Bulk Oil Workbench
Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2023 2:20 am
Fellas,
Hope all is well with everyone in the new year. I've been away from the forum for a while (again). Lurking occasionally to see what types of projects folk have been working on however. Anyway, the primary reason for my absence has been the lack of fabrication projects, which has been due to a life decision I made a while ago. I decided to purchase a business for legacy reasons; to have something to leave behind to my son when it's all over for me. 'Want him to have more than I had. Things were still booming then, less so now. However I chose to:
1) Retain the day job (software)
2) Purchase an existing business rather than start from scratch
3) The business had to be a passion
4) I spoke with a couple of fabrication shops but didn't get a positive reaction from them
5) So I chose the route of an automotive repair shop.
We've been owners of a shop in Round Rock for a few months now. It's doing alright. However with inflation, the economy, etc. the industry as a whole is rather soft, if to speak openly. I digress. The point being that while we're slower than we normally would be, I decided to make a few improvements around the shop. And that brings the discussion into relevancy to the forum.
One of the aspects of the shop that I bought that I never liked was how they did bulk oil. To be clear, bulk oil is oil that you store in some container for utilization during oil changes. You must also have a waste oil collection system of some sort, but that is unrelated to the subject at hand. The most common approach to bulk oil in an automotive repair shop is to have one or more large storage tanks that are located in a separate room, plumbed with piping (either steel or PVC, usually steel). The oil from those tanks is pumped up out of the side room and along the ceiling to the work bays, where hoses on reels are available to dispense the oil into a given vehicle. Great option, but my shop is space constrained as it is. No possible way we could install such a system. And of course that didn't exist when I bought the shop, as one would expect.
Another approach is to buy your oil in 55 gallon drums. Those are brought in by a vendor and stored wherever. Oil is extracted via a hand pump into a small container of your choosing, then walked to a vehicle and poured in. Much less efficient. In addition to inefficiency, there are other issues too. A small amount at the bottom of the drum cannot be extracted, the drum option itself is more expensive than other options and finally the dang things just get in the way because they occupy more space than you think they would, depending on how many you have. Again, we just don't have the space in the shop. The previous owner operated with two drums. This made the oil change process rather cumbersome, depending on the use case for a given vehicle. Another issue with the drums is that the vendor will often bring you new drums, but the fella bringing the new stuff is not the fella who collects your old (but not completely empty) drums. And so you would often have more around than you normally planned. It could be a couple of weeks between the dropping off of new drums and the retrieval of the old ones. In our shop that made life a real pain. So I told myself that I needed to come up with an alternative approach to the friggin drums.
Interestingly I noticed that we also didn't have much in the way of workbenches. "Not enough room" was the reply when I inquired about it. No surprise. And so hmmmmmm...I did a little research and found this: It is a combination workbench and bulk oil system. Each (heavy duty) plastic container has a maximum capacity of 120 US gallons. Two containers can therefore hold more than four drums. And this approach to bulk oil is cheaper than the drum counterpart. A solution to two problems really, so I decided to press ahead with further research.
Hope all is well with everyone in the new year. I've been away from the forum for a while (again). Lurking occasionally to see what types of projects folk have been working on however. Anyway, the primary reason for my absence has been the lack of fabrication projects, which has been due to a life decision I made a while ago. I decided to purchase a business for legacy reasons; to have something to leave behind to my son when it's all over for me. 'Want him to have more than I had. Things were still booming then, less so now. However I chose to:
1) Retain the day job (software)
2) Purchase an existing business rather than start from scratch
3) The business had to be a passion
4) I spoke with a couple of fabrication shops but didn't get a positive reaction from them
5) So I chose the route of an automotive repair shop.
We've been owners of a shop in Round Rock for a few months now. It's doing alright. However with inflation, the economy, etc. the industry as a whole is rather soft, if to speak openly. I digress. The point being that while we're slower than we normally would be, I decided to make a few improvements around the shop. And that brings the discussion into relevancy to the forum.
One of the aspects of the shop that I bought that I never liked was how they did bulk oil. To be clear, bulk oil is oil that you store in some container for utilization during oil changes. You must also have a waste oil collection system of some sort, but that is unrelated to the subject at hand. The most common approach to bulk oil in an automotive repair shop is to have one or more large storage tanks that are located in a separate room, plumbed with piping (either steel or PVC, usually steel). The oil from those tanks is pumped up out of the side room and along the ceiling to the work bays, where hoses on reels are available to dispense the oil into a given vehicle. Great option, but my shop is space constrained as it is. No possible way we could install such a system. And of course that didn't exist when I bought the shop, as one would expect.
Another approach is to buy your oil in 55 gallon drums. Those are brought in by a vendor and stored wherever. Oil is extracted via a hand pump into a small container of your choosing, then walked to a vehicle and poured in. Much less efficient. In addition to inefficiency, there are other issues too. A small amount at the bottom of the drum cannot be extracted, the drum option itself is more expensive than other options and finally the dang things just get in the way because they occupy more space than you think they would, depending on how many you have. Again, we just don't have the space in the shop. The previous owner operated with two drums. This made the oil change process rather cumbersome, depending on the use case for a given vehicle. Another issue with the drums is that the vendor will often bring you new drums, but the fella bringing the new stuff is not the fella who collects your old (but not completely empty) drums. And so you would often have more around than you normally planned. It could be a couple of weeks between the dropping off of new drums and the retrieval of the old ones. In our shop that made life a real pain. So I told myself that I needed to come up with an alternative approach to the friggin drums.
Interestingly I noticed that we also didn't have much in the way of workbenches. "Not enough room" was the reply when I inquired about it. No surprise. And so hmmmmmm...I did a little research and found this: It is a combination workbench and bulk oil system. Each (heavy duty) plastic container has a maximum capacity of 120 US gallons. Two containers can therefore hold more than four drums. And this approach to bulk oil is cheaper than the drum counterpart. A solution to two problems really, so I decided to press ahead with further research.