Shop update.
I haven’t moved the lift over yet, but I did consolidate all of my drywall tools and equipment into the new space. Just staging everything so when the lift moves it’s bolt-down, level, and go to work.
While I was measuring things out to make sure my truck could comfortably get in and out of the bay, I noticed something I hadn’t really paid attention to before.
The garage door is 9.5’ x 10’, which sounds huge. And technically the truck already fits through the opening just fine on the winter setup. But my summer setup is 22x14 wheels, and those add enough track width that the truck needs about 103 inches of clearance to comfortably pass between the concrete pedestals that support the columns on each side of the bay.
That’s when I noticed the issue.
This one someone already gave a haircut to.
Those pedestals slope inward about 5 inches at the base before they go vertical. That taper eats up just enough space that the truck would be extremely tight getting through there with the summer wheels.
So I started looking closer at the pedestals themselves trying to figure out what I was dealing with. Mainly I wanted to know if there was rebar inside them before I touched anything.
Looking around the complex I found a couple damaged ones and another one where a chunk had already been knocked off. That made it pretty clear what they were made of.
Solid poured concrete. No rebar. Just massive blocks. Big chunk out of this one
After digging a little deeper I found out that was actually intentional. These pedestals were built that way to spread the load of the column and also act as impact protection for vehicles moving in and out of the bays. Which makes sense once you learn what the building actually was.
The shop sits on the grounds of Fort Ethan Allen, originally built in the early 1890s as a U.S. cavalry post. Back then the base revolved around horses — cavalry units, stables, wagons, blacksmith shops — everything needed to keep mounted troops operational. But the specific row of buildings my shop sits in came later.
When the Army transitioned from horses to mechanized vehicles in the early 20th century, the outer support areas of the base were converted into motor pools and vehicle maintenance buildings.
Which means the row of garage bays I’m moving into was part of a WWII motor pool.
So the exact bay where my lift will sit likely had soldiers wrenching on military trucks and Jeeps at some point. Kind of cool to think about the timeline of that space:
1890s → cavalry horses and wagons
1940s → soldiers servicing military trucks and Jeeps
2026 → Fully built EcoBoost SHO on a lift carrying the torch!
And since the Army engineers in the 1940s didn’t anticipate a Ford F-150 Raptor on 22x14 wheels needing 103 inches of clearance…
Both pedestals are getting a very modest 3-inch Military haircut (high and tight) to straighten that taper out and open the entrance a bit.
Once the lift gets installed the SHO will finally have its permanent home base…literally.
Not a bad place to keep the tradition of turning wrenches alive.
I haven’t moved the lift over yet, but I did consolidate all of my drywall tools and equipment into the new space. Just staging everything so when the lift moves it’s bolt-down, level, and go to work.
While I was measuring things out to make sure my truck could comfortably get in and out of the bay, I noticed something I hadn’t really paid attention to before.
The garage door is 9.5’ x 10’, which sounds huge. And technically the truck already fits through the opening just fine on the winter setup. But my summer setup is 22x14 wheels, and those add enough track width that the truck needs about 103 inches of clearance to comfortably pass between the concrete pedestals that support the columns on each side of the bay.
That’s when I noticed the issue.

This one someone already gave a haircut to.

Those pedestals slope inward about 5 inches at the base before they go vertical. That taper eats up just enough space that the truck would be extremely tight getting through there with the summer wheels.
So I started looking closer at the pedestals themselves trying to figure out what I was dealing with. Mainly I wanted to know if there was rebar inside them before I touched anything.
Looking around the complex I found a couple damaged ones and another one where a chunk had already been knocked off. That made it pretty clear what they were made of.
Solid poured concrete. No rebar. Just massive blocks. Big chunk out of this one

After digging a little deeper I found out that was actually intentional. These pedestals were built that way to spread the load of the column and also act as impact protection for vehicles moving in and out of the bays. Which makes sense once you learn what the building actually was.
The shop sits on the grounds of Fort Ethan Allen, originally built in the early 1890s as a U.S. cavalry post. Back then the base revolved around horses — cavalry units, stables, wagons, blacksmith shops — everything needed to keep mounted troops operational. But the specific row of buildings my shop sits in came later.
When the Army transitioned from horses to mechanized vehicles in the early 20th century, the outer support areas of the base were converted into motor pools and vehicle maintenance buildings.
Which means the row of garage bays I’m moving into was part of a WWII motor pool.
So the exact bay where my lift will sit likely had soldiers wrenching on military trucks and Jeeps at some point. Kind of cool to think about the timeline of that space:
1890s → cavalry horses and wagons
1940s → soldiers servicing military trucks and Jeeps
2026 → Fully built EcoBoost SHO on a lift carrying the torch!
And since the Army engineers in the 1940s didn’t anticipate a Ford F-150 Raptor on 22x14 wheels needing 103 inches of clearance…

Both pedestals are getting a very modest 3-inch Military haircut (high and tight) to straighten that taper out and open the entrance a bit.
Once the lift gets installed the SHO will finally have its permanent home base…literally.Not a bad place to keep the tradition of turning wrenches alive.


































