigidity without damaging the floor; and large backboards to prevent spills or loose parts going down against the wall, also doubling as vertical storage space (pegboard or shelving), with thick foam pads to protect the walls from bumps and vibration. Also water buckets under any grinding/sanding tools to minimise dust (less spesifically a renter friendly tip, more just a good idea)
    I wouldn't tempt fate with anything more than 3D printing, gluing or brush painting inside, ESPECIALLY over carpet.

  • @FierceDeityLink1990
    @FierceDeityLink1990 2 роки тому

    I'm so glad I found a ground floor appartement that has a small storage shed outside that I can use as a workshop and it's not attached to any buildings so I don't annoy the neighbours with noise

  • @cmdrdarklight
    @cmdrdarklight 2 роки тому +5

    Adhesive plastic carpet covering used by construction companies to protect floors available from good hardware stores would be great in these situations😉

  • @revspyder
    @revspyder 2 роки тому

    I've done the floor covering! Rented a townhouse years ago and set up a machine shop in a carpeted basement! As a model engineer i built a lot in a few years in that shop. I layed formica board down and duct taped it at seams on the under side with a shiny white side up. I can tell you it worked great but after two years it did permanently flatten the carpet. It was nit a thick shag carpet but not a tight pike type carpet. So i can tell you from experience it protects from dust, paint, metal shavings etc. But will permanently flatten a carpet with deep texture.

  • @ZilloTea
    @ZilloTea 2 роки тому +5

    LED lighting also doesn't use up a ton of power. Very efficient, and can handle many lights on a single circuit

    • @AidyJames
      @AidyJames 2 роки тому

      This! I also have a ring light on a stand that I can use if I need more lighting in a specific spot or if I need something to be particularly well-lit.

  • @frasercossar407
    @frasercossar407 2 роки тому

    Yes, yes please! I’d be on your Tiny Workshop makeover/ set-up show! I have a 8x7, attached- chicken coop to my century home. An 6’+ board needs to stick out the door to be cut on my moveable mitre saw. I’m so envious of full shops!

  • @79hirider
    @79hirider 2 роки тому

    When I set up a RC model shop in the spare bedroom of my first apartment. I put a 4x8 piece of 3/8 plywood down against the wall. Covered it with Linoleum tile squares and then set my workbench up on that. I did alot of cutting and grinding with a Dremel and worked with small dirty and oily parts that I would frequently drop and the 4x8 tiled floor kept the chips and dirty parts from finding the newly installed carpets. After 3 years I moved out, picked up the plywood and the carpet was still as new as it was when I moved in. I got my full deposit.

  • @Telamon8
    @Telamon8 2 роки тому

    My tip for small room shops: most of your work shop will probably be entirely confined to a table or desk, like mine pretty much exclusively is. You want to do everything you can to keep your hands clean as much as possible. A bit of ink or paint on the palm of your hand you didn't notice, and suddenly your doors or carpet or everything is covered in it. Keep a bottle of hand cleaner within arms reach at all times, have something that helps keep your hands raised, have gloves and a bag to dispose them in, all of that. Keep yourself clean, and you'll go a long way to keeping your house clean.

  • @beavismount
    @beavismount 2 роки тому +1

    On the lighting: From NASA-STD-8739.4A (the PDF is easily searchable) "6.1.2 Lighting. Light intensity shall be no less than 1077 lumens per square meter (lm/m2) (100 foot-candles) on the surface where cabling and wiring are being assembled, inspected, or tested."
    I used this as a standard when setting up my brother's basement workshop. The right way to do it would be to measure the lumens at the workbench, but I just took the square footage of his basement and bounced that off the output of the LED panels that I could get. I sourced enough panels to make sure that we were at least half the NASA requirement, and the lighting there is almost awesome. Go bright or go home!

  • @xentrix89
    @xentrix89 2 роки тому

    Same here! a bright light source is so important you could say its like night and day!

  • @kenbousquet4060
    @kenbousquet4060 2 роки тому

    We are really fortunate in that our apartment has a large bathroom, so a lot of projects get done in there. Especially anything involving saw dust or paint!

