Building A Dry Tooling Gym
Building A Dry Tooling Gym
Building A Dry Tooling Gym
By Malcolm Kent
You can call it a wall, cave, gym or even woodie (not my preferred nomenclature), it's all the same.
Here's the story of how I built mine (wall not woodie!).
Basically I live in a city, so figuring that rent prices or buying costs would be ridiculous close to home,
I went looking in the out-of-town areas. Areas where I could see tonnes of warehousing and general
industrial grey bleakness. And after 2 months of fruitless searching, with only a sheisty tin pot garage
to my name, I struck lucky and found a reasonable sized warehouse for an affordable price.
I measured up every dimension of the space, noting that the design would have to be a little more
unorthodox given the paper thin aluminium walls and shortage of electricity. I spent 2 weeks buying
the tools I needed and ordering wood from a reputable timber merchant. There were never any
formal plans or drawings. Just a mental image and a pathetic looking cereal box cut out. Everyone
goes on about structural engineers, but frankly they aren't going to make your design safer
necessarily. Rather they can probably tell you how to build it to the same strength but with less
wood. Stubbornly I opted to ignore engineering principles and throw a spoon full of chunky timbers
in when I thought it needed it.
I built a free-standing frame supported by a number of key vertical columns. These resembled a mini
Stonehenge made from wood. The columns were 20cmx20cm wide and attached to the ground with
90 deg brackets bolted with expansion bolts into the concrete floor. As the framework built up
around the columns I switched to using either 2x8'' planks or 2x6'' bracing, depending on where it
was positioned. In the cave area the finished framework was essentially a massive box with oblique
cross bracing connecting from the sides to the roof beams. For the main wall, the overhang was
limited so that the wall wouldn't just topple over and the far ends were braced diagonally downward
into the ground to counteract the tendency to topple in.
A 90 deg bracket supporting a post.
During the framework building it became obundantly clear that french screws, regular wood screws
and steel brackets were the be all and end all. My universe! They really made the structure work. I
think infact I lost count of the brackets used after it passed 80. I have to stress at this point that you
can do a lot on your own as I did, but eventually you get to stopping points where you just have to
get 1 or 2 folks to help. If you and your mates know roughly what you're doing then that teamwork
can really help to tighten up the joints and stiffen up the whole structure. Infact if you've done it
right then you should be able to start climbing around on the framework well before it's fully
finished. (if you do this and it collapses ontop of you and your buddy and you never walk again .... I
hereby disclaim my way out of any liability!).
The final touches were to add some paint to the panels (the holes plugged with something to stop
the paint getting in) and to throw in some crash matting. I used mats that were 30cm deep for a cave
section that was 3.5m and a wall section that was 4.5 high.
Most importantly though, always keep it fun and interesting to work on. The minute it starts to
become tiresome and depressing, a change of approach is needed. A cynical, dry but slightly self-
deprecating sense of humour can really help at these times.