Don’t forget the beer fridge!
Does your wife have a sister as tolerable as she is? Currently if I leave my coffee cup on the counter for more then 30 minutes, it`s a violation of the castle. Hug your wife, she is a special woman. Jeff^^
Most of my sizing presses are in the garage as a great deal of tools are however much the same as others my garage temps fluctuate considerably pushing me to alternative solutions. My wife is a good sport for the “most part” in addition being empty nesters increases tolerance I suppose, my thoughts are to just be comfortable and enjoy the process.
Shoot Small
J
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I'm considering moving my reloading room to the garage from a room in the house. We were planning on moving, but that is not going to happen now. I have always done my reloading in a spare room in the house, but now I think it's time to having all the stuff in one place.
I have a very large three car garage. With all 3 cars in the garage, I still have an open space of 12ft x 31ft I can use for a reloading room.
I live on the Texas Gulf Coast, 55 miles as the crow flies from the Gulf of Mexico. We have more hot and humid days than cool days. Humidity is the worst here.
Those of you that live in an extreme heat and humidity environment and reload in the garage or outbuilding, how do you beat the humidity?
That would not fly at our house. I reload and make bullets in my daylight basement.^^
Most of my sizing presses are in the garage as a great deal of tools are however much the same as others my garage temps fluctuate considerably pushing me to alternative solutions. My wife is a good sport for the “most part” in addition being empty nesters increases tolerance I suppose, my thoughts are to just be comfortable and enjoy the process.
Shoot Small
J
View attachment 1144617
I live near Austin and have all my reloading equipment in the garage. I typically don't park cars in my 3 car garage, one bass boat, and my workshop take most of the room. The reason I mention that is that the rapid changes in weather can cause serious problems.
Worst case scenario is when a very cold air mass visits us for several days, cold soaking everything in the garage. Tools inside the tool box, guns in a safe, everything gets super chilled.
Then, overnight the weather changes and we get a warm moist flow off the Gulf, and if I open the garage door, exchanging that cold, dry air inside the garage with warm moist air, EVERYTHING sweats! Tools inside the box aren't spared and everything rusts.
So if you do move it all out there, and can't close off the space to create a controlled atmosphere room, make sure you don't open the garage door for several days after a cold snap or until everything warms back up.