It seems absolutely insane that in a parking garage you can just go ahead and tap into electrical, run some conduit into the bike storage section and pretty much just have at it building in a "common" area. In the States you would likely be sued, pay damages and restoration of the parking garage. Nuts. AMAZINGLY COOL, but nuts.
2 года назад+2
I'm pretty sure it would not be ok in most places in Germany too. Maybe he got the permission, but just the noise itself, possibly some dust.. I'd love to hear what are the terms here.
great workshop. one trick with that disk sander is to peal down half the sand paper and put some paper between it and the disk. then rotate the disk and pull offf the stuck part. the paper will allow the part below the table to come out with out sticking. to put on a new one peel off the backing and fold it back on itself . then drop that belpow the table and stick the top half to the disk. then rotate and pull on the flap of backing to remove it all and stick the rest to the disk. you can change the paper very fast this way
I‘m English but have been living in Germany for years (yep, I‘m fluent too 🤪) Don‘t know where you are, but your neighbors are definitely not typical German! Drilling holes in walls, chiseling out bigger holes for the Mitre Saw Slide, and all that in a „Tiefgarage“, and, everything open to anyone who cares to go in......... WOW! And nobody complained? Double WOW!!!!
Well, the property belongs to family and the neighbours are both doctors who don´t care. They are hardly home because they work so much anyway : ) You are like the reverse of my story. I am grom Germany and lived in England for 8 years. Loughborough and York.
Max Maker Really funny, I live in Dortmund, driving up to Lübeck tomorrow with my girlfriend for the beginning of the Christmas Market, amongst other things. Small world 😂
I love the LED back lit tool hanging panel. I wish I had enough wall space in my shop to do that. I’d probably put up color changing LED’s though 😜 great shop 👍🏼👍🏼
When you are from Germany: Du hast echt Potenzial! Dein Englisch ist verdammt gut und ich finde es sehr angenehm dir zuzuhören! Zudem hat mich dein Video sehr inspiriert! Dankeschön!
As soon as I checked out the videos on your channel, this video immediately drew my attention. We bought a new house last year, and my plan has been to convert the two-car garage into a 500+ sq ft office/lab/workshop/studio area. I've had some delays, but I'm expecting to get more electricity and some air conditioning out there before the Texas summer heat gets here this year, so I'm excited. I hope I can manage to do even 1/4 as well as you've done here, Max!
Good luck! Working at home is amazing. I can work for a few hours, take a nap and then return to the workshop. Underground also works very well. The temperature is always 9-20C°.
Max all you need is a half circle of thin plastic to change the sanding paper. You pull the sandpaper-disc half off, insert the plastic half circle and rotate the disk a half turn. Once you did that pull the other half of the disc off the machine. Slide the sandpaper up and take the half round plastic disc with it. To put a new sheet in just reverse the order of operations.
I wish I had as much room you have-just a small suggestion on battery charging for your power tools-put them on a timer that switches off and on during a 24 hour period. this will help save your chargers life and keeps your batteries charge real nice.
Very nice workshop! However, I'm not sure if the following applies in your country, but here we are not allowed to have multiple power cables in one junction box, which are switched/triggered by different circuit breakers. The reason is that if one person thinks that power is off, and starts working in the junction box, he might get surprised by one of the wago clips or cables still being powered. Sure, any electrician worker need to check for remaining power before starting to working on cables or junction boxes, but the element of surprise is still here in your junction box.
I see what you mean. In this case there are 4 fuses with their own FI-fuse in one separate row in the fuse box. They are labled „workshop“. So if you start work it would be easy to switch of the entire workshop instead of just single fuses. Light is still supplied from the parking garage lights.
