Thank you all! Pics now then.
So it's 8 feet, 22" deep 33" high
The Maguire wagon vice looks great and works even better. The dovetail was entertaining to assemble.
Twin-screw vice. I had serious misgivings about this, expecting it to be slow to use and sloppy - but it is a joy, quite fast, very grippy, and sweet to use.
My early vice screws (from Joe at Bigwoodvice) have inboard garters, his later ones and Richard Maguire's have external garters which are easier to fit and maintain. The oak is the garter engaging in the groove in the screw.
The sliding 'deadman' - based on Chris Schwarz's but thicker.
I removed stock from the back of the vee to give clearance to remove the deadman. It's fine because the main load bearing is the front face anyway.
Front of top is wedged tenons, with the back 'floating' using clips / buttons, as on a cabinet or table top, but rather bigger.
An oak planing stop, which locks at any height from underneath. The wedged tenons - one of the very few 'pretty' bits - it's mainly quite plain.
A loose-fit shelf under. I used random board widths (ash again) and looked for the wild grain where possible. I like the random widths because machines and factories don't work like that. It's a subtle hint that hands were involved here.
About finishing: Just cannot decide what colour to paint it #-o
Generally I am a 'less is more' finisher. Anyone who reads Popular Woodworking... that Bob Flexner series is the one I always go straight past. The usual finish on a bench is an oil/varnish mix, but ages ago I came by a gallon can of cellulose 'varnish'. I thin that with thinners 50/50, and wipe it on. It dries super-fast, really locks the fibres together, it's tough, semi-matt and best of all has almost no colouring effect on the ash. Very heady stuff though, so windows and doors open!
Thank you for following my bench journey. I'll have to think of something to make on it now. I'll keep it nice for a bit but in time it will become scarred. Actually, need to move it to where it belongs first... oooer!