Well I managed to get mostly moved in, though like a house move I'll be living in boxes and sorting things out for ages yet. The space looks empty!
The day started out by clearing up the mess left from all the work so far. I have almost no actual storage in my existing in house workshop so this is something that needs to be remedied soon.
I grabbed one of the metal shelving units from the dining room (temporarily put up 3 years ago and since home to the printer, board games, playdoh, lego etc). Just one unit gets so much stuff up off the floor. I do have 3 more in my office if I need them, but it only means brining all that crap with me so for now it can stay in there. The workshop is a workshop, not a storage unit.
With that in place and 4 horses used to lift some chipboard flooring off the floor, I now have extra space to lay things out while I work out where its all going to go. Since my first workshop came into existence my benches have been covered in tools meaning a 10 minute job always becomes at least 40 minutes as I need to find the bench first. I'd like to avoid that state now that I have room to move.
Next I had to wade into Workshop 1.0 and pack it up ready for transport. Naturally the 47 tons of cardboard boxes we've had in the house in the last 6 months have all upped and vanished so I could onyl scrounge up a couple to move everything in. Some time later I ended up with this. My tiny bandsaw and bench drill look lost. As you can see, that cabinet has no drawers or even doors, so that will be one priority just to add storage options. The workbench too needs to use up all that space under it.
Still to move is my MFT assembly table and all the wood stored within it, a couple of sheets of ply and various other offcuts. But apart from that, this is it. I have lots of room to play with and build what I need when I need it. Naturally things are not in their final positions yet. The wall with the bandsaw and drill on will likely be the wall where most tools/machines live as that's where the DX will be so it makes sense to keep it on one side where possible.
I love how a 8x4 sheet is kind of just "over there in the corner", rather than "oh balls how do I maneuver around this to maneuver this around?".
I even got a video going again for the move. I've not recorded any since I finished the front cladding as frankly I was running short on time.
Thanks to all for the support and tips along the way Especially
@MikeG. of course. I'll keep updating the thread as I add workshop based entertainment and sort the windows out one I'm happy I can actually make the damned things.