I am totally impressed with your self-taught skills and attention to detail. I know how much hard work went into this project, and you should be proud of what you have accomplished. This has inspired me to clean up and organize my workspace, and I thank you for the kick in the pants.
From Belgium: The fact that you are so humble and calm and resilient and edited your videos so perfectly well, makes me want to give you this message: I have a workshop 1 times bigger but bigger is not better. I split up into, electrics, electronics, woodworking and metal working. Will send you some photos when it is done (when people are on Mars?). You INSPIRED me!!!
Drywall? UGH - I was in my early thirties and complained I was TOO OLD FOR DRYWALL. Oh, to go back those forty years. You are to be commended on the project's shear ENERGY, plus the design, layout, construction, finish work and THIS video. All so good! Thank you for sharing...
I was 56 when I built the workshop, about to turn 60 this year. And although I vowed never to drywall again (the dust is a killer) I'm now thinking of drywalling the one remaining area in my basement that isn't finished yet. Hopefully I'll talk myself out of the idea! So glad you enjoyed the video.
Yes sir Bill you are a neet fellow.. you are also a neat fellow.. I love your little workshop. You and my wife must be somehow related.. she had me build her a little office.. She has put enough things in her office to fill a two bedroom house.. she is so organized and neat I often kid her about the 8 square inches of space she has left in there.. It is like being in a small radio room in one of the old diesel subs like the bonefish or something.. Oh YEAH! what a scruffy looking fellow.. I was a carpenter for 30 years and I really like to watch talented people building for the first time.. You can build my friend.. or should I say billed.. oh I crack myself up...thanks so much for the share Bill and please carry on..
I really like your little workshop. A small well organized space can make working on projects much easier, when everything is close at hand it saves time and makes clean up very easy.
Yes! I have done lots of ceiling sheetrock work - by myself, too. I built homes for a living for a few years. I always thought it was interesting how on snow days, I was the only one capable of getting to the job site. Well, when your family needs money to live, you just do it! I made several innovative jigs to help me get the rock into place and braced up flat and positioned and soon, one screw at a time, it was up. Oh, well. I started serious working life in a sign shop as a sign mechanic, graduated to the electrician, then to welder, then to fabricator, then to sheet metal shop, helper, then foreman- I was on my way to being a true artisan. I ended up as a field supervisor, crane operator and sign erector. Have you ever walked around on top of a 120' tall, lighted highway sign? Some fun and great views. I quit one day and started my own construction business- and finally retired some years later. Yet, I was never disciplined enough or patient enough to keep a well-organized shop, as you have created and maintained. I really, really respect that. I could not tell you how many shops I have neatly organized with high hopes of efficiency and neatness and as soon as the first jobs came in, it all turned into Hell's messiest shops. It takes a very dedicated person to end a 14 hour day and still have enough energy to put everything back to order, sweep up and throw away the scrap. I ruined my best intentions by thinking I needed to keep the slightest leftovers _ "Hmm...I Might need that someday!". I think the best rule anyone could follow is to get rid of anything that is not used or used up at least once a month. Anyway, your mental discipline shows up in both your shop and your most excellent teaching. God bless you, Bill- You are truly an inspiration.
I am studying electronic engineering and electrical mechanical engineering and I have just started to build my own workshop, this video is amazing and that workshop is very beautiful, now I feel very inspired, it has a new subscriber.
Very much impressed with your working n your knowledge in electronics. I have seen your videos on power supply in that your presentation was excellent.I left this field after 35 years n out of field for last 12 years.after seeing you again I am trying to come back again.thanks
You did an amazing job!!! The “secret” video put a huge smile on my face- you seem like a very genuine and caring man, thank you for sharing your knowledge! I’ve learned so much from finding your channel a short time ago and you’ve inspired me to organize my work area and get into more projects!
Great shop Sir!! I’m 36 and I seem to have turned into a Jack of all trades, amateur level. 😂 I’ve been watching many shop tours spanning from wood working, mechanic, audio, and electronics. I will sure take some pointers from you to apply to the electrical corner of my garage shop. Thank you.
That was great Bill, you have every right to be proud of your workshop. Many great ideas for storage and work areas. I was totally captivated for the whole 36 min.
Always remember kiddies....it's not the size of a man's shop but how you use your shop that makes all the difference! And everyone likes a clean shop! Nice stuff DroneBot! Thank you for all the videos! I subscribed today!
