Filth
Contents
Operation FILTH
or, How to inflate our dirty room to 200%
Summary / Outline:
- Removing wall dividing dirty room from adjacent room, creating one larger room;
- Change flooring to laminate for much easier & faster cleaning (sweeping)
- Putting long workbench in, making high work tables in front of dirty room redundant
- Putting in sink to facilitate light chemical/paint/etc work, sparing kitchen sink
- Rethinking layout and tool placement, rectifying mistakes made, etc.
Date / Period:
Unknown, not set yet, to be determined. But starts very soon. Planned is no later than September.
We decided to aim for the weekend of 13+14 September for the wall demolition.
Participants / volunteers:
(if for a specific part, please indicate that behind your name):
- Mr. Ultratux
- Chotee
- Narya - paint walls and benches
- justa - too busy to edit the wiki but will certainly show up
Task list / Timeline
Rough task list, to be refined/updated. In this order, generally.
- Disposal method of the debris:
Inquire what (if any) possibilities exist at URUR kindly allows us to dump it in their container. Retrieve key. -
Make appointment with Laurens/UR for the electrical conduit in the wallUltratux - Relocate remaining network equipment outside, well shielded from dust(!!) (or far away to the glass room)
- Contact network team, ask them what they need from us to make that happen (like longer cables, from where to where?)
- Get list of what sockets are on what VLANS and which cables need POE so we might start rerouting cables to the glass room
- Make a casing around the fusebox to shield it from splashes & vapours from sink below it.
- remove the 19" rack
- remove the red drawer systems
- Take just about everything else out of the rooms, store intelligently. Dustproof the rest.
-
Make sure the high tables in front of the window are not blocked by that stuff - Take out the parts of the ceiling tiles and supports that will interfere with our work
- Take out or protect the air conduits that risk getting pierced/damaged by flying debris.
- Tape dustproof/watertight everything that needs protecting, like the fusebox and...?
- Disconnect the electricity outlet+cable that is inside the wall we're taking down. network outlet too.
- Tape the door+doorframe so dust is contained inside rooms as well as can be
- Arrange for protective wear: dust masks, eyewear, ear protection, builders' helmets...
- Arrange breaking tools; big hammer. maybe pickaxe (many wall, very mine, so d0ge!), maybe hilti's too
- Break wall down, while making sure we can also evacuate the rubble. People seem to disagree on the best way to do that.
- Dispose of the debris.
- Plaster/fixup walls where needed. Paint 'em too?
- Clean everything up well
- Where needed, egalize floor so it can support laminate
- Put in laminate floor, wall to wall
- Justa plans to put the laminate also outside... I'm like... no... why... We'll have to talk on this later.
- Remove wood from door bottom to accomodate new floor height
- Design/purchase/build a (rubber?) dustproof strip to put on door.
- Rearrange ceiling slats so the ceiling will be seamless
- possibly relocate some of the air duct inlets?
- Cut ceiling tiles to match, where needed
- Block off one door, (possibly using extra insulation?)
- Build and secure the benches using the high tables as frames + Gamma plywood on top
- A suggestion was made to close the shelves below the benches with doors against dust (essentially making cabinets) Me, I'm not sold on the idea yet, but...
- The reason I disagree in part has to do with the storage items below; like, why would you want to shield wood stock from sawdust? etc. Doors make the access hard.
- Paint/varnish the benches (It would be good to try and do parts of this in advance so we don't waste a week to wait for 3 coats to dry...)
- Put some powertools in, where appropriate, like onto walls or on dedicated platforms.
- Put sink in, drill through wall to kitchen, arrange water conduits
- Redo/expand/fix electricity. People have expressed desire for emergency cut-off switch. Hard(er) to do if multiple groups though... how would a good way?
- Make a 3-phase outlet, while at the same time discouraging use of high-powered equipment since we have just small fuses, regrettably.
- Optionally: change the air exhaust fan back to 3-phase, thereby increasing its power by ~50% or so
- Arrange storage space for:
- Wood; sheets
- Wood; scrap pieces
- Wood, metal, plastic; lengthy stuff like rods, pipes, sticks, etc
- Wood, perhaps metal; large beams
- Metal; scraps and small sheets
- Power tool storage off the benches
- Screws, plugs, bolts; re-hang red drawers etc
- Hand tools from tool board and/or office drawer block
- Put everything that remains back inside
Optional, perhaps outside of the scope of this project
- Split toolboard up into soldering tools and other, move soldering tools west.
- Create tables or [......] in front of the windows now that that becomes unoccupied
- Reroute/replace UTP to new location of core switch(es) (glass room? or not?)
- Perhaps relocate audio mixer to more central place (if so desired)
- Perhaps create fume hood over/around sink?