  • @awandererfromys1680
    @awandererfromys1680 2 роки тому

    Always keep a few good sturdy cardboard boxes around. The bigger the better. They make for great makeshift spray paint boxes or paint dryers. Whether it's airbrush or rattlecan, indoor or outdoor, it keeps everything nice and contained. Flatpack them into a corner or something.
    You can build yourself a simple wooden box with a fan and HEPA filter of course, but a big cardboard box is a great alternative on the fly.
    On lighting, if colour matters then the light source does too. Modern LEDs are pretty good in that regard but not all sources are created equal. Our eyes only register the wavelengths present in the light source. If the source is particularly 'cold' or 'warm' things will look different than when viewed under full-spectrum light (i.e. sunlight). It matters for your workshop but also for displays and galleries. Bad lighting can really screw you.
    Now that halogen and fluorescent are mostly phased out it's less of an issue, but make sure that whatever you get is labeled full-spectrum or something similar.

  • @michellefonda7491
    @michellefonda7491 2 роки тому +2

    I will say that I would absolutely Love the Adam Savage tiny workshop version of Monty Don's Big Dreams Small Spaces

  • @Mortifier21
    @Mortifier21 11 місяців тому

    I live in a tiny flat and gardening is one of my hobbies, so I have a 4x4 grow tent with grow lights and a couple little workbenches. I've been thinking of using the space for crafts instead of plants lately. It already has great lighting!

  • @RetroTekGuyAU
    @RetroTekGuyAU 2 роки тому

    Smaller shop areas within another area that I've been to I've found the simple approach of building a room within a room. A boxed off area is probably the best thing to do

  • @AndyGeesGarage
    @AndyGeesGarage 2 роки тому +1

    I rented an apartment that came with a storage room in the basement and actually built several custom motorcycles there. However I did not do any welding, grinding or paint work there. I did that in a friends bike shop that I worked at part time.

  • @alanturing8382
    @alanturing8382 2 роки тому

    My wife in I are painters, and we painted in our apartment. When we left, we painted any areas that had stains to match the carpet color.

  • @jeepspeedracer
    @jeepspeedracer 2 роки тому

    I own a house now but the small spray paint booth on wheels I built is a great idea to be able to put outside and do any form of paint or resin on it. Definitely worth it to make one that can fold out bigger if you have to get into an apartment elevator or something.

  • @goat325
    @goat325 2 роки тому

    This is a question near and dear to my heart and I have for you a marvelous solution: baby drop cloths. You know what makes a huge and often liquid mess? Children. They make waterproof drop cloths designed to be washed and set over flooring (even with grippy bits on the back so they don't slide!) so that your children don't destroy the floor when they fling strained peas or vomit uncontrollably or knock their juice cup over. They're not impervious, but they're cheap, waterproof, and portable. I don't do much painting, but these are the reason I've done what I've done. May this knowledge help you on your travels.

  • @Yolandi.
    @Yolandi. 2 роки тому

    “Small Shop Homes”… “Tiny Workshop”… “My Shop Chop”.. I would totally watch these shows in my free time, all day.

  • @ThomasWren
    @ThomasWren 2 роки тому +2

    A really simple way to get good bright light exactly where you need it without spending lots of money or setting up posable, adjustable lights is to buy a really good head torch.

  • @lukesmith3901
    @lukesmith3901 2 роки тому +1

    That would be an awesome show, you should definitely pitch that to some one

  • @MarcusBeirne
    @MarcusBeirne 2 роки тому

    Lumicluster's workshop is one of the best examples of a small workshop I have ever seen. I can't find the video, but I know she talked about her setup when she was working in her sister's music studio, and the challenges she faced in working with silicone and resin in a space where spills couldn't happen.

  • @U8uxa8SP
    @U8uxa8SP 2 роки тому

    What a great bunch of ideas. Your show would be incredible.

  • @ansellprops1684
    @ansellprops1684 2 роки тому

    We had a spare room in our apartment here in sweden which I am slowly turning into a makeshift workshop. I bought a giant rug from ikea for the floor, and have used tension shower rods and curtains to protect the walls.