You could add this elastic ends to the wire covering pipes, to protect them. Your dust collecting system seems to have no tilt at all, so there will be dust buildup inside it. Also this "German made" drill press looks like typical chinese one (but thats fine, they are OK). Besides that i really like your work you put there. It's always way more convinient to be able to build your workshop from empty room. Usually people start with some tools, they buy more, and more, and at some point its really hard to re-design some things. :)
@@MaxMakerChannel I thought was yours because was on your side of garage. You made a hole on that wall, the bikes were there, and as well the vacum cleaner :D
You don’t need to take that disc sander apart to change the paper. Just peel half of the backing over so that half of the adhesive is exposed. Slip the portion with the backing still on down onto the lower half of the disc then press the top half onto the disc. Rotate the disc 180 degrees and peel the rest of the backing off. Press the rest of the backing onto the wheel. Done
Sehr guten Ideas! I did my tool board somewhat similar to yours, but using plywood or MDF. As a suggestion, I lay my board on the floor and arrange all the tools on it. Then I trace them with a CD-pen. Only them I hang the board and put the screws. I also use self-tapping hooks, which can hold most tools very tightly (even calipers!). I'll build a new workshop on a new house and I really liked your dust collection arrangement.
I has OSB before this which works just as well, but its not as nice. Recently I started printing a lot of tool holders. That is much easier and nicer than making them out of wood. Only worth it if you can make CAD models quickly. Tracing the tools is on my to-do list. Recently I installed a dedicated small vacuum at my mitre saw. It doesn’t produce a lot of dust and the saw turns on on its own and keeps running for 5 extra seconds. Otherwise I need to press a button all the time or open the blast gate for the central vacuum.
I can highly recommend a German Shepherd. You know, since you already have the bowl, the rest is simple. Well done with the plastic LED tool board! Outstanding!
a bit late with the comment, but an easy way to change the sanding disk on that machine is to peel only half of the adhesive, slide the unpeeled half down and stick the top part, spin the disk half way, peel the rest of the plastic from the back and stick the rest of the disk
Tolle Werkstatt, tolles Video. Tipp zum Schleifpapierwechsel beim Tellerschleifer: Ein altes Schleifpapier zum Halbkreis schneiden und hinter das zu entfernende schieben. Dann den Teller 180° rotieren und ohne Probleme das ganze Papier abziehen. So musst du keine Schrauben lösen ;)
Back then it was the dream, but I am outgrowing the space. If everything goes right in two years I can build my own workshop which will be much larger.
Some good ideas and some things I would avoid. The hole in wall for mitre saw? I would avoid this. The narrow dust extraction piping? I would have larger diameter.
Very nice! Looks like you have the entire place for yourself? I'll bet you your neighbors will be asking you for help ever so often! :) now... time for the wake board! Yippee!
I also have a hole in the wall for the mitre saw...except my hole is a small window so i have a tarpoline cover to stop rain getting on it. When you want to get as many tools as you can into a small space you have do these things :-)
Max, Make sure you put some grounding wires on your dust Collect pips, PVC and dust can create a lot of static electricity, so to prevent anything bad from happening I would highly recommend that you do that. But I love the look of the new workshop
It isn't for electrical ground, which creates a path to earth to prevent a shock. Static bonding is what you want, and you may dismiss it at your peril. A spark can occur inside the pipe due to the dust rubbing against itself and the walls of your pipe. Fine dust is very easy to ignite; I nearly burned my shop down a few years ago from exactly that. It is pretty startling to look up from the saw and see a flame thrower blowing down into a dust collection bag and then burning through it after lighting the contents on fire before I could get it shut off. PVC is good for moving water (and plumbing vents) and static isn't a problem with that. I now have aluminum dust collection plumbing and have magnets in the floor sweep boxes so I don't suck any nails or screws into the impeller. Of course, I use a 3HP extractor and have 8" and 6" pipe running everywhere, so it's not the same situation you have. Everything I have is bonded together, including the tools. In the absence of that, make sure that if a fire does occur, that it can't spread. You are ahead of me with all that concrete; my shop is all wood. Also, obviously, make sure you have a fire extinguisher! Cheers, Max! @@MaxMakerChannel
Hi, wie ist denn das nun. Du hast zwei Parkplätze gemietet, bleibt nun die Werkstatt offen auf den anderen Seiten? Ich weiß ja nicht so eine Garage ist doch kalt und feucht. Macht das denn Spass? Bei mir im Keller ist es auch nicht gerade warm aber sicher wärmer als in der Garage neben an und wenn man an der Arbeit ist heizt sich der Raum auch auf. Gruss
Hi, stumbled across this video. Will be an avid watcher for now on. Question: how big was your old workshop and how big was your current workshop? :) Thank you!
