I'll upload pictures tomorrow, or saturday, depending when I remember to bring my camera downstairs.
Anyway, all but one stringer is up. The last one is in a tight spot (the wall was built between the ceiling joists, and connected with a metal strap

), so I'll do that tomorrow when I'm wide awake. Too beat now to engineer this on the fly correctly.
Built a new wall under the deep slant next to the doorframe that fell down, tying the studs to a floor sill (2x4) and the slanted joist, as well as the doorframe. Put silicone chaulk under the floor sill, between the studs, and the roof joists. So thats done.
Put two junction blocks in the crawl space, hooked them to the transformer, and moved the current studio feed to the transformer. Flipped the breaker and the transformer produced 60V, but thats because the primary is expecting 240V, and I don't have that in the house yet, so it got 120V. But at least I verified the electrical is run correctly.
Mounted the wall switches I pictured further up this thread, and attached the computer feed to the transformer, as well as the studio feed. 20A 120V a piece.
Then tapped the exiting electrical (since I'm tossing whats there anyway) in this space for the lighting feeds.
I'm still thinking LED overhead console lights will be a nice, very low profile touch, but at the same time, zapping a track overhead and some really short hingey lights with 10W bulbs or so might do the trick instead. I'd just prefer not to drill holes into the surface unless I'm sure they are staying.
Anyway, don't have to worry about that since there is no surface to drill into yet. Looks like I can put in the flourescent light internals tomorrow late afternoon if I keep the pace I'm going, and at least the remainder of the construction will be well lit. Using a bunch of lamps, small spot lights, and other things of equal sadness just ain't cutting it.
Plus the one good clip on spotlight I was using got ruined today. I didn't realize the cord was under my table saw, and when I fired it up, well, it sucked it in and flipped the breaker.
Just one of those dumbass moves I have to do on occasion just to make things more time consuming. So I rewired it with some 12-2 electrical cable which works fine, except that its solid wire so its incredibly stiff and hard to torque around. Nothing can be easy. Nothing not ever oh well, tomorrow is another day
BTW, I'm using deck screws for strength and ease off application. Before each screw goes in, I fill the hole with silicone and put a bead in and around all the joints, even for studs, joists, and stringers. I figure it will help seal it up later, but more importantly, keep things from loosening up.
Anyway, I bought these neat square drive deck screws at ace hardware, and they are very neat except they are made in tiawan and when they torque down tight, 20% of the time the heads come off. The bit doesn't strip, neither does the hole the bit goes in, but the heads come off.
Picture a balding guy covered in dirt, swearing at foreigners he's never met, while taking the remainder of the screws out with vicegrips one at a time.
Its an amusing sight, I'm sure.