"It's such a tiny shop that I thought it would be too short of a video"... 36 minutes later I'm still sitting here watching and imagining that after he watched the final edit, there were at least three things he realized he didn't show 🤣 Very efficient use of space here. I also couldn't help but chuckle during the construction slide-show narration as it felt a bit "Mr. Rogers"-esque with the calm and measured tone and delivery. I kept waiting for trolly to appear or a little jingle to play... or perhaps a break to walk over and feed the fish. I love your videos. Keep up the great work!
Bill, Thanks for your commitment to sharing your knowledge and experience. Your workshop is a brilliant use of such a tiny space. I am fortunate enough to have just built a very edgy house on 100 acres in a special wilderness area listed on our National Trust and State Heritage Register. A workshop with a view. Oh, and it's on the fringe of one of Australia's major wine districts. :) I have always considered myself a bit disorganised, but if I'm honest, I'm a bit OCD. My tools are not all on pegboard, but those that aren't are tidily laid out in their own drawer. If my house contractors need a tool, they know I will have one. I'm disabled, so they go to the shed on their own. (94x26 ft. thee bays, all lined and insulated). I can describe the exact drawer etc., but they often go on their own and just know where to find it! Long story short (OK too late...), I have the luxury of space, so while I'm organised, I'm not as efficient as you - by a long shot! Space can be your enemy. My struggle - and I'd love to hear more from you - is the details of your storage. That is, what's in what drawers of your storage boxes. How are they organised? I guess that's going to vary widely amongst what items different people need to store. I use boxes like you have for your jumper leads - with typically 18 compartments. We in AU call them 'tackle boxes'. I have a few different ones but keep to only a few types for the sake of consistency. I then store them like books in a bookshelf. All labelled to within an inch of their lives. My little Dymo label printer prints from Excel templates. I'm playing with but not diving into Arduino etc. just yet. I have degrees in Chemistry and Computing, but I am not an engineer and want to get my head around analogue electronics first. To that end I bought a used electronics education board with pwr supply, basic signal generator etc. from a US university engineering dept. And of course, an oscilloscope and good quality multimeters etc. Sorry for the dissertation. Keep up what must be a very busy schedule. Your work is great. Doug
Coming from a background of 5s, and engineering, I must say, congratulations!. You nailed it! Very efficient work area. Thanks for the tour. I am happy to have found this channel, I have a lot to learn.
Your workshop is awesome and your videos are well made and I admire your intelligence. You're an inspiration to me and I appreciate your content. Thank you.
I am redoing a 120 year old home and doing it myself. I am really enjoying your retelling of your experience. My kitchen is not square either and when my pantry door edge lined up with the drawer below it I was so tickled! Great job on your shop!
I'm not even nearly what you would call an electronic hobbyist... Btw, I just watched a couple of your videos about rotary encoders and I2C . I have to tell you. You are a great teacher. Thank you for sharing your experience with us. great channel !!!
Good thing you did that back in 2015. If you'd have done it in 2021 you would've had to remortgage the house for the lumber. Awesome job btw. I dream of being that organized.
I'm late for the tour! I just wanted to tell you again- of all the hundreds of channels I regularly watch, you rank WAY at the top, easily one of the best 5, and certainly top 3 when it comes to instructional videographers!! Thanks for all your hard work!!!
I really like the idea of having built in basic power supplies built into the work bench when I redo my lab I plan to borrow your idea along with your built in audio amp great ideas and video!
I was one of two or three guys who ribbed you about the size of your workshop. I thought it was a TV set that was just wheeled into a studio , having been in TV for many years. Now we can see that you designed and built it yourself and did a really great job. The roll of anti-static material was really funny...I was expecting something 10 times smaller...lol. I've saved most of your videos and think they are all first class productions. Kudos for making this video, Bill..
Awesome, and inspirational! I am glad you told us that you have "off site" storage for "stuff" because as every true maker knows - you can never have too many tools! It's a fallacy... Normally I don't trust guys that have a clean, tidy workbench but I have made an exception in your case. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
I'm glad you're inspired Max, it makes it all worthwhile to hear that. As for "if I could do it again" it depends upon how much space I had. If I built it again in a similar sized room there really isn't much I would change. But if I had a larger area I would have tried to get my scope and test equipment onto the "electronics workbench". I had actually hoped to do that, one thing that I didn't point out was another surface-mount AC outlet that I put on the far left side of that workbench for plugging in test equipment. I also shortened a standard AC cord for use with the scope, and I do use that arrangement wghen I drag the scope to the workbench. Back in the 80's when I worked as a technician I had a scope right on the workbench, alomng with a few meters. It was nice to always have it handy.
