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The Inventiveness Behind a Unique Top Shop

The Inventiveness Behind a Unique Top Shop

With a combination of inventive minds and a careful planning process, a unique, customized 50×120-foot shop was crafted by Paul and Craig Heineman just outside of Ogden, Iowa.

When the brothers were looking to build the necessary shop for their growing operation, efficiency was at the top of their list. “Necessity is the mother of invention. If you don’t have what you need, if it’s not feasible, or if it’s too expensive, then you try to fabricate something yourself,” says Paul Heineman. “That’s just the way we look at it.”

The frame of the shop is built from salvaged metal off a gas station awning that was taken down. The large posts that hold the canopy over gas pumps at convenience stores are incorporated into Heineman’s shop as the pillars on the sides, allowing the structure to reach 21 feet tall. This made the shop taller than it was originally, giving the Heinemans more space to work on large equipment. However, that was just the beginning of the brothers’ inventiveness.

Service Pit  

One of the most unique features built by the Heinemans is the hydraulic service pit engineered by Paul. The pit is constructed with two I-beams and a scissor lift underneath to raise and lower the lift, which runs on a small hydraulic cylinder and electrical hydraulic pump. The two foot controls (one up and one down) are engineered from starter switches.

Heineman’s service pit makes oil changes simple and hassle-free. A used oil receptacle is lowered in the pit, rolled under the piece of equipment to change the oil, then rolled back out, and raised for disposal without mess.

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