Man you're awesome I love your workshop and ideas and stuff I'm going to build my own. I work at old hickory buildings and sheds for bout a year now I'm 30 years old and I finally feel like I'm getting my shit together growing up and waking up and I build buildings and I love it and I'm going to buy a 14 by 40 old hickory shed and make it my workshop. I want to build birdhouses dog houses doll houses who knows, whatever I want I can see the workshop in my mind already. I typed into RUclips workshops and this was the top video and I agree LOL I've been planning it out for a couple of weeks now and I thought I had it all figured out but the more I think about it the more I'm like damn I need this this this this this and this and that other thing lol. I'm only about halfway through your video but the reason I'm commenting is do you have any advice that you would care to give me I mean other than this video LOL
Setting up a workshop is probably never a bad idea. My main advice is to only buy the tools that you need for the next project you have in mind. If you buy saws, make sure they are precise with 90° angles. Most other tools can be cheap and simple. Good luck!
I originally watched your workshop build in 2018. Then I asked whether your neighbors, who share the garage, would have a problem with all the dust caused by the mitre saw. You said they were all very relaxed about it and it shouldn‘t be a problem. I know Bosch saw dust extraction is notoriously bad as I own one myself. I built a box (Hauber) around mine and it now catches about 80% of all the dust. Not perfect but better than nothing. Would like to know if you still work without mitre saw dust extraction, and if you have built some sort of system, what have you done to solve the problem. You live in Lübeck, right?
Hey, yes I live in Lübeck. I had dust extraction from the beginning. Recently I also CNCed some blast gates. The saw is actually from Metabo. The dust extraction was indeed very bad. Most of the dust went underneath the exhaust at the back. I added thick rubber around the hinge to trap any dust. I also covered up the hole on the left side where the blade is with a piece of corrugated plastic. So now most of the blade is encapsulated. This helped dust extraction immensely! Instead of building a big box, I just encapsulated the saw blade as good as I could. Now there is barely any dust. And when I cut would, I turn on the 2 ceiling mounted dust extractors.
@@MaxMakerChannel Hey, thanks for the reply. Would be good if you could post something on the Tube showing how you did that mod on the saw to capture the dust. I've got the Bosch GCM 8 SJL and the dust extraction is awful to put it mildly. Perhaps your idea could work on my saw too!?!
Great job. Love the LED lights around the tool wall. As far as opinions...its your shop and what works for you is fine. With the miter saw, I like what you did through the wall, but how do you swivel it for angle cuts?
Thanks! I cannot swivel it anymore, but I didn’t used to do that very often. I can still cut angles on the table saw or the bandsaw. If I ever need a lot of angle cuts, Ill get a second mitre saw probably.
The vast majority of my tools are hanging from screws aswell. I feel like I should have some fancy system like almost everyone on youtube but the screws just do the exact same thing plus they look clean and are inifitely modular
I've often wondered if mounting my tools on a wall vs. putting them in a tool box would be better because I could readily see what's there and what's missing and I could grab them without having to sort through what's in the drawer. However, the associated cost is that I would not have the wall space for a cabinet. Could you comment a little about which is better and why you chose what you chose?
You said the important things. It is wall space vs storage space. I can work much quicker having my tools visible and easily accessible. However the wall space is limited. One way to maximise wall space would be to put tool walls on hinges. That way you can hide stuff behind the tool walls and still access it. In the long run, I want to put drawers all the way underneath my workbenches. So I get more storage there.
It seems absolutely insane that in a parking garage you can just go ahead and tap into electrical, run some conduit into the bike storage section and pretty much just have at it building in a "common" area. In the States you would likely be sued, pay damages and restoration of the parking garage. Nuts. AMAZINGLY COOL, but nuts.