I love you workshop, reminds me my workshop in India, but that was not too tidy but have all the tools, but now I came to UK to do Double MS in AI with Robotics, and soon will make LAB again. Well Thanks for all you knowledge.
Good naration of the electronics projects with hands-on experience .very helpful for me for the projects to build easily without searching sites for information
Thanks for all your great videos. I have learned a lot and use your videos, ideas, and others channels to keep my skill levels and knowledge current. I started out in Electronics in high school and spent 6 years in The Navy in Advanced Electronics program. However, I spent the 5 years out of the 6 years active on land. I was assigned to a government agency with a clearance working on Digital Equipment Corporations DEC System 10 main frame computers. Troubleshooting them down to the board level and then then discrete component level repair back in 1968-1974 time frame. They actual supported core memory for their systems. The systems supporting multiple Dec 10 systems computers coupled together for real-time data collection and timesharing systems with shared memory between them. Large rooms of computer equipment working together. The last year in the Navy, I worked part-time as one of a few Field Service Engineers as a Technician for Digital Equipment Corporation before being hired full time. I ended up supporting the DuPont Experimental Stations real-time data capture and time sharing systems. With DEC PDP10, PDP 8, PDP 9, nd PDP 11 computers coupled together. It was a lot of fun and enjoyable work. While working for DEC I built and leased Cromemco Computer S100 Bus Z80 systems configured as using bank switching MPM Multi- Processing Machines to multiple local high schools and the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center. Again, Thank you for your great videos and knowledge that you share with us all.
im still watching but just got to 10 mins in and i'm blown away by how great a job you did building your workshop. Massive thanks for showing us this :-D
Recently I came in contact with your TH-cam channel. On the very first video that I saw I fell in love of your workshop. So neat & nice arrangements in small place. The colour scheme is also very pleasant.
Kudos for the 'projects in progress' sliding drawer. I always seem to have at least a dozen projects in progress... waiting for a part or waiting for me to figure out the next step.
Just ran across you channel, love your workshop. Great logic used designing it. I bought an Arduino when they first came out and a book on projects. I organized all my equipment into boxes, and never had time (active duty military back then) to mess with it. Now that I am settled into my final place with a detached workshop and some time, I got back into building custom speakers and decided to dabble a little into the Pi world building a media box. Which led me here somehow. I watched your Pi video explaining the differences between the micro computer and the micro controller and a little dab into python (awesome video). And was hoping I could find a tour of your workshop. Thanks for making these videos, your teaching techniques are very good for the uneducated. Look forward to your future videos.
Totally impressed with your attention to detail and your workshop design. I'm fairly new to your channel and look forward to viewing most if not all of your videos. Thank you!
Some good ideas there. While watching this video my wife popped in, saw it for no more than 1.5 seconds and said "what a neat workshop he has"! I suppose what that really meant was that my workshop is, ummm, not so neat. However, my day will come in a few months when our new house is built. In it I plan to build a new workshop and it will have many of the ideas I've picked up around the net, including some that I have seen here.
This is by far the most fantastic little workshop in the world. (I thought it would be a great deal larger) I could only hope to build a work area for my tinkering that is 10% as spectacular as this. I am also a fan of pegboard, even chipboard full of nails is a step up from searching for 15 minutes to locate a tool. Your workshop is extremely well designed for the space you had available. Thanks for sharing.
Great video -- I definitely got some ideas. I am wanting to move my electronics lab from a desk in the study to a utility room. My space is limited, plus I reload ammo in the same room, along with the washer and dryer.
You have done an absolutely fantastic job! I've seen so called "professionals" try and fail miserably. But you have put in so much effort and came out with a fantastic result!
what an awesome video. thank you sharing sir! love it! nothing complicated, all building materials that a regular person like myself could realistically tackle. I also appreciate how you covered the mechanical bench.
I am totally impressed with your self-taught skills and attention to detail. I know how much hard work went into this project, and you should be proud of what you have accomplished. This has inspired me to clean up and organize my workspace, and I thank you for the kick in the pants.
