I've not posted for a while so I thought I'd throw something up on my last project. I wanted something I could do quickly and I also wanted to learn SketchUp so I followed a great guide at Sketchup for Woodworkers and after a few hours I felt comfortable with it and went about designing a bench for my bandsaw. I have finally gone to the dark side and got a machine - Albeit a tiny cheap effort!
I had in mind something that would have a small footprint but weigh as much as possible - similar to me! I'd be using mainly leftover material I had about so that was 4x4, 6x2, 4x4 redwood. With those constraints, I came up with the design and produced it on SketchUp. I wanted to try laminating a top as this was not something I'd attempted before and I thought that'd be a way of adding weight. I especially wanted to try cutting notches into the top to accommodate the legs before glueing up. That seemed like a great way to get a clean and square mortise for the tenons on the legs
I bought a set of 6 sash clamps from Rutlands for the laminating, so let this be a cautionary tale for anyone buying them. You know they price them where you pay an extra few pounds for the next size up, then you think hold on, for just a few quid more I can go even bigger - bigger has to be better. I ended up with 1.5m sash clamps to clamp up a 16" top - not a clever move on my part.
While building the bench I had to change the stretchers to be M&T rather than a half lap joint because one of the 4x4 lengths needed cleaning up quite a bit so ended up thinner than the rest.
Also, not sure if anyone has a tip for this. When I laminated the top I left the lengths random and that made squaring up the top afterwards a pain...
I tried to treat the top as any other component with a face and edge to get a line all the way around before cutting. Just feels like I was missing a trick on this bit!
I used drawbores for all the M&T joints.
and then painted the legs and oiled the top. I wish I just oiled everything because painting showed up every little hole or imperfection that then needed filling.
As a novice designer, I didn't think about the centre of gravity only the ergonomics of it to fit me. Once the bandsaw is bolted on top you can rock the bench with a bit of force. If I was to do it again I'd space the legs out more front-to-back. Oh well - you live and learn!
On another note, the amount of time I spent fettling that little bandsaw to get it cutting straight was maddening. At first, I thought I'd wasted £50 on it but eventually, after lots of research, adjustment, trial and error and a new blade, I was happy with it.
The best I can get it to cut consistently is about 0.021 inches thick slither +/- 0.002 at each end. I'm not sure if that is any good but it's a hell of a lot better than it started!
Cheers.
I had in mind something that would have a small footprint but weigh as much as possible - similar to me! I'd be using mainly leftover material I had about so that was 4x4, 6x2, 4x4 redwood. With those constraints, I came up with the design and produced it on SketchUp. I wanted to try laminating a top as this was not something I'd attempted before and I thought that'd be a way of adding weight. I especially wanted to try cutting notches into the top to accommodate the legs before glueing up. That seemed like a great way to get a clean and square mortise for the tenons on the legs
I bought a set of 6 sash clamps from Rutlands for the laminating, so let this be a cautionary tale for anyone buying them. You know they price them where you pay an extra few pounds for the next size up, then you think hold on, for just a few quid more I can go even bigger - bigger has to be better. I ended up with 1.5m sash clamps to clamp up a 16" top - not a clever move on my part.
While building the bench I had to change the stretchers to be M&T rather than a half lap joint because one of the 4x4 lengths needed cleaning up quite a bit so ended up thinner than the rest.
Also, not sure if anyone has a tip for this. When I laminated the top I left the lengths random and that made squaring up the top afterwards a pain...
I tried to treat the top as any other component with a face and edge to get a line all the way around before cutting. Just feels like I was missing a trick on this bit!
I used drawbores for all the M&T joints.
and then painted the legs and oiled the top. I wish I just oiled everything because painting showed up every little hole or imperfection that then needed filling.
As a novice designer, I didn't think about the centre of gravity only the ergonomics of it to fit me. Once the bandsaw is bolted on top you can rock the bench with a bit of force. If I was to do it again I'd space the legs out more front-to-back. Oh well - you live and learn!
On another note, the amount of time I spent fettling that little bandsaw to get it cutting straight was maddening. At first, I thought I'd wasted £50 on it but eventually, after lots of research, adjustment, trial and error and a new blade, I was happy with it.
The best I can get it to cut consistently is about 0.021 inches thick slither +/- 0.002 at each end. I'm not sure if that is any good but it's a hell of a lot better than it started!
Cheers.