MF

"Mr Fixit eh"

24/03/2005 8:01 AM

Work Stations vs Workbench

I have a space-challenged workshop. My plan is to make a floating
torsion box bench running the length of one wall 10 ft, or so.
Underneath this bench I will park the tablesaw (on mobile stand)and I
want to build two workstations on locking wheels. One will be a router
table, the other will be a chest of drawers with a top that has a
docking station for benchtop tools: drill press, jointer, planer,
scrollsaw, etc.

I'd like to be able to quickly lock the two workstations together to
make a double-sized assembly table.

Any ideas?

Steve


This topic has 8 replies

bb

"bf"

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

24/03/2005 10:22 AM


Mr Fixit eh wrote:
>I
> want to build two workstations on locking wheels. >
> I'd like to be able to quickly lock the two workstations together to
> make a double-sized assembly table.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Steve

Quick grip clamps? If you're willing to design the workstations to
acommodate this.

If it were me, I'd just make one large workstation to begin with
(instead of 2 small ones that needed joined together). It's always nice
to have a larger router table (wish I made mine bigger).

PH

"Phillip Hallam-Baker"

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

24/03/2005 10:52 AM


> want to build two workstations on locking wheels. >
> I'd like to be able to quickly lock the two workstations together to
> make a double-sized assembly table.
> Any ideas?

Why not forget about locking the two workstations together and instead
build a torsion box that uses the two workstations as big wide
supports?

Then you have no problems having to get the two workstations aligned or
anything. The torsion box can be stored on end wnen not in use.

Ws

"Woodchuck34"

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

24/03/2005 11:08 AM

Steve,

Have you seen Wood Magazine's Idea shop 5. If not, here's a link:

http://www.woodmagazine.com/wood/story.jhtml?storyid=/templatedata/wood/story/data/463.xml&catref=wd8

I've built the drill press stand and it was real easy to do. I managed
to slap the whole thing together in a few hours. I have a version of
the mobile/router center I've been using since just before this issue
was published. I just ordered a better saw and am looking to use this
plan.

When I am ready to work, I pull SWMBO's car out of the garage and pull
my carts around. Usually ready to work in about 10 minutes.

Chuck

MF

"Mr Fixit eh"

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

26/03/2005 10:31 AM

I wanted to make the mobile units about 24"x36". Although the bigger
bench is a great idea, my space is small and awkward enough that I'd
have a hard time manouvering a bigger bench around.

I won't be banging around much on the torsion box. I was planning on
the mobile units to take any beatings. The torsion box will have a
recess for the compound miter saw.

I think the mobile base units will be handy for alot of assembly work,
but I thought it would sometimes be nice to 'lock' them together for a
little more surface area.

I was planning to have the tops of the mobile units level with the
tablesaw to double as outfeed tables.

Steve

cb

charlie b

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

24/03/2005 10:30 AM

Mr Fixit eh wrote:
>
> I have a space-challenged workshop. My plan is to make a floating
> torsion box bench running the length of one wall 10 ft, or so.
> Underneath this bench I will park the tablesaw (on mobile stand)and I
> want to build two workstations on locking wheels. One will be a router
> table, the other will be a chest of drawers with a top that has a
> docking station for benchtop tools: drill press, jointer, planer,
> scrollsaw, etc.
>
> I'd like to be able to quickly lock the two workstations together to
> make a double-sized assembly table.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Steve

You planning on doing any tapping and banging on that torsion
box? Gonna need any bench dogs to hold things while you
router it or sand it or plane it or scrape it? Dog holes in
a torsion box are possible - if you plan for it. Got a way
to keep the top of the torsion box pretty flat 'cause
assembling on a curved surface often won't yield nice
results after everything's glued up and put on a flat floor.

Or - do you also plan to make a workbench?

charlie b

Nn

"No"

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

25/03/2005 9:58 AM

Why don't you build the benches and mobile stations the same height as your
table saw? That way you can use them as impromptu infeed or outfeed tables.
You may need to make you 10' fixed bench smaller (by size of table saw). Who
doesn't sometimes use their table saw top for some assembly anyway?

"Mr Fixit eh" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a space-challenged workshop. My plan is to make a floating
> torsion box bench running the length of one wall 10 ft, or so.
> Underneath this bench I will park the tablesaw (on mobile stand)and I
> want to build two workstations on locking wheels. One will be a router
> table, the other will be a chest of drawers with a top that has a
> docking station for benchtop tools: drill press, jointer, planer,
> scrollsaw, etc.
>
> I'd like to be able to quickly lock the two workstations together to
> make a double-sized assembly table.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Steve
>
>

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

24/03/2005 10:01 PM

It was somewhere outside Barstow when "Mr Fixit eh"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Any ideas?

This might be interesting
http://christophermerrill.net/ww/plans/UTS/Tool_Stand_1.html

LD

Lobby Dosser

in reply to "Mr Fixit eh" on 24/03/2005 8:01 AM

24/03/2005 6:28 PM

"Mr Fixit eh" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have a space-challenged workshop. My plan is to make a floating
> torsion box bench running the length of one wall 10 ft, or so.
> Underneath this bench I will park the tablesaw (on mobile stand)and I
> want to build two workstations on locking wheels. One will be a router
> table, the other will be a chest of drawers with a top that has a
> docking station for benchtop tools: drill press, jointer, planer,
> scrollsaw, etc.
>
> I'd like to be able to quickly lock the two workstations together to
> make a double-sized assembly table.
>
> Any ideas?

Large hinges with loose pins.

>
> Steve
>


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