From Belgium: The fact that you are so humble and calm and resilient and edited your videos so perfectly well, makes me want to give you this message: I have a workshop 1 times bigger but bigger is not better. I split up into, electrics, electronics, woodworking and metal working. Will send you some photos when it is done (when people are on Mars?). You INSPIRED me!!!
No joke. My son watches your channel. Thanks for being a good influence.
Drywall? UGH - I was in my early thirties and complained I was TOO OLD FOR DRYWALL. Oh, to go back those forty years. You are to be commended on the project's shear ENERGY, plus the design, layout, construction, finish work and THIS video. All so good!
Thank you for sharing...
I was 56 when I built the workshop, about to turn 60 this year. And although I vowed never to drywall again (the dust is a killer) I'm now thinking of drywalling the one remaining area in my basement that isn't finished yet. Hopefully I'll talk myself out of the idea!
So glad you enjoyed the video.
YES, @@Dronebotworkshop please keep up your good works - and keep us posted on the drywall episodes
Yes sir Bill you are a neet fellow.. you are also a neat fellow.. I love your little workshop. You and my wife must be somehow related.. she had me build her a little office.. She has put enough things in her office to fill a two bedroom house.. she is so organized and neat I often kid her about the 8 square inches of space she has left in there.. It is like being in a small radio room in one of the old diesel subs like the bonefish or something.. Oh YEAH! what a scruffy looking fellow.. I was a carpenter for 30 years and I really like to watch talented people building for the first time.. You can build my friend.. or should I say billed.. oh I crack myself up...thanks so much for the share Bill and please carry on..
Nice shop, look like your videos, neat and organized.
I really like your little workshop. A small well organized space can make working on projects much easier, when everything is close at hand it saves time and makes clean up very easy.
I’m glad that you posted this despite your hesitation. I’d hazard a guess that most of us are fighting space limitations. So this is inspiring.
31:00 This is the anti static material I have left over... (backs up a truck). That made me chuckle.
Yes! I have done lots of ceiling sheetrock work - by myself, too. I built homes for a living for a few years. I always thought it was interesting how on snow days, I was the only one capable of getting to the job site. Well, when your family needs money to live, you just do it! I made several innovative jigs to help me get the rock into place and braced up flat and positioned and soon, one screw at a time, it was up. Oh, well.
I started serious working life in a sign shop as a sign mechanic, graduated to the electrician, then to welder, then to fabricator, then to sheet metal shop, helper, then foreman- I was on my way to being a true artisan. I ended up as a field supervisor, crane operator and sign erector. Have you ever walked around on top of a 120' tall, lighted highway sign? Some fun and great views. I quit one day and started my own construction business- and finally retired some years later.
Yet, I was never disciplined enough or patient enough to keep a well-organized shop, as you have created and maintained. I really, really respect that. I could not tell you how many shops I have neatly organized with high hopes of efficiency and neatness and as soon as the first jobs came in, it all turned into Hell's messiest shops. It takes a very dedicated person to end a 14 hour day and still have enough energy to put everything back to order, sweep up and throw away the scrap. I ruined my best intentions by thinking I needed to keep the slightest leftovers _ "Hmm...I Might need that someday!". I think the best rule anyone could follow is to get rid of anything that is not used or used up at least once a month.
Anyway, your mental discipline shows up in both your shop and your most excellent teaching. God bless you, Bill- You are truly an inspiration.
I am building my own work area and try to adopt the best ideas I see in other workshops. Love your space.
I am studying electronic engineering and electrical mechanical engineering and I have just started to build my own workshop, this video is amazing and that workshop is very beautiful, now I feel very inspired, it has a new subscriber.
Thank you for sharing the experience ! Your workshop looks fabulous and also, I’m glad I’m not the only one removing the price tag of a 2 by 4.
I really love your workshop, well organized. The best thing with your workshop is the built-in jacks and sockets.
Very much impressed with your working n your knowledge in electronics. I have seen your videos on power supply in that your presentation was excellent.I left this field after 35 years n out of field for last 12 years.after seeing you again I am trying to come back again.thanks
You did an amazing job!!! The “secret” video put a huge smile on my face- you seem like a very genuine and caring man, thank you for sharing your knowledge! I’ve learned so much from finding your channel a short time ago and you’ve inspired me to organize my work area and get into more projects!