I'm pretty sure it would not be ok in most places in Germany too. Maybe he got the permission, but just the noise itself, possibly some dust.. I'd love to hear what are the terms here.
I'm pretty sure it is not a public area, it is likely just a private garage on the ground floor of a house.
And everything would get stolen in no time at all.
Got to love the ‘real’ walls in Europe. No dray walls. Woo!
it is really nice to watch an european youtube woodworker because I live in denmark and I can relate to the electric and plumming stuff
Nice! I am from Lübeck!
Why am I only seeing this now!? As a fellow engineer I really enjoy your workshop, I wish I had something like that when I want to create a prototype!
I think the hole for the sliding miter is brilliant.
Thank you!
great workshop. one trick with that disk sander is to peal down half the sand paper and put some paper between it and the disk. then rotate the disk and pull offf the stuck part. the paper will allow the part below the table to come out with out sticking. to put on a new one peel off the backing and fold it back on itself . then drop that belpow the table and stick the top half to the disk. then rotate and pull on the flap of backing to remove it all and stick the rest to the disk. you can change the paper very fast this way
I‘m English but have been living in Germany for years (yep, I‘m fluent too 🤪) Don‘t know where you are, but your neighbors are definitely not typical German! Drilling holes in walls, chiseling out bigger holes for the Mitre Saw Slide, and all that in a „Tiefgarage“, and, everything open to anyone who cares to go in......... WOW! And nobody complained? Double WOW!!!!
Well, the property belongs to family and the neighbours are both doctors who don´t care. They are hardly home because they work so much anyway : )
You are like the reverse of my story. I am grom Germany and lived in England for 8 years. Loughborough and York.
Max Maker What town/city are you in?
Lübeck
Max Maker Really funny, I live in Dortmund, driving up to Lübeck tomorrow with my girlfriend for the beginning of the Christmas Market, amongst other things. Small world 😂
How cool is that?! Hope you have a good time here. I’ll probably go there this weekend too.
I love the LED back lit tool hanging panel. I wish I had enough wall space in my shop to do that. I’d probably put up color changing LED’s though 😜 great shop 👍🏼👍🏼
When you are from Germany: Du hast echt Potenzial! Dein Englisch ist verdammt gut und ich finde es sehr angenehm dir zuzuhören! Zudem hat mich dein Video sehr inspiriert! Dankeschön!
Danke dir fürs zugucken!
As soon as I checked out the videos on your channel, this video immediately drew my attention. We bought a new house last year, and my plan has been to convert the two-car garage into a 500+ sq ft office/lab/workshop/studio area. I've had some delays, but I'm expecting to get more electricity and some air conditioning out there before the Texas summer heat gets here this year, so I'm excited.
I hope I can manage to do even 1/4 as well as you've done here, Max!
Good luck! Working at home is amazing. I can work for a few hours, take a nap and then return to the workshop. Underground also works very well. The temperature is always 9-20C°.
Max all you need is a half circle of thin plastic to change the sanding paper. You pull the sandpaper-disc half off, insert the plastic half circle and rotate the disk a half turn. Once you did that pull the other half of the disc off the machine. Slide the sandpaper up and take the half round plastic disc with it. To put a new sheet in just reverse the order of operations.
Heimdall I sold it. Bought a belt sander. : )
I wish I had as much room you have-just a small suggestion on battery charging for your power tools-put them on a timer that switches off and on during a 24 hour period. this will help save your chargers life and keeps your batteries charge real nice.
Good idea. I have them switched on remotely. So they are only on when the lights are on.
Very nice workshop!
However, I'm not sure if the following applies in your country, but here we are not allowed to have multiple power cables in one junction box, which are switched/triggered by different circuit breakers. The reason is that if one person thinks that power is off, and starts working in the junction box, he might get surprised by one of the wago clips or cables still being powered. Sure, any electrician worker need to check for remaining power before starting to working on cables or junction boxes, but the element of surprise is still here in your junction box.
I see what you mean. In this case there are 4 fuses with their own FI-fuse in one separate row in the fuse box. They are labled „workshop“. So if you start work it would be easy to switch of the entire workshop instead of just single fuses. Light is still supplied from the parking garage lights.
