Wallaceandsons
Established Member
Hello,
Ive just begun establishing a woodshop in my double garage, Its about 5.2m by 5.2m. Its split straight down the middle as I also run an outside catering company and use the other side for storage and refrigeration at the moment. The purpose of the workshop initially is to prevent a reliance on tradesman and eliminate the need for me to buy shelving, tables etc, with a longer term plan to build speakers, intergrated units with speakers. I really like bass and loud music. But the first job will be to build a proper kitchen on one side after Ive built a workbench as my first project.
The side with the workshop has a single garage door at the front that is currently boarded up, Im going to remove the cladding to gain access from the garage door side and make it easier to work outside when weather permits.
The first few bits of kit have arrived, a Metabo Mitre Saw, Random Orbit Sander, Drills, Router, lots of stuff. I've also purchased a Scheppach Precisa TS82 Table Saw. This has a continental 16 amp 240 V plug attached. So Ive put it together, the instructions are terrible, and its takes up much more room than I expected. But the garage already has a 16 amp socket, the previous owner used the garage for a printing business, so I presume he ran a bit of kit from it, obviously the continental plug wont fit, and the socket is on the other side of the garage, in the kitchen. First question is, can I move that myself? Is it a matter of just cutting off the supply, cutting the wire, remounting the socket and swapping over the Saw plug? Theres a visible 10mm wire running from the fuse box to the socket. Also the saw is 1100 W, so does it actually need a 16 amp supply?
Second question, in regards to the work bench, I was thinking of making it half workbench, half outfeed table for the table saw and positioning the table saw close to the garage door so if i do need the travel to feed the saw I can open up the door. How would you guys feel about that configuration, so is it worth losing one side of the workbench?
Third question, I was thinking about getting a table top thicknesser, good idea? I dont want to spend vast sums on finished timber and from some research this seems to be the best solution.
I've got loads of questions but I'll leave it at that for now. My Dad was big into woodworking back in the day but Ive never had the money to take the plunge until now. I've been lurking on here for ages, unregistered, I cant wait to get cracking, pretty gutted today when I got the saw together and couldnt even make a cut as I cant even turn it on. :-(
Ive just begun establishing a woodshop in my double garage, Its about 5.2m by 5.2m. Its split straight down the middle as I also run an outside catering company and use the other side for storage and refrigeration at the moment. The purpose of the workshop initially is to prevent a reliance on tradesman and eliminate the need for me to buy shelving, tables etc, with a longer term plan to build speakers, intergrated units with speakers. I really like bass and loud music. But the first job will be to build a proper kitchen on one side after Ive built a workbench as my first project.
The side with the workshop has a single garage door at the front that is currently boarded up, Im going to remove the cladding to gain access from the garage door side and make it easier to work outside when weather permits.
The first few bits of kit have arrived, a Metabo Mitre Saw, Random Orbit Sander, Drills, Router, lots of stuff. I've also purchased a Scheppach Precisa TS82 Table Saw. This has a continental 16 amp 240 V plug attached. So Ive put it together, the instructions are terrible, and its takes up much more room than I expected. But the garage already has a 16 amp socket, the previous owner used the garage for a printing business, so I presume he ran a bit of kit from it, obviously the continental plug wont fit, and the socket is on the other side of the garage, in the kitchen. First question is, can I move that myself? Is it a matter of just cutting off the supply, cutting the wire, remounting the socket and swapping over the Saw plug? Theres a visible 10mm wire running from the fuse box to the socket. Also the saw is 1100 W, so does it actually need a 16 amp supply?
Second question, in regards to the work bench, I was thinking of making it half workbench, half outfeed table for the table saw and positioning the table saw close to the garage door so if i do need the travel to feed the saw I can open up the door. How would you guys feel about that configuration, so is it worth losing one side of the workbench?
Third question, I was thinking about getting a table top thicknesser, good idea? I dont want to spend vast sums