Great shop Sir!! I’m 36 and I seem to have turned into a Jack of all trades, amateur level. 😂 I’ve been watching many shop tours spanning from wood working, mechanic, audio, and electronics. I will sure take some pointers from you to apply to the electrical corner of my garage shop. Thank you.
I love the dimmer doohickey’s. I have lots of those. Not all dimmers, but lots of doohickeys.
No mention of the white and blue color scheme, very cool, kudos ;-)
Nice shop, well thought out. I really liked your video on the Op-Amps...very helpful. God Bless.
That was great Bill, you have every right to be proud of your workshop. Many great ideas for storage and work areas. I was totally captivated for the whole 36 min.
Always remember kiddies....it's not the size of a man's shop but how you use your shop that makes all the difference! And everyone likes a clean shop! Nice stuff DroneBot! Thank you for all the videos! I subscribed today!
I’m glad I’m building my shop with windows. Very few on yt seem to have any.
"It's such a tiny shop that I thought it would be too short of a video"... 36 minutes later I'm still sitting here watching and imagining that after he watched the final edit, there were at least three things he realized he didn't show 🤣 Very efficient use of space here. I also couldn't help but chuckle during the construction slide-show narration as it felt a bit "Mr. Rogers"-esque with the calm and measured tone and delivery. I kept waiting for trolly to appear or a little jingle to play... or perhaps a break to walk over and feed the fish. I love your videos. Keep up the great work!
Thank you very much for devotion to share all your excellent work experience.
Bill,
Thanks for your commitment to sharing your knowledge and experience. Your workshop is a brilliant use of such a tiny space. I am fortunate enough to have just built a very edgy house on 100 acres in a special wilderness area listed on our National Trust and State Heritage Register. A workshop with a view. Oh, and it's on the fringe of one of Australia's major wine districts. :)
I have always considered myself a bit disorganised, but if I'm honest, I'm a bit OCD. My tools are not all on pegboard, but those that aren't are tidily laid out in their own drawer. If my house contractors need a tool, they know I will have one. I'm disabled, so they go to the shed on their own. (94x26 ft. thee bays, all lined and insulated).
I can describe the exact drawer etc., but they often go on their own and just know where to find it!
Long story short (OK too late...), I have the luxury of space, so while I'm organised, I'm not as efficient as you - by a long shot! Space can be your enemy.
My struggle - and I'd love to hear more from you - is the details of your storage. That is, what's in what drawers of your storage boxes. How are they organised? I guess that's going to vary widely amongst what items different people need to store.
I use boxes like you have for your jumper leads - with typically 18 compartments. We in AU call them 'tackle boxes'. I have a few different ones but keep to only a few types for the sake of consistency. I then store them like books in a bookshelf. All labelled to within an inch of their lives. My little Dymo label printer prints from Excel templates.
I'm playing with but not diving into Arduino etc. just yet. I have degrees in Chemistry and Computing, but I am not an engineer and want to get my head around analogue electronics first. To that end I bought a used electronics education board with pwr supply, basic signal generator etc. from a US university engineering dept. And of course, an oscilloscope and good quality multimeters etc.
Sorry for the dissertation. Keep up what must be a very busy schedule. Your work is great.
Doug
If you're ever in doubt, this is really cool! I'm hoping I will have something similar one day 😊
Coming from a background of 5s, and engineering, I must say, congratulations!. You nailed it! Very efficient work area. Thanks for the tour. I am happy to have found this channel, I have a lot to learn.
Your workshop is awesome and your videos are well made and I admire your intelligence. You're an inspiration to me and I appreciate your content. Thank you.
I am redoing a 120 year old home and doing it myself. I am really enjoying your retelling of your experience. My kitchen is not square either and when my pantry door edge lined up with the drawer below it I was so tickled! Great job on your shop!
I'm not even nearly what you would call an electronic hobbyist... Btw, I just watched a couple of your videos about rotary encoders and I2C .
I have to tell you. You are a great teacher. Thank you for sharing your experience with us.
great channel !!!
wOo! First time seem a Worksop being totally built by self. Thanks for sharing
Amazing man, amazing job, amazing courses. Doing such things alone means a lot. Thanks
Good thing you did that back in 2015. If you'd have done it in 2021 you would've had to remortgage the house for the lumber. Awesome job btw. I dream of being that organized.
You Rule! And thank you for being one of my most vaulted professors.
