Let’s see some pictures of your brewing work bench area. I made mine from a simple family handyman design and modified some measurements to work better for me. I have a 4 ft shop light and I’m going to add some white peg board on the back to hang some of my equipment. It’s a little messy right now. I have a Coffer Porter fermenting in the plastic bucket wrapped in a blanket.
I wish I had a workbench. I have a small table in the basement where i store all my brewing equipment. Bottling is done on my chest freezer (fermentation chamber) and i fill bottles on the floor. I need a bigger house!
Mullerbrau for the win! Greg doesn’t screw around. Makes us all look like amateurs!
My winter/spring project is cleaning out the storage space in my basement and turning it into a proper brew cave, as well as converting the adjacent room my middle son used for an office into a tap room now that he’s moved to his own place.
Really, ya think so? I never considered it, but I guess I wouldn’t think mold would grow on them…[/quote]
If they are cleaned well, there is nothing for mold to grow on. That said, I don’t like leaving things where water collects either.
[quote=“mhall2013”]Let’s see some pictures of your brewing work bench area. I made mine from a simple family handyman design and modified some measurements to work better for me. I have a 4 ft shop light and I’m going to add some white peg board on the back to hang some of my equipment. It’s a little messy right now. I have a Coffer Porter fermenting in the plastic bucket wrapped in a blanket.
[/quote]
Nice bench. Your design or did you get a plan somewhere?
Here is the link for the design. I did change some of the measurements to fit my needs. Example I lowered the bottom shelf so I could place taller items on it. I think the original design said to use 1 gallon paint cans to space the shelf off the ground. It cost me more to build since I used quality studs and nice sanded plywood. You could knock off a bunch of money buying cheaper lumber.