AES
Established Member
I'd appreciate help/advice from those with experience of woodwork benches please.
I've (at last) "bitten the bullet" and decided that I MUST build myself a woodworkers bench. Due to space it will be quite small (just over 1 metre long x 50 wide), flat top (no well). I've seen plenty of designs on the web etc and although this will be my first "large" wooden structure I'm pretty confident of being able to bring it off OK. BUT:
1. FOLDING: Due to space reasons, when not in use it needs to be folded up vertically, being fixed to an existing cupboard at one end and free standing (2off 4 x 4 legs) at the other. It will be fitted with a smallish Record wood workers vice, plus, maybe, a few hold downs. I had thought of the bracing being a lower shelf hinged at the fixed end (like the bench itself) and with metal brackets with "cam-shaped holes" (which I'll make myself) to lock onto metal pegs (headless thick gauge screws) at the legs end. The shelf would be fairly substantial (at least half inch birch ply) and the top will be 2 laminations of about three quarter MDF (I think). The bench itself will be positioned on the existing cupboard so that the big forces (planing, etc) will be mainly against the cupboard which in turn is fixed hard both to the concrete floor and against a concrete wall.
QUESTIONS: Will the above idea work? Any special points to consider? What about containing "across the bench" rather than "along the bench forces (e.g. sawing)?
2. Height: I'm in my mid 60s and had a back operation 10+ years ago. The op worked quite well but I still get quite a lot of back discomfort (sometimes pain), especially when bending, even for quite a short period. My existing mechanics bench which I made has a big mechanics vice on it with the top of the jaws set at elbow height (as per the general advice) and in general I find this quite comfortable when hacksawing, filing, etc, although for longer work periods I am considering raising the vice by a further inch or so by mounting it on an extra wooden (ply) plate. I am approx 6 foot 2 and the vice jaws are presently just under 45 inches above the floor.
But all the plans for woodworkers benches I've found are all MUCH lower than this (average seems to be about 32 to 36 inches, though I did find one at 38, and another at 29). Just like my Workmate, that seems to be far too low for me and I can imagine severe back pain working at heights like that (which happens to me now when I plane something on my Workmate). As I see it, I'd like to ignore that part of all the existing plans and set the top of the new woodworkers bench at about the same height as the the top of the jaws of my mechanics vice, i.e. about 45 inches. But I've never seen plans for a woodworkers bench with a height anything like that:
QUESTIONS: Am I missing something here? Why are all the woodworkers benches I've seen (plans and those in DIY stores) so "low"? Can anyone with more experience than me (i.e. just about everyone!) see anything wrong with, for example, planing a piece of timber with my back bent only slightly?
All comments and advice gratefully received - please remember I'm a real newbie in this woody world.
Thanks in anticipation.
AES
I've (at last) "bitten the bullet" and decided that I MUST build myself a woodworkers bench. Due to space it will be quite small (just over 1 metre long x 50 wide), flat top (no well). I've seen plenty of designs on the web etc and although this will be my first "large" wooden structure I'm pretty confident of being able to bring it off OK. BUT:
1. FOLDING: Due to space reasons, when not in use it needs to be folded up vertically, being fixed to an existing cupboard at one end and free standing (2off 4 x 4 legs) at the other. It will be fitted with a smallish Record wood workers vice, plus, maybe, a few hold downs. I had thought of the bracing being a lower shelf hinged at the fixed end (like the bench itself) and with metal brackets with "cam-shaped holes" (which I'll make myself) to lock onto metal pegs (headless thick gauge screws) at the legs end. The shelf would be fairly substantial (at least half inch birch ply) and the top will be 2 laminations of about three quarter MDF (I think). The bench itself will be positioned on the existing cupboard so that the big forces (planing, etc) will be mainly against the cupboard which in turn is fixed hard both to the concrete floor and against a concrete wall.
QUESTIONS: Will the above idea work? Any special points to consider? What about containing "across the bench" rather than "along the bench forces (e.g. sawing)?
2. Height: I'm in my mid 60s and had a back operation 10+ years ago. The op worked quite well but I still get quite a lot of back discomfort (sometimes pain), especially when bending, even for quite a short period. My existing mechanics bench which I made has a big mechanics vice on it with the top of the jaws set at elbow height (as per the general advice) and in general I find this quite comfortable when hacksawing, filing, etc, although for longer work periods I am considering raising the vice by a further inch or so by mounting it on an extra wooden (ply) plate. I am approx 6 foot 2 and the vice jaws are presently just under 45 inches above the floor.
But all the plans for woodworkers benches I've found are all MUCH lower than this (average seems to be about 32 to 36 inches, though I did find one at 38, and another at 29). Just like my Workmate, that seems to be far too low for me and I can imagine severe back pain working at heights like that (which happens to me now when I plane something on my Workmate). As I see it, I'd like to ignore that part of all the existing plans and set the top of the new woodworkers bench at about the same height as the the top of the jaws of my mechanics vice, i.e. about 45 inches. But I've never seen plans for a woodworkers bench with a height anything like that:
QUESTIONS: Am I missing something here? Why are all the woodworkers benches I've seen (plans and those in DIY stores) so "low"? Can anyone with more experience than me (i.e. just about everyone!) see anything wrong with, for example, planing a piece of timber with my back bent only slightly?
All comments and advice gratefully received - please remember I'm a real newbie in this woody world.
Thanks in anticipation.
AES