I'm late for the tour! I just wanted to tell you again- of all the hundreds of channels I regularly watch, you rank WAY at the top, easily one of the best 5, and certainly top 3 when it comes to instructional videographers!! Thanks for all your hard work!!!
You passion is admirable. By next year I will have my lab setup
Thank you for sharing! Outstanding Workshop! Thanks again, Joel
great video uncle.. will try to update my workshop also
I really like the idea of having built in basic power supplies built into the work bench when I redo my lab I plan to borrow your idea along with your built in audio amp great ideas and video!
I live in poverty, on UBI with a walk in closet sized SRO. But I appreciate you sharing your wisdom and knowledge with us plebs.
I was one of two or three guys who ribbed you about the size of your workshop. I thought it was a TV set that was just wheeled into a studio , having been in TV for many years. Now we can see that you designed and built it yourself and did a really great job. The roll of anti-static material was really funny...I was expecting something 10 times smaller...lol.
I've saved most of your videos and think they are all first class productions. Kudos for making this video, Bill..
Awesome makers space. I would love to have something like this one day. Very neat and visually pleasing.
Awesome, and inspirational! I am glad you told us that you have "off site" storage for "stuff" because as every true maker knows - you can never have too many tools! It's a fallacy...
Normally I don't trust guys that have a clean, tidy workbench but I have made an exception in your case. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Awesome! Love your videos! I am inspired to have a similar workshop.
What would you do differently? if you had to do it again?
I'm glad you're inspired Max, it makes it all worthwhile to hear that.
As for "if I could do it again" it depends upon how much space I had. If I built it again in a similar sized room there really isn't much I would change.
But if I had a larger area I would have tried to get my scope and test equipment onto the "electronics workbench". I had actually hoped to do that, one thing that I didn't point out was another surface-mount AC outlet that I put on the far left side of that workbench for plugging in test equipment. I also shortened a standard AC cord for use with the scope, and I do use that arrangement wghen I drag the scope to the workbench.
Back in the 80's when I worked as a technician I had a scope right on the workbench, alomng with a few meters. It was nice to always have it handy.
Did you do it
This is a thing of beauty. What a set up!
I love you workshop, reminds me my workshop in India, but that was not too tidy but have all the tools, but now I came to UK to do Double MS in AI with Robotics, and soon will make LAB again.
Well Thanks for all you knowledge.
Good naration of the electronics projects with hands-on experience .very helpful for me for the projects to build easily without searching sites for information
Looking at all sorts of electronics workshop tour videos at the moment, yours is the most inspiring build so far :-)
Thanks for all your great videos. I have learned a lot and use your videos, ideas, and others channels to keep my skill levels and knowledge current.
I started out in Electronics in high school and spent 6 years in The Navy in Advanced Electronics program. However, I spent the 5 years out of the 6 years active on land. I was assigned to a government agency with a clearance working on Digital Equipment Corporations DEC System 10 main frame computers. Troubleshooting them down to the board level and then then discrete component level repair back in 1968-1974 time frame. They actual supported core memory for their systems. The systems supporting multiple Dec 10 systems computers coupled together for real-time data collection and timesharing systems with shared memory between them. Large rooms of computer equipment working together.
The last year in the Navy, I worked part-time as one of a few Field Service Engineers as a Technician for Digital Equipment Corporation before being hired full time. I ended up supporting the DuPont Experimental Stations real-time data capture and time sharing systems. With DEC PDP10, PDP 8, PDP 9, nd PDP 11 computers coupled together. It was a lot of fun and enjoyable work.
While working for DEC I built and leased Cromemco Computer S100 Bus Z80 systems configured as using bank switching MPM Multi- Processing Machines to multiple local high schools and the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center.
Again, Thank you for your great videos and knowledge that you share with us all.
A very impressive and well thought out electronics work bench!!!
im still watching but just got to 10 mins in and i'm blown away by how great a job you did building your workshop. Massive thanks for showing us this :-D
Subscribed and yes you have inspired me to work on my area, ty!! :-)
This video is absolutely amazing! Thanks a bunch for sharing this with us!
Thanks for the tour! I'm planning out my own workbench in a small space and this provided good inspiration!
Great day! Found your channel, wished you had a shop tour posted, and here it is!
Very inspiring. Thanks so much for sharing your experience with building such a well thought out workshop.
