Capn, it is a great space and I am lucky to have such a generous friend to share it with me.
Today was a big moving day for Ben’s stuff.
Here you can see that the floor planks, insulation bats and most of the floor girders have been removed from the joist hangers to open up the shipping hatch.

The last couple of girders and the center beam (joists) have been removed and the hoist has been plugged in and rolled over.

Mind the hole. Topside looking down… a long way down.

Ground level looking up.

We flipped the work/out feed table over so that smaller items could be laid inside it more efficiently while in the back of Karl’s truck.


“Dropped it” right into the bed of the truck.

The miter fence goes. I pulled the truck out some and we slid it thru the legs of the overturned table.


Next we hooked Karl's UT up and put that under the hole.
Then the table…

… saw…

went.

The three of us just about couldn’t lift the granite topped saw to get it on to the dolly and over to the staging area next to the hole, so we took the outrigger legs off and tipped it to get the dolly under.

(Don’t worry about Ben’s dog. She has lots of experience on work sites and was fully aware to mind the hole.)

Man I hate to see the saw go. That thing was a pure pleasure to use.
Looking down as I operate the hoist. Below, Ben unhooks the table that the miter fence sat on.

Last night after work I picked up a sheet of melamine and some lumber to build a new work bench. Here we are shipping the 49x97 inch sheet up.

From there we ran down to Westbrook to off load at Ben’s place, then he treated us to lunch at a nice deli market. I had hot pastrami on a hard roll with Swiss cheese, sautéed onions, cole slaw, brown mustard, and a root beer.
Back to Mecca, Karl and I hoisted the new saw up. It’s not that heavy, but it was a lot more convenient than carrying it up the stairs.

This rolls machine had been stored under the crawl space in the loft and Karl has a job coming up that he will need it for, so down it goes.

Easier to bundle the lumber for the new bench and hoist it up, rather than maneuver it up the stairs.

Next we put the floor hatch joists back in, and while Karl stuffed the insulation and floor planks back in, I brought the shop vac up and sucked up the accumulation of sawdust that had been building up.
Karl was a great help feeding wood to me on the miter saw, and helping build the new bench. Here we have built one of the side frames (squaring the legs up, me pilot drilling and him impact driving the screws in; went fast that way), and are starting to align the second side frame parts on top to match.

Here is the new bench screwed to the floor with those cheesy little hardware store corner brackets, and the melamine screwed down to the top. I left 3 inches hanging over the frame all around for ease of clamping things down to the edge.

And finally, I fit and added some diagonal bracing on each end and across one bay at the back. This made the table rock solid, but doesn't block access too badly, so I should still be able to fit stuff under for storage

So after an 8 hour day Karl and I were both pretty bushed and that is where we called it a day. Tomorrow I plan to move the cabin back into position, rearrange all of the disturbed parts and supplies, and get the plastic drape back into place. Weather forecast is for snow again soon.