• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Wildwest's brew lean-to (my almost dream build)

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I have a stained concrete floor and it looks great after 3 years of heavy use. Did you etch the concrete prior to applying stain? Was it waterbased?

Yes and yes. Brand new slab, followed directions to the letter.

_
 
My slab after 3-4 years. Was going to re etch & stain this fall:

30687d1311819611-uds-build-liner-1.jpg
 
Man WW that is one of the nicest set ups I have seen on HBT. I have about 400 sq. ft. of my basement left unfinished, which I originally planned on using for storing my brewing equipment and simple prep. work on brew days, but after seeing your build.....I need a set up like that! My plan all along was to build an AG, gas fired, brewing rig on heavy duty casters to wheel out on my patio on brewing days. I live in MI, so it would completely blow in the winter time to have to brew on the patio. The rig would be too heavy and bulky to wheel up to one of my garages, which is where I currently extract brew in the winter.

I'm thinking electric is the way to go for me now. I have been reluctant about going electric for the simple fact that while finishing the rest of my basement, I used up every last circuit in my 40 breaker electric panel. Being completely ignorant about electricity, I though that I was screwed. However, in speaking with my neighbor who is an electrical engineer, he said for about $100 and very little work, we could install a smaller sub panel to accommodate more circuits. Evidently my 200 amp. service can more than handle a sub panel. Now that I realize that I am NOT limited with power supply, the all electric route is looking even more appealing.

Hell, I have the extra space, already have a basement bar, rec. room, and bathroom completed. Why go outside if I don't have to. I'm very inspired by your build and can see a very similar set up going into my basement over the winter. Nice work....and thanks for your kegging advice along the way during my keezer build. :mug:
 
I would endorse any scenario that ends with dead cats.

If dogs were allowed to roam free they would be WAY more destructive than cats...and you never heard of a cat mauling a child to death...just sayin.

On topic, this thread is cool...makes me wanna build my own.
 
Hell, I have the extra space, already have a basement bar, rec. room, and bathroom completed. Why go outside if I don't have to. I'm very inspired by your build and can see a very similar set up going into my basement over the winter. Nice work....and thanks for your kegging advice along the way during my keezer build. :mug:

Thanks. You will never regret going to an electric setup. I love being able to brew indoors without the extreme heat of a burner. As nice as your keezer turned out, i'm sure you could come up with a killer electric setup.

_
 
Thanks man. I have a couple of other projects in my basement to finish up before I start, but I'm going to start gradually accumulating parts for my keggles soon. I just purchased all of my drop ceiling grid and panels last week and finished the first room (and the smallest of the 5 rooms I'm doing) over a couple of days. It's going to be more work than I though, but I'm looking to have it up in the next few weeks. I then have carpeting to purchase and a hydronics boiler for my radiant floor heating for the finished side of the basement left to buy before winter. At that point, the basement will be 100% complete. I can then move all of the sh*t out of my storage room in the basement (furniture, etc.) and start formulating a layout for the brewing room and a solid game plan. I also need to start replinishing my "brewing projects" fund before I start getting carried away with the e-system. If I start tapping into our other accounts for brewing purposes....my wife gets a little edgy. She has been pretty supportive of my new hobby, so I don't want to rock the boat with her. :D

I may have some questions along the way. Again, great job with yours...it's a frickin' masterpiece!
 
Super thread WW. Great room. Some day in the future I might have a place like this. Right now it on the patio in the 100+ heat. Great job, very inspiring.
 
Nope, i'm wishing I never stained the concrete. That stuff was crap, it's all peeling off the floor. How in the hell does "stain" peel off? Followed the directions to the letter, and it didn't work.


_

Great job on the brew pub. As far as the concrete issues, your stain may have been applied to soon after it was poured. Concrete cures through the process of hydration and this some times takes years to fully complete. Most go with the 27 day cure rule when applying stains or paints. If it was done after a month after it was poured, then I'm stumped. Still, all in all, job well done on your build.
 
Simply the best 67 pages I've ever read in one sitting. It won't be long before my job blocks this site. Your brew pub is simply amazing. I tip my hat to you sir!
 