  • @ArcanumV
    @ArcanumV 2 роки тому

    For protecting the floors, rubber-backed commercial floor mats are great. They're fairly cheap at your local hardware store, and they're a solid color and not as deep as most carpeting, so it's easier to find those tiny pieces that escape. For spray painting, Wagner sells several shelters and tents that catch overspray. You could probably repurpose a child's play tent or camping tent for the same thing, but be sure to not get inside it (for ventilation safety).

  • @csn583
    @csn583 2 роки тому

    RE: lighting. Cheap adhesive 12V LED strips + ~1/2" aluminum angle + any old computer power supply makes a surprisingly effective and very inexpensive way to light a small to medium space. Whipped mine up 6 years ago and only one little patch of 3 LEDs failed, otherwise plugging along fine. I also used some of the PSU's extra power to run an automotive stereo amp to a pair of 6x9s from a Chromecast for tunes.

  • @reddcube
    @reddcube 2 роки тому +1

    For renting, don't be afraid of nailing and hanging.
    A small nail hole is easy to patch and doesn't damage paint like Command strips.
    Also taking lots of photos and print them out. When you want your security deposit back no one is going to check emailed photos.

  • @brentrockwood
    @brentrockwood 2 роки тому +1

    With regard to the "apartment shop" question, look in to apartment darkrooms. Photographers have been dealing with nasty chemicals in apartments with portable setups for decades. Usually it involves something that is easy to set up and take down in the bathroom. If there is a spill, you are surrounded by hard surfaces and they are designed to be easy to clean if you get to it quickly.

  • @joefera8947
    @joefera8947 2 роки тому

    When I built my clone trooper costume, I used the deck that went the entire length of the front of my apartment building and put a big tarp down to collect all the plastic shavings and other debris, and to paint. Only works great in warmer weather, obviously, but I kept it all outside of the apartment. When I did spray paint inside, I taped up newspapers to the wall and table to catch any over spray. My wife wasn't happy about having the window in the spare room open in the dead of winter for ventilation. LOL

  • @cobrebluebonnetequinechall4782
    @cobrebluebonnetequinechall4782 2 роки тому

    I would totally watch a show like that. Setting up shops.

  • @patricksanders858
    @patricksanders858 2 роки тому +2

    "Savage Sets you up!" " A Savage Space" "Adam Makes!"

  • @ChronosFatherOfTime
    @ChronosFatherOfTime 2 роки тому

    As a person who specialises in floors, if you want something that isn't permanent, place down a layer of builders plastic as your water proof layer, then a layer of what we in Australia called 'Ram Board', which is a cardboard like, heavy duty temporary floor that builders use to keep the original floor in good condition, especially when working in preestablished houses.

  • @richardsavage6981
    @richardsavage6981 2 роки тому +1

    Do the shop-building show. That's an awesome idea.

  • @Amalgamotion
    @Amalgamotion 2 роки тому

    I have had a mini shop of some sort inside my apartment for about 10 years now. I am a craftsman by trade and try my hand at sculptures and make my own furniture. I've lived in several rentals in this time and I have some pointers.
    Carpet mask should only be laid down for roughly a month, while it's an amazing shield against liquids the adhesive will leave itself on your carpet if its in a high traffic area or down for too long.
    However, its about the best product to lay down under a drop cloth and tarp if you just want the peace of mind for the weekend. Totally with Adam on the layer's. can be found in the carpet section of most hardware stores.
    Invest in a diy fume hood of some kind. better yet do it outside, but sometimes you cannot. Understandable! But you will pay twice for that spray.
    Plus, your pets, plants and landlord all benefit from the lack of over spray.
    If you are consistently noisy, and share walls with neighbor's. Consider making your neighbor's little gifts so they think of you as more an Elvish or Dwarven workshop, than mad scientist laboratory.
    Noise complaints will get you kicked out of most places if you get too many.
    I've had to pour money into a place before leaving just to prevent a hefty bill if not downright lawsuit. If you cannot find a sweet landlord that will work and understand what your up to. think of it as a game with serious consequences if you don't crush it.
    I fully encourage a show helping makers build out their spaces, show off what this country is up to in our little passion project rooms.
    (edited b/c it it, isn't a thing)

  • @sierraecho884
    @sierraecho884 Рік тому

    Here is what I have done. I have made a shop cart out of Aluminium extrusion profiles (40x40 ITEM) with a MDF top surface (with mounting holes for clamps) and casters. The MDF top is 18x1200x800mm and I just bought it here in Germany ready to go from a small company. Then I made a sliding door cabinet underneith it for all my tools, shop vac, and sorting boxes.
    This way I have a small moble maker space which contains al my tools and I can take it with me OR adjust in size when I move into a new apartment. This Way you can simply use a tarp, then move your small mobile maker space over it and build and paint whatever you want to. Everything is tidy and contained. Also do not forget some kind of air extraction if your work pieces emit toxic fumes or you work with resins etc. This is very important.

