Search String: Display: Description: Sort:

Results:

References: [ +from:cak@aratar.com: 13 ]

Total 13 documents matching your query.

1. air plumbing (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Mon, 8 Apr 96 11:29:46 PDT
There's a discussion of this over on rec.crafts.metalworking, started by the usual question of "is PVC OK". The concensus is still no, but a new reason or three have cropped up: * PVC brittles with a
/html/shop-talk/1996-04/msg00012.html (7,254 bytes)

2. Re: air plumbing (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Tue, 9 Apr 96 10:38:50 PDT
Well, think about this for a second. Fire breaks out and your PVC pipe filled with water melts and bursts. Big deal - there's now a bunch of water helping put out the fire. Fire breaks out and your P
/html/shop-talk/1996-04/msg00024.html (8,549 bytes)

3. shelves (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Mon, 8 Jan 96 13:34:50 PST
I am very hapy with the chrome steel food service rack that I bought. This is thesame sort that you see in the Griot's garage catalog: I got mine for about $130 from MSC Industrial Supply (call (800)
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00009.html (7,269 bytes)

4. house wiring FAQ (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Tue, 9 Jan 96 10:42:39 PST
Potential garage builders should check out ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/electrical-wiring/part[1-2] for all their wiring questions... it's great!
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00015.html (6,267 bytes)

5. floor paint (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Tue, 9 Jan 96 13:25:21 PST
My local paint supplier tells me that I shouldn't even bother, because the tires will tend to pull up th epaint. But if I insist, he'll sell me a Pratt&Lambert product - a two-part epoxy, roughly $80
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00016.html (7,235 bytes)

6. Re: more garage notes (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Fri, 12 Jan 96 11:09:21 PST
My compresser is a large "portable" connected to my air lines via large-diameter hose, I've been wondering about this, too. My compressor is a 25 gallon Craftsman, and all the fittings from the tank
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00054.html (8,185 bytes)

7. Re: more garage notes (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Fri, 12 Jan 96 11:13:33 PST
I'll vouch for hose reels - I have one in my current shop that will reach pretty much any corner (it's a small shop). It's a cheap 50 foot reel from J.C. Whitney; I'm fairly certain it's 1/4 hose, an
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00055.html (8,264 bytes)

8. benches (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Fri, 12 Jan 96 11:27:50 PST
New shop, new bench - I've always built benches out of wood and attached them to the garage studs, so they don't move with me. This time I'm probably going to do it a bit differently, and I'm looking
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00057.html (9,684 bytes)

9. Re: Electrical ducting (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Tue, 23 Jan 96 17:23:25 PST
OK all you guys that run conduit along the ceiling with drops - how exactly did you do it? 1/2" galvanized conduit with individual conductors pulled to a junction box above every outlet, and wire nut
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00134.html (8,497 bytes)

10. Re: Electrical ducting (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 96 11:59:29 PST
You can get some GFCI *outlets* that allow some daisy chaining. This may solve your shared neutral problem and the half-size breakers. Right. The code allows one to GFCI-protect a circuit by putting
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00153.html (8,724 bytes)

11. Re: Electrical ducting (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Thu, 25 Jan 96 10:50:31 PST
Check into GFCI circuit breakers. They are more expensive, but they will probably solve this problem. Same problem - you can't share the neutral, so you can't run jacketed (BX) 12/3 around the shop t
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00171.html (8,820 bytes)

12. Re: Electrical ducting (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Thu, 25 Jan 96 10:59:53 PST
Why would you want to do this for 110 circuits? You will effectivly limit your outlets to 1/2 of the circuit capacity, by doubling the load on the neutral wire. Each 110 circuit should have it's own
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00172.html (9,031 bytes)

13. Re: Electrical ducting (score: 1)
Author: cak@aratar.com (Chris Kantarjiev)
Date: Thu, 25 Jan 96 10:47:02 PST
You can get some GFCI *outlets* that allow some daisy chaining. This may solve your shared neutral problem and the half-size breakers. Putting a GFCI outlet at the head of a string of outlets is a ch
/html/shop-talk/1996-01/msg00179.html (8,736 bytes)


This search system is powered by Namazu