Your new workshop looks fabulous. You’ve got way more space for all your projects now. Thanks for sharing. From Australia 🇦🇺👍
Thanks! I enjoy it every day.
I'm in Australia too David. Batemans Bay, NSW 🇦🇺👍
You could add this elastic ends to the wire covering pipes, to protect them. Your dust collecting system seems to have no tilt at all, so there will be dust buildup inside it. Also this "German made" drill press looks like typical chinese one (but thats fine, they are OK). Besides that i really like your work you put there. It's always way more convinient to be able to build your workshop from empty room. Usually people start with some tools, they buy more, and more, and at some point its really hard to re-design some things. :)
I like your cars, the Porsche and the Mercedes, very nice
This is so cool! Thank you for uploading the video. It's really inspiring!
Wait for the new workshop I am building this year!
The work shop is great but that Porsche sitting there is just amazing
Nicolae Sirbu The owner sees it the same way. Its one of the last air cooled engines and its super loud. I smell it for hours when he starts it.
@@MaxMakerChannel I thought was yours because was on your side of garage. You made a hole on that wall, the bikes were there, and as well the vacum cleaner :D
Oh no. I spend my money on tools : )
You don’t need to take that disc sander apart to change the paper. Just peel half of the backing over so that half of the adhesive is exposed. Slip the portion with the backing still on down onto the lower half of the disc then press the top half onto the disc. Rotate the disc 180 degrees and peel the rest of the backing off. Press the rest of the backing onto the wheel. Done
That Porsche 911 964!
Not mine and even worse it belonged to a surgeon who was working 24/7 and never drove it. But it gained a lot of value sitting around.
That’s a great space and the lighting looks good as well👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you! It got even better since then. More lights and tools.
Thanks for the great ideas
Sehr guten Ideas!
I did my tool board somewhat similar to yours, but using plywood or MDF. As a suggestion, I lay my board on the floor and arrange all the tools on it. Then I trace them with a CD-pen. Only them I hang the board and put the screws. I also use self-tapping hooks, which can hold most tools very tightly (even calipers!).
I'll build a new workshop on a new house and I really liked your dust collection arrangement.
I has OSB before this which works just as well, but its not as nice. Recently I started printing a lot of tool holders. That is much easier and nicer than making them out of wood. Only worth it if you can make CAD models quickly. Tracing the tools is on my to-do list.
Recently I installed a dedicated small vacuum at my mitre saw. It doesn’t produce a lot of dust and the saw turns on on its own and keeps running for 5 extra seconds. Otherwise I need to press a button all the time or open the blast gate for the central vacuum.
I just love this work in your garage, I am also a technical guy like you.
mimpiku untuk memiliki WorkShop seperti itu. keren brother
5:07 really like that there is a calculator on the tool wall.
Wow this workshop is beautiful 😮😯😲
RoleQ I enjoy it every day!
Very nice. I wish I had. Sometime soon i hope. The chair is my fav tool. Lol
I can highly recommend a German Shepherd. You know, since you already have the bowl, the rest is simple. Well done with the plastic LED tool board! Outstanding!
Thanks: ) I have two Sacred Cats of Birma. They are good companions too and they can walk themselves in the Garden.
My German Shepherd has her own cat. She thinks it is a very ugly puppy, but she loves him anyway.
@@MaxMakerChannel
Awhhhhh
I cant believe this is a shared area and it's all open, in the UK you'd have to have CCTV to see who's stealing you're tools
Great lab workshop
You have the shop, get the dog. Every man needs a "Shop Dog". :-)
Hayalimdeki atölye. Güzel çalışmalar dilerim İstanbul dan selamlar. 🙏🙏🇹🇷
You have the water bowl but no dog. I have all the tools but no skills. Great job from the former USA!!!
I'm a machanic and a construkcion worker and a machanic engener and I like your great looking workshop 😎. Greetings from Slovenia 🇸🇮
Thanks!
