I'm getting ready to try to lube my front wheel bearings on a '91 Festiva L five-speed as per a thread introduced in the repair self help forum here.
My question for General Discussion is: my apartment that was originally built as a small livery stable in the 1880s has an attached 8'x20' garage with a dirt floor.
I've been doing work on my car next to the sidewalk in front of my front door, but would be using the garage if it weren't for that dirt floor that the neighborhood alley cats think is their cat-box.
I read somewhere long ago that someplace in the world perhaps like Malaysia in South East Asia some people used old crankcase oil mixed with dirt as the floors of their homes and wonder if anyone has any better information about something like this?
Or any other ideas of how to make a decent work surface I wouldn't mind laying on and that would have less potential to contaminate any work I'm doing on my car. The cats really aren't the bulk of the problem since they seem to concentrate in one small area and only when passing through and not their only target zone I'm sure, but the dirt floor is uneven and in the winter gets moist and muddy a little and in the summer is rock hard and yet still dusty and dirty as hell and which I've laid a large plastic tarp over that is not the greatest surface ever but that at least I don't feel bad about sitting things on to store for awhile.
I'm just a renter and so don't feel like pouring concrete or anything radical and expensive and which might cause the property taxes to go up the next time the place is assessed and which cement floors always adds value to.
This used crankcase floor idea when I saw it like in a NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC seemed very clean and neat and in the type places where people typically sat on the floor always. The surface seemed to get spider-web like crack lines all over but that were not huge faults, but only fine minor tracings that seemed to add beauty and the floors were very sweepable and tidy, etc.
My question for General Discussion is: my apartment that was originally built as a small livery stable in the 1880s has an attached 8'x20' garage with a dirt floor.
I've been doing work on my car next to the sidewalk in front of my front door, but would be using the garage if it weren't for that dirt floor that the neighborhood alley cats think is their cat-box.
I read somewhere long ago that someplace in the world perhaps like Malaysia in South East Asia some people used old crankcase oil mixed with dirt as the floors of their homes and wonder if anyone has any better information about something like this?
Or any other ideas of how to make a decent work surface I wouldn't mind laying on and that would have less potential to contaminate any work I'm doing on my car. The cats really aren't the bulk of the problem since they seem to concentrate in one small area and only when passing through and not their only target zone I'm sure, but the dirt floor is uneven and in the winter gets moist and muddy a little and in the summer is rock hard and yet still dusty and dirty as hell and which I've laid a large plastic tarp over that is not the greatest surface ever but that at least I don't feel bad about sitting things on to store for awhile.
I'm just a renter and so don't feel like pouring concrete or anything radical and expensive and which might cause the property taxes to go up the next time the place is assessed and which cement floors always adds value to.
This used crankcase floor idea when I saw it like in a NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC seemed very clean and neat and in the type places where people typically sat on the floor always. The surface seemed to get spider-web like crack lines all over but that were not huge faults, but only fine minor tracings that seemed to add beauty and the floors were very sweepable and tidy, etc.
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