Sharing with a deep freezer.

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Chubber

Established Member
UKW Supporter
Joined
25 Apr 2024
Messages
304
Reaction score
427
Location
Devon PL21
If you were 'obliged' to share your double garage workshop space with a deep freezer, would you choose an upright model or a chest model?

The upright has a smaller footprint, but I think a chest model, able to be covered semi permanently with a 6mm ply cover would occasionally provide a flat stable surface on which to rest things for assembly, varnishing etc..

This would be to supplement an integrated 'fridge-freezer in the kitchen, for stowing the occasional half of a pig, bargain buys et al, so wouldn't need to be opened every 10 minutes.

Quaeso mone me...
 
My workshop was home to an overflow freezer for a while., It was the chest variety so stuff could easily be kept on top.
Thankfully, it is no longer there - though my grown-up daughter's piano still is. This is well covered and used as a couple of shelves. :LOL:
 
We have 2 uprights and recently bought a little chest type because the steer we bought cut and wrapped was too big for the uprights. I much prefer the upright because you can find what you need without having to empty everything to get the stuff at the bottom. I've run into people along the way that have stuff in the bottom of the chest that has been there for a couple years or more because they forgot about it. In a shop I would be afraid of the top of a chest ending up buried with stuff. Then you have to find somewhere to put it while you go digging in the freezer.

Pete
 
Also note if the space isn't heated, or not continuously heated, you need to select a freezer that uses tech that can keep working if the external temperature drops below 0C.
 
I shared a previous garage workshop with a chest freezer and did exactly as you propose. It was a useful additional work surface for light duties.
We tried not to overfill it so we could move stuff around to get to the bottom. Like ours, I guess most chest freezers have wire baskets in them that helped with this.
 
Upright. Stuff stored on top of it doesn't need to be removed each time it is accessed.

It's all well and good saying you won't put too much stuff on top of the chest freezer but it's guaranteed that it will be a pain in the buttocks to move everything off when you need to access the freezer.

We have a built in freezer in the kitchen, which is neat but the capacity is relatively small. So the freezer in the garage is used relatively often. It sits on top of an old fridge (rarely used) which means the top is the perfect height for my Record Air Filter.
 
Chest freezers are bottomless pits unless you are storing large items that you know are in there.
Used to dread having to dig stuff out for the missus and they take less floor space. We must have had a bad chest freezer as it required yearly de-icing.
 
Of course, one of the downsides of a chest freezer, is that if you have to do a lot of scrummaging, and you have to pull a lot of things out, you can inadvertently forget to put everything back. :unsure:
 
Back
Top