  • @TheodoraBrass
    @TheodoraBrass 2 роки тому +1

    Please do the tiny shop show. PLEASE! 🙏🏻

  • @joec8079
    @joec8079 2 роки тому

    Canvas drop cloths with the spill protection liner LIFESAVER

  • @gibbontakeit9098
    @gibbontakeit9098 2 роки тому

    This is an awesome topic, thank you! So many ramifications..

  • @tvtoms
    @tvtoms 2 роки тому +4

    Here are a few ideas. Swing arm curtain rods with curtains can hide unsightly storage areas such as under tables, open cabinets or shelves.
    Wire mesh panels hung vertically on walls with 3m style hooks for lighter storage. Floor to ceiling spring loaded poles / panels / shelving for heavier.
    Bed risers to raise not only the bed but kitchen table. It provides more storage and allows for easier work standing or sitting at a counter height I find.
    Consider hanging any heavy thing inside a closet where you can patch any penetration and they are less likely to care or notice.
    Buy a big sheet of PVC plastic for use as a huge fool proof drop cloth. Big enough to extend up the walls a few feet all around. Something like the black and white "panda" plastic they sell at garden centers.
    There's a few to grow on anyway.

    • @ElectroDFW
      @ElectroDFW 2 роки тому

      With the budget you're expecting them to spend, they could own instead of rent.

    • @tvtoms
      @tvtoms 2 роки тому

      @@ElectroDFW This is in reply to me? Everything I mentioned was no more than a few hundred bucks one time expenditure.

    • @ElectroDFW
      @ElectroDFW 2 роки тому

      @@tvtoms not just you, but yeah, let me check the couch cushions and see if I can come up with a few hundred bucks I didn't know I had just laying around... 🙄

    • @tvtoms
      @tvtoms 2 роки тому

      @@ElectroDFW Haha I am on a fixed income of less than 1400 a month! You think I'm loaded with cash after sharing the LOWEST budget ideas on here. Not sure what else to say. Good luck.

  • @Duck.customs
    @Duck.customs 2 роки тому

    i work portable in everything i do, i do vehicle repair when im not doing my model/lego building or painting. what i always find useful is nurmerous toolboxes and even jewelery boxes to help keep track of the small things. i use these a lot with legos and rc building too.

  • @NatorDM
    @NatorDM 8 місяців тому

    This guy is so great... I haven't watched him since the OG Mythbuster days I knew he had a channel but I had never watched it because I thought I wouldn't have the space for a little shop in my apartment really inspiring. Building a wall on wheels right now, and it's daunting despite it seeming simple. No elevator in my building and I live on the top 3rd floor I was trying to think of a portable option but looks like I'm just going to have to put the back seat down in my honda accord and get some 9ft 2 x4's lol. That's going to be fun moving up the stairs alone. The advice regarding light is really good. Dealing with just ceiling fan light right now and damn I can't see anything that my shadow covers from it.

  • @janajeffsilvernickelladventure
    @janajeffsilvernickelladventure 2 роки тому

    Thank You Adam!!

  • @thetombuck
    @thetombuck 2 роки тому

    I've got a big bit of Lino on the floor of my rented garage. Great for spills and doubles as a cutting mat

  • @RaydarCreative
    @RaydarCreative 2 роки тому

    One BIG thumbs up to the workspace setup TV Show, it would be so neat to join you with helping out with it as well!

  • @gavinyoung4870
    @gavinyoung4870 2 роки тому

    When I was a renter I ran an extension cord out my window and was able to do some woodworking on the roof of my building. Although a parking lot or a truck’s tailgate would be just as gpod.

