I am in the process of cleaning up an old school woodwork bench, of the type I@m sure most users are familiar with:
I acquired this a good few years ago from my old uni' workshop, and I'm finally getting round to cleaning it up. I've knocked the base apart, and all the fixings are marinading in WD40, whilst I plane/scrape the worst filth off the faces of the frame. The frame is comprised of two roughly square assemblies at either end, which are bolted to a stretcher at floor height, and to the bench top, via coach bolts under wooden plugs. Racking is prevented by an apron under the top, which screws to the end assemblies and sits flush with the bench edge.
I've got everything apart, and with a light plane/scrape cleaned it up well, but the end assemblies have some slack in the joints, and I'm tempted to separate them, take the opportunity to plane the inaccessible faces and corners clean, and then re-wedge the joints to remove the play.
Any thoughts on whether this is a good idea, or how to separate the joints? They appear to be wedged above and below the tenon, rather than into cuts in the tenon itself, but despite the slight gappy-ness and movement in the joint, seem reluctant to come apart...
My final plan for the bench is to flip the top over and refit it, which reveals a nice level-ish, clean top. The current top surface is very scarred and rough, and despite hours of work when I first got the bench is still studded with more screws and pins than your local B&Q, testimony to thousands of boring lessons spent knocking in nails to pass the time. Flipping should also allow me to reverse the vice location, making the bench left handed, like me.
I acquired this a good few years ago from my old uni' workshop, and I'm finally getting round to cleaning it up. I've knocked the base apart, and all the fixings are marinading in WD40, whilst I plane/scrape the worst filth off the faces of the frame. The frame is comprised of two roughly square assemblies at either end, which are bolted to a stretcher at floor height, and to the bench top, via coach bolts under wooden plugs. Racking is prevented by an apron under the top, which screws to the end assemblies and sits flush with the bench edge.
I've got everything apart, and with a light plane/scrape cleaned it up well, but the end assemblies have some slack in the joints, and I'm tempted to separate them, take the opportunity to plane the inaccessible faces and corners clean, and then re-wedge the joints to remove the play.
Any thoughts on whether this is a good idea, or how to separate the joints? They appear to be wedged above and below the tenon, rather than into cuts in the tenon itself, but despite the slight gappy-ness and movement in the joint, seem reluctant to come apart...
My final plan for the bench is to flip the top over and refit it, which reveals a nice level-ish, clean top. The current top surface is very scarred and rough, and despite hours of work when I first got the bench is still studded with more screws and pins than your local B&Q, testimony to thousands of boring lessons spent knocking in nails to pass the time. Flipping should also allow me to reverse the vice location, making the bench left handed, like me.