Hi Gary,
You're right, I could set up and play now...but I want it all...and after waiting 14 months since my last darkroom session I can wait a few more days or a couple weeks...
And that really is all I'll have to wait! I had the most favorable trip to the hardware store ever on Saturday. This is good news, as you can read above about my normal frustrations on going to the store. First, I made a very careful and comprehensive list of what I wanted. This showed greater than average determination on my part. Second, I remembered to take it with me. This was far more than above average, this was absolutely shocking (there that word is again...must be the electricity...). Third, I carried relevant parts and pieces that I need to connect into. I've intended to do this a number of times, but the superlatives necessary to compliment myself on accomplishing it for real elude me at present. Probably because I'm still reeling from the electricity. And fourth, I didn't put myself up against a time constraint, meaning I could sit in the hardware store for a couple hours and have the clerk help me solve my problems...which he did! It was really great.
Most of this trip involved plumbing the drain. My intent is to have my sink drain into a silver recovery chamber which then drains into the french drain. I have a Kodak silver recovery chamber, which is just a big 5 gallon bucket with inlet and outlet fittings. The fittings take a flexible tube, which I already had. But the sink trap ends in a slip-joint plastic pipe fitting. So I needed to go from that to the flexible tube somehow. We finally accomplished it by finding a slip-joint to pvc connection in the sink plumbing section, then found some reducing fittings for pvc and finally a pvc to tube fitting. Amazing.
The drain coming from the ground is 2" ABS. I originally had intended to plumb straight onto this from the silver recovery chamber, but this greatly limits my options... I read comments from an impassioned and experienced in-the-darker the critical importance of a floor drain. I wasn't real excited about putting a joint below the shed for two pipes to join, as this is a classic place to have freezing problems. So I finally opted to extend the ABS from the ground up to the floor and put in a floor drain. Rather than anything special, I just got a 2" fitting that goes right in the pipe.
So, this leaves me with a floor drain...what about the sink effluent? I took the floor drain and cut out a hole big enough to fit the flexible tubing from the silver recovery chamber. So now I can run the flexible tubing down the drain to let the sink drain out. But I still have a floor drain. It also allows me to fairly easily put a heat tape down the drain to keep the above-ground portion from freezing in winter. I hope it works.
Now I really could start playing in earnest. But I noticed that my wet-side stuff was too big to fit on the shelves, so I installed a shelf under the wet bench and put the last big piece of linoleum on it last night. I also bought some paint at the store, and will be painting all the exposed wood on the wet side before I start working. I will eventually paint all the dry side as well, but I will grant myself the luxury of waiting on that.
That's the progress. And it really is progress. Next weekend, I should be done...