Beautiful workshop
a bit late with the comment, but an easy way to change the sanding disk on that machine is to peel only half of the adhesive, slide the unpeeled half down and stick the top part, spin the disk half way, peel the rest of the plastic from the back and stick the rest of the disk
Well done. I like that you are honest about time taken prices etc...
Yea, the Miter saw trick is not neat. It's brilliant... Awesome job man, really Awesome!
Nice and complete of tools my friend
Built your own CNC that's freeking cool!
Tolle Werkstatt, tolles Video. Tipp zum Schleifpapierwechsel beim Tellerschleifer: Ein altes Schleifpapier zum Halbkreis schneiden und hinter das zu entfernende schieben. Dann den Teller 180° rotieren und ohne Probleme das ganze Papier abziehen. So musst du keine Schrauben lösen ;)
Oh cool. Danke für den Tipp!
Are you sharing the garage with more people, looks like other neighbors can easily "borrow" your stuff...
Yes, but they are doctor and work all day long. 12h shifts every day. They don’t have time to use them. I also have three security cameras down there.
why dont you build wall's@@MaxMakerChannel
There is no need.
Marco Polo..... not everyone is a dirty thief. Lol
@@bonze1257 But that doesn't mean you Don't lock things away. Fool.
He has a dream, just like me. Only i have to wait untill i am old enough to buy a workplace/house 🙁😅
Nice workshop
Very cool congrats on new place
Funny how one man's cramped work space is another man's dream shop
Back then it was the dream, but I am outgrowing the space. If everything goes right in two years I can build my own workshop which will be much larger.
Love your practical solution for the mitre saw, made me lol ☺
Ich habe mich gewundert, dass der Titel einmal auf deutsch und dann auf englisch angezeigt wurde ... Dann habe ich deinen Akzent gehört😂😂😂
Ja. Das ist die doofe Übersetzfunktion von RUclips.
Dust collector is a novel idea!
Some good ideas and some things I would avoid. The hole in wall for mitre saw? I would avoid this. The narrow dust extraction piping? I would have larger diameter.
I also want to build a garage workshop in my future for DIY stuff ☺. I even added tools worth 1 lakh INR in my amazon cart
12:18 Don't point with your middle finger 😂😂
Crude hole in the wall for the saw seamed a little silly but it’s your workshop so if you find it good then fair play, not my bag though
Very nice! Looks like you have the entire place for yourself? I'll bet you your neighbors will be asking you for help ever so often! :) now... time for the wake board! Yippee!
Braam Steyn Pretty much for myself. My neighbors aren’t around very often. Hope to test props soon. Need to buy a big water tank first.
WOW 😳 VERY NICE 🥇👍
I also have a hole in the wall for the mitre saw...except my hole is a small window so i have a tarpoline cover to stop rain getting on it. When you want to get as many tools as you can into a small space you have do these things :-)
Awesome!
"And this gole in the middle of my caffee table is for me to accidentally drop my coffee cup when I'm thinking in my resting chair"
I usually weld a washer onto my vise clamps to hang them up it also helps as a handle for extra torque.
Good idea. If you have a welder.
Could always ask a friend to help you out
His video really blew up. Nice job, you’ll have to tell me he secret next time we talk!
I have no idea why.
Max, Make sure you put some grounding wires on your dust Collect pips, PVC and dust can create a lot of static electricity, so to prevent anything bad from happening I would highly recommend that you do that. But I love the look of the new workshop
I added some grounding wire at spots where it was conveniant. But I am not so sure if it is really neccessary.
@@MaxMakerChannel Well better to be safe than sorry right.
It isn't for electrical ground, which creates a path to earth to prevent a shock. Static bonding is what you want, and you may dismiss it at your peril. A spark can occur inside the pipe due to the dust rubbing against itself and the walls of your pipe. Fine dust is very easy to ignite; I nearly burned my shop down a few years ago from exactly that. It is pretty startling to look up from the saw and see a flame thrower blowing down into a dust collection bag and then burning through it after lighting the contents on fire before I could get it shut off. PVC is good for moving water (and plumbing vents) and static isn't a problem with that. I now have aluminum dust collection plumbing and have magnets in the floor sweep boxes so I don't suck any nails or screws into the impeller. Of course, I use a 3HP extractor and have 8" and 6" pipe running everywhere, so it's not the same situation you have. Everything I have is bonded together, including the tools. In the absence of that, make sure that if a fire does occur, that it can't spread. You are ahead of me with all that concrete; my shop is all wood. Also, obviously, make sure you have a fire extinguisher! Cheers, Max! @@MaxMakerChannel
Thanks for ypur advice. My vacuum and collector barrel are steel. I also have two fire extinguishers.
