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Sawdust Girl®

Sawdust Girl®

Renovation, cabinet building and woodworking plans and tutorials. Build like a Girl®

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Winterizing the Shop

All Posts, Build & Breakfast, HVAC

There are a few weeks during the Fall when I can leave my shop doors wide open! I enjoy the sunlight and sounds of all the animals that live in the woods around my shop. Then it gets cold. When it gets too cold in my shop, I can’t work safely because gloves and saws don’t mix. Nor do frozen fingers and saws! Last year I didn’t have HVAC in my shop. I wore sweaters, hats and did jumping jacks to warm up. Which wasn’t productive because I had to warm up every 30 minutes. This post is sponsored by Trane.

This year the whole shop is tricked out with Trane HVAC systems and I want to make sure my shop is winterized to keep the warm air IN and the cold air out!

Winterizing

There are several relatively simple steps you can take to winterize your home. Most of these are inexpensive and can be done by anyone with little DIY skills or experience.

  • Check Doors and Windows for gaps and air leaks
    • Install weather stripping around doors
    • Caulk around windows
    • Apply window film for single pane windows
  • protect water pipes
  • Fill cracks and gaps
  • Replace air filters
  • Schedule your HVAC Fall maintenance visit

Weatherstripping on metal doors

My workshop has three metal entrance doors. One is the new one I had installed in the back room and recently added weatherstripping to it. This was a new experience for me. Weather stripping for metal doors is also metal and secures to the surface of the door frame.

Door Threshold

I also installed a threshold to stop air from leaking under the door. Metal threshold into concrete floor. I’m learning all sorts of new tricks.

Fill Cracks and Gaps

The whole building is supported by metal beams, pillars, columns and joists. Then the structure is filled in with other materials. The second level has a concrete floor so there’s good insulation and sound buffering between the 1st and 2nd floor. However, there were gaps on the perimeter walls where the air could flow freely between floors. I sealed those gaps with expanding foam to keep the conditioned air from the 1st floor, IN the 1st floor.

Once we finish building out this second level, it will get its own HVAC system and then both levels will be comfortable and homey!

For now, I just need to keep the cold air from upstairs and outside off of the main floor so I can work comfortably through the coming cold season!

Set Thermostat

My Trane systems are so efficient, my electrical costs only went up by about $50/month. That’s going from no HVAC to cooling my entire 3,200 sq/ft shop throughout the hot summer months! With winter approaching, I don’t have to change the ComfortLink thermostats because they are set to keep the temperature within a range (of my choosing). If it needs cooling, it cools. If it needs heating, it heats.

This will be my first winter in this shop with HVAC and I’m thrilled that I won’t have to thaw out my hands with a little space heater!

I hope you all are enjoying the autumn weather while staying safe! I’ll see y’all very soon!

Huge thank you to Trane for being a Platinum sponsor of the B&B and helping me create a comfortable place to work and teach!

October 23, 2020 · 12 Comments

« Framing Begins
Framing The Lodge – part 2 »

Comments

  1. Guam says

    October 23, 2020 at 9:48 pm

    Yay that looks very comfy.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      October 30, 2020 at 7:30 am

      And in comparison to last winter it’s going to be amazingly warm! Though it still feels like summer still. lol

      Reply
  2. Carol Peckham says

    October 24, 2020 at 2:54 am

    Yup I’m both impressed and a little bit jealous!

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      October 30, 2020 at 7:29 am

      🙂 I’m very happy that it’ll be nice and comfy for everyone that comes to learn how to build or DIY with me.

      Reply
  3. Shep says

    October 24, 2020 at 7:47 am

    That will be a game changer for the winter. Happy for you!

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      October 30, 2020 at 7:27 am

      For sure! Though in Michigan, you’re winters are much colder than they are here in Knoxville. Still, I’ve acclimated so 40 feels pretty cold. LOL

      Reply
  4. Dean J Smith says

    October 24, 2020 at 9:02 am

    Just put a wood stove in my garage in your shelves, working out great for storage, getting a little cold here in Michigan

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      October 30, 2020 at 7:21 am

      Hi Dean, Oh man I bet that is so cozy. (Makes me nostalgic for my childhood home. I remember sleeping on the couch so I could be right next to our wood stove.)

      Reply
  5. Vange Johnson says

    October 25, 2020 at 1:26 am

    Awesome!

    Reply
  6. Pawan says

    May 25, 2021 at 3:51 am

    Great job Sandra!
    $50 rise in energy bills is reasonable considering energy-intensive activity that HVAC does.
    How frequently it requires maintenance?
    Thanks.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      May 25, 2021 at 1:28 pm

      I do the seasonal checkups but haven’t had them long enough to need mainenance.

      Reply
  7. John Allen says

    July 11, 2022 at 4:39 pm

    Me: That’s a rad shop, way better than my tiny garage
    “…both levels…”
    Me: COME ON

    Reply

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