Simply incredible. Absolutely wonderful, I’m beyond impressed!
gotta admire that commitment to the blue! - keep up the great work bud!
inspired to clean and organize my dungeon/ work area...😎
Of course you're proud of it, dude, just look at it!
Recently I came in contact with your TH-cam channel. On the very first video that I saw I fell in love of your workshop. So neat & nice arrangements in small place. The colour scheme is also very pleasant.
Love the extra footage watching how and why the shop is pretty cool.
Excelent work Bill, - - Muy Bonito!!! , Greetings from México.
You were much more relaxed in your old video. That's not such a bad thing.
Kudos for the 'projects in progress' sliding drawer. I always seem to have at least a dozen projects in progress... waiting for a part or waiting for me to figure out the next step.
I can't keep a nail in a wall, so I applaud you for your efforts! Very nice layout.
Just ran across you channel, love your workshop. Great logic used designing it. I bought an Arduino when they first came out and a book on projects. I organized all my equipment into boxes, and never had time (active duty military back then) to mess with it. Now that I am settled into my final place with a detached workshop and some time, I got back into building custom speakers and decided to dabble a little into the Pi world building a media box. Which led me here somehow. I watched your Pi video explaining the differences between the micro computer and the micro controller and a little dab into python (awesome video). And was hoping I could find a tour of your workshop. Thanks for making these videos, your teaching techniques are very good for the uneducated. Look forward to your future videos.
Totally impressed with your attention to detail and your workshop design. I'm fairly new to your channel and look forward to viewing most if not all of your videos. Thank you!
Some good ideas there. While watching this video my wife popped in, saw it for no more than 1.5 seconds and said "what a neat workshop he has"! I suppose what that really meant was that my workshop is, ummm, not so neat. However, my day will come in a few months when our new house is built. In it I plan to build a new workshop and it will have many of the ideas I've picked up around the net, including some that I have seen here.
Thank you so much for all your videos. I've already wached a lot of them and I've learned so much from you! Regards, Gunther from Germany
heel mooi werkplaats Bill alles wat je nodig hebt voor mooie projekts
You are meticulous sir! Well done!
Love your workshop! And your channel. I'm learning lots!
Thankyou for sharing your expertise. I just watched your egloo car construction.....You made it see easy......
it's the other way around.. this is not basic.. this is spectacular.. i just enjoyed the video
Great Job Boss, I'm a huge fan and i will take this video as a plane to complete my own workshop
SUPER, SUPER. Excelente trabajo., Se ve de lujo.
I like the Blue and White Theme.
This is by far the most fantastic little workshop in the world. (I thought it would be a great deal larger) I could only hope to build a work area for my tinkering that is 10% as spectacular as this. I am also a fan of pegboard, even chipboard full of nails is a step up from searching for 15 minutes to locate a tool. Your workshop is extremely well designed for the space you had available. Thanks for sharing.
Yea pegboard is awesome. Thanks for the video.
Hi Bill, what can I say, another very excellent video, many thanks.
God bless you what an interesting video:)
Great video -- I definitely got some ideas. I am wanting to move my electronics lab from a desk in the study to a utility room. My space is limited, plus I reload ammo in the same room, along with the washer and dryer.
It’s most amazing thing, building a workshop all by yourself.
thankyou i just spent 30 min drop jaw over your workshop im so jealous
Beautiful! I love your pace.
Thank you Bill
You are a perfect package - great VDOs , nice explanation.
You have done an absolutely fantastic job! I've seen so called "professionals" try and fail miserably. But you have put in so much effort and came out with a fantastic result!
I think you could probably cut up that anti-static material into hobby-sized bits and sell it on amazon/ebay. You could fill that gap in the market!
Love this.
Very encouraging. Will utilise the space i have
You need to sell your anti static material as "Own a piece of DroneBot Workshop". Get some of you cost back.
I'll take 10 ft
Great workshop and you have a great way of teaching and making videos, thankyou
Beautiful shop. Congrats
Amazing, Congrats! Hope I manage to get my workshop some similar to this one. Truly inspirational.
It's so beautiful. Fortunately, I had dream my another new room.
Wow you must have a $100k into that! Crazy big setup.
A great shop. Well organized with plenty of connections for your projects.
Excellent tour. Thanks for making this DroneBot workshop.
what an awesome video. thank you sharing sir! love it! nothing complicated, all building materials that a regular person like myself could realistically tackle. I also appreciate how you covered the mechanical bench.