Plastic conduit is much safer. Great job on the workshop mate.
Thank you!
I'm so glad to hear about the hydrofoil!
Great workshop.
Thanks!
Hi, wie ist denn das nun. Du hast zwei Parkplätze gemietet, bleibt nun die Werkstatt offen auf den anderen Seiten? Ich weiß ja nicht so eine Garage ist doch kalt und feucht. Macht das denn Spass? Bei mir im Keller ist es auch nicht gerade warm aber sicher wärmer als in der Garage neben an und wenn man an der Arbeit ist heizt sich der Raum auch auf. Gruss
This is great, congratulations on the new shop!
Thanks Ryan! Hope I see your lathe working soon : )
Be careful not to drop screws otherwise your neighbours will be mad when they find one in there tyre
Very insightful. Good show.
This is awesome! Do you happen to have an inventory of all that you did?
Absolutely Fantastic job!!! Looks amazing bro! Loved your video. Greetings from Australia
Steve James Thanks for watching Mate! (You should hear my Australien accent!)
Your skill level is mad, just found your channel, subbed
Thanks for watching!
sweet job
Good video. One question: I'm in need of space; how did you get yours? Are you renting or is this a part of your house? Power to the builders 💪👍😎🤘
Thanks for your feedback. Its part of my apartment that I am renting. Instead of parking my car there, I have this workshop.
Max Maker you’re renting it but smashing hole through the walls and building a workshop in a shared garage? Jesus
Is that space shared with anyone? I'm amazed you were allowed to do that without breaking any regs etc...fair play though
Yes, but they are nice : )
great workshop!!! lots of great ideas
Cooles Video und die Werkstatt wurde gut eingerichtet😀
Danke!
@@MaxMakerChannel Vielen Dank für das Herz🤩 Mach weiter so!!!
The tools look great when they are clean and set out nicely but who manages to keep them like this i wish i could
It gets messy within an hour of working, but I clean up once a week.
Amazing space!
ClutterBug Thank you!
Hi, stumbled across this video.
Will be an avid watcher for now on.
Question: how big was your old workshop and how big was your current workshop?
:)
Thank you!
Thanks! Old was 3x5m. New is 5x6m + 5x6m of usable space, but its not for storage.
Eine sehr gelungene Tour! German engeneering!
Freut mich dass sie dir gefällt!
Great Build! Just box in the back with wood and nobody will ever know. You can make a shelf on top of it :)
Hallo, sieht sehr gut aus! Könntest du bitte einen Link von der schwarzen Folie posten, welche auf der Werkbank liegt? Danke! :)
Hey. Danke. Gib mal be ebay Gummimatte oder Feinriefenmatte ein!
Man you're awesome I love your workshop and ideas and stuff I'm going to build my own. I work at old hickory buildings and sheds for bout a year now I'm 30 years old and I finally feel like I'm getting my shit together growing up and waking up and I build buildings and I love it and I'm going to buy a 14 by 40 old hickory shed and make it my workshop. I want to build birdhouses dog houses doll houses who knows, whatever I want I can see the workshop in my mind already. I typed into RUclips workshops and this was the top video and I agree LOL I've been planning it out for a couple of weeks now and I thought I had it all figured out but the more I think about it the more I'm like damn I need this this this this this and this and that other thing lol. I'm only about halfway through your video but the reason I'm commenting is do you have any advice that you would care to give me I mean other than this video LOL
Setting up a workshop is probably never a bad idea. My main advice is to only buy the tools that you need for the next project you have in mind. If you buy saws, make sure they are precise with 90° angles. Most other tools can be cheap and simple. Good luck!