Yea I just read all 68 pages. SWMBO has no idea what I'm going to do to her garage :D
 
Thanks for the kind words, just recently completed my 20th batch on the "new" setup, still love it.:mug:


_
 
Since this thread was recently bumped I thought i'd post a pic of the setup. I finally got all my pumps and mounted them. I've brewed 10 batches on this setup and it's all dialed in. I hated it at first, fiddling with pumps and hoses and what not. But I now love it and it's almost worth the ridiculous amount of time it takes to clean.


DSCN3288.jpg



-

i'm freakin jealous...
 
but it looks so damn cool! if i tell some one i brew beer then show them my set up i get looks like i'm the unibomber. yours is so neat and clean and shiney. i bet you get looks like, "hey, this guys must know what he's doin. i'll have one of his beers."
 
What about the system makes cleanup that bad?

Having to clean the brew kettle then re-fill with pbw and re-circ to clean the chiller for 20 minutes then drain and hot rinse. All the kettles have to be wiped dry(in and out) after cleaning or they look like hell. All kettles have to be put back in the exact same spot everytime or the hoses won't work, just nit picky stuff.

Sometimes I miss just rinsing out my cooler with a garden hose.:eek:


but it looks so damn cool! if i tell some one i brew beer then show them my set up i get looks like i'm the unibomber. yours is so neat and clean and shiney. i bet you get looks like, "hey, this guys must know what he's doin. i'll have one of his beers."

But they also expect world class top notch beer to come out of there, no pressure.

_
 
I joined this forum because of your thread, WW.

I am getting ready to try my hand at home brewing, and now I want to convert my theater into a brew room. :rockin:
 
One day I will do this, but bigger. Why bigger? Cause I'm gonna need a cold room for all those conicals I'm dreaming of. Seriously though, you've inspired the inspired. Oh, and all the electrical nazis should die. STFU AND DIE! Seriously, die. Ok, done :rockin::rockin::ban::ban:
 
I joined this forum because of your thread, WW.

I am getting ready to try my hand at home brewing, and now I want to convert my theater into a brew room. :rockin:

That's awesome, I usually have the opposite effect on people. I think I would keep the theater room though.

_
 
That's awesome, I usually have the opposite effect on people. I think I would keep the theater room though.

_

WW, I was going to quit this forum because of you :D

I figure since I'm paid up I may as well stay though.

Honestly, your build is a bit of an inspiration, and I still use the carb table you used to have as your sig.

Awesome work!
 
That is bewilderingly awesome. I hope you brew often enough to make it worth it. And have lots of friends to share the enjoyment with.
 
It is painful sitting here knowing I have to graduate college, get a house, and a real job before I can have something like this. It is absolutely beautiful.
 
this is awesome......just read this whole thread while at work(havent gotten much done since i started)...now all i want to do is build something like this....too bad i dont own my own house...i guess i'll just have to settle with bottling my pumpkin ale tonight. Anyway thanks for all the posts and pictures you should be inducted into the brewing hall of fame!!
 
It is painful sitting here knowing I have to graduate college, get a house, and a real job before I can have something like this. It is absolutely beautiful.

Never graduate! Being a poor college student has a lot of advantages over an 8-5'er!!! Just transfer to a better looking school like Texas Tech (although they just got beat by the damn Aggies)


WW, this makes me want to take a vacation to TN just to visit your brewery/bar! This is simply f-ing amazing.
 
Having to clean the brew kettle then re-fill with pbw and re-circ to clean the chiller for 20 minutes then drain and hot rinse. All the kettles have to be wiped dry(in and out) after cleaning or they look like hell. All kettles have to be put back in the exact same spot everytime or the hoses won't work, just nit picky stuff.

Sometimes I miss just rinsing out my cooler with a garden hose.:eek:

Although I rinse my cooler with a hose, :D, since I've gone with a structure and pumps it takes mw 2 hrs to clean up and put away everything. PBW adds to the cost too. :mad: Think I may try mixing some TSP and OxyClean together once and see how it does. Awesome build, no doubt, awesome. :mug:
 
It is painful sitting here knowing I have to graduate college, get a house, and a real job before I can have something like this. It is absolutely beautiful.

Meh, I skipped the college step, that cut 4 years off the build time.:)




When are you going to come down this way and build me my very own brew shed?

Isn't your shed full to the rafters with bulk grain?

_
 
Back
Top