  • @barnowl012001
    @barnowl012001 2 роки тому

    I use a foldup table from Walmart as my workstation... So everyone can understand, I rent an apartment and my landlord is okay with wall mounted shelving so all my tools are stored away along with using an old file cabinet for my toolbox. I have Miniature Led light fixtures mounted to the lower shelves so I have a high contrast of light available while working on my projects.

  • @flamewave64
    @flamewave64 2 роки тому

    I would absolutely watch that show

  • @grimace1965
    @grimace1965 2 роки тому

    Great idea for a show. I'd watch that.

  • @graemejohnson9025
    @graemejohnson9025 2 роки тому

    Adam.. great idea for the floor, is buy Marine Carpet.. it is designed to not allow moisture to soak through.. lay it over the carpet.. when leaving, just give the original carpet a steam cleaning.. and it is back to normal..

  • @Dima_Sen_
    @Dima_Sen_ 2 роки тому +1

    Amazing Adam! Just amazing 🤩

  • @button-puncher
    @button-puncher 2 роки тому

    Surge suppressors are important on LED lighting. Tripp Lite sells nice single outlet cube surge suppressors that are perfect for that application. Budget shop lights typically have no or very little filtering on the incoming line so spikes can easily fry things. VFDs and mini-mills with brushed DC motors put a bunch of garbage on the AC line. Its important to have stuff like that on a separate line. I use an online (double conversion) UPS that all of my lighting and sensitive electronics plug in to.

  • @austinwagner3231
    @austinwagner3231 2 роки тому

    My apartment workshop mostly revolves around 3D printing. Its generally a much cleaner practice than other crafts, which is nice. When I do something a little more messy, I often used shared community space outside. Im lucky enough to have a back yard, but its shared with my entire complex. If you cobble together a dedicated mobile crafting station, like a rucksack or beach cooler, you could even go to a local park.

  • @BluAlaris
    @BluAlaris 2 роки тому

    Never spraypaint indoors. I always put down some cardboard or a cheap tarp and do it out in the parking lot. Brushing can be done indoors, tarp and cardboard still helps.
    Put holes in the wall, even if your lease says not to. Learn how to do it properly, be able to find a stud, learn to drill holes without ripping out chunks of drywall/paint, and learn how to fill the holes properly and paint over before you move out.
    Get furniture that can do double-duty and don’t be too precious about it. My dining room table was thrifted and has a few stains, scrapes, and burn marks on it because it’s also my primary workbench. I can throw a table cloth on top if company is over for dinner. I have an unassuming side table that stores Lego and model kits.
    Use balcony/porch space. You can put metal garage shelving or outdoor storage binson your balcony. It’s good for storing anything that’s not especially temperature and moisture sensitive. Especially when covered with a tarp or stored in heavy-duty plastic containers.
    Recognize that some things just aren’t feasible. I’d love to have a table saw, a spray booth, a drill press, a laser cutter, etc. but I couldn’t reasonably fit them. If I can’t adequately do a task with a cordless drill and jigsaw, I’ll pay someone to do it or try to find a local makerspace with the tools.

  • @ramosel
    @ramosel 2 роки тому +6

    As a landlord, I have worked with tenants. First off, no really noisy tools at 2am... be mindful of others and neighbors. I tell them that if they want to make things then they need to fix things... put them back the way you found them. We take pictures and agree to conditions. If you bolt something to the wall, fix the hole. If ruin the carpet, replace the carpet. Of the 3 times I've done this it was successful 2.5 times. The 1/2 wrong the tenant did ruin the carpet and took out all the bad carpet and surrendered his deposit in favor of putting in new carpet. Cost me about $200 more than the deposit. We're still good friends. One of my tenants found an insurance policy through a maker space that cover's renters should they make a catastrophic blunder. I know nothing more than he showed me the policy.

  • @user-fv1jn1gw5w
    @user-fv1jn1gw5w 2 роки тому

    Love the idea of a Adam Savage shop building show!

  • @davidmarden4789
    @davidmarden4789 2 роки тому

    I'm going through this right now. I bought a folding welding table from HF and added a small vice to it. I'm having to push my non running project car in and out of the shop and it's pretty difficult considering I'm not very mobile right now. You have to plan what and when you want to work on at any given time to best utilize the space you have.