@@MaxMakerChannel thank you so much for replying
Nice vid, definitely kicked of some inspirations for me. Keep up the good work!
Thanks for watching!!
I originally watched your workshop build in 2018. Then I asked whether your neighbors, who share the garage, would have a problem with all the dust caused by the mitre saw. You said they were all very relaxed about it and it shouldn‘t be a problem. I know Bosch saw dust extraction is notoriously bad as I own one myself. I built a box (Hauber) around mine and it now catches about 80% of all the dust. Not perfect but better than nothing. Would like to know if you still work without mitre saw dust extraction, and if you have built some sort of system, what have you done to solve the problem. You live in Lübeck, right?
Hey, yes I live in Lübeck. I had dust extraction from the beginning. Recently I also CNCed some blast gates. The saw is actually from Metabo. The dust extraction was indeed very bad. Most of the dust went underneath the exhaust at the back. I added thick rubber around the hinge to trap any dust. I also covered up the hole on the left side where the blade is with a piece of corrugated plastic. So now most of the blade is encapsulated. This helped dust extraction immensely! Instead of building a big box, I just encapsulated the saw blade as good as I could. Now there is barely any dust. And when I cut would, I turn on the 2 ceiling mounted dust extractors.
@@MaxMakerChannel Hey, thanks for the reply. Would be good if you could post something on the Tube showing how you did that mod on the saw to capture the dust. I've got the Bosch GCM 8 SJL and the dust extraction is awful to put it mildly. Perhaps your idea could work on my saw too!?!
Wow super 👏
Great job. Love the LED lights around the tool wall. As far as opinions...its your shop and what works for you is fine. With the miter saw, I like what you did through the wall, but how do you swivel it for angle cuts?
Thanks! I cannot swivel it anymore, but I didn’t used to do that very often. I can still cut angles on the table saw or the bandsaw. If I ever need a lot of angle cuts, Ill get a second mitre saw probably.
Some great ideas, nice organizations of equipment.
Thanks for watching!
looks very expensive and time consuming, but it looks great!
I use this for work so the money part is ok, but yeah it took weeks!
Dude, check the spelling on your title for this video. I am jealous of all the space you have 😎.
As an American I don’t understand how a workshop is set up in a parking garage lol good luck tho!
The vast majority of my tools are hanging from screws aswell. I feel like I should have some fancy system like almost everyone on youtube but the screws just do the exact same thing plus they look clean and are inifitely modular
Thats my thinking! I only have custom holders for very specific ones like hammers or planes. You cannot hang then well with screws.
Wow, that is a lot of screwdrivers and files... But where will you park your red Mustang?
Drawers were a nice find.
Nice shop, man!
Hey, you made it across from Instagram! Thanks!
@@MaxMakerChannel You're welcome. I'm excited for upcoming projects .-)
Awesome videos!
Thank you!
Like your style
Hello Max Sir, which Camera DSLR you are using for video shooting
Iphone : )
@@MaxMakerChannel oh Great IPHONE with Gimbal ?
Again no DSLR Whatsoever Highly Supprised!
No gimbal. Its easy shoot with the iPhone. Easy data management.
@@MaxMakerChannel ok sir Can Samsung S10 Plus also gives the same result
No idea.
Sieht echt cool deine Werkstatt
Pat. VX danke!
I've often wondered if mounting my tools on a wall vs. putting them in a tool box would be better because I could readily see what's there and what's missing and I could grab them without having to sort through what's in the drawer. However, the associated cost is that I would not have the wall space for a cabinet. Could you comment a little about which is better and why you chose what you chose?
You said the important things. It is wall space vs storage space.
I can work much quicker having my tools visible and easily accessible. However the wall space is limited. One way to maximise wall space would be to put tool walls on hinges. That way you can hide stuff behind the tool walls and still access it. In the long run, I want to put drawers all the way underneath my workbenches. So I get more storage there.
I like to thank you for all the information you have given to us and i have to say that's a goid work shop way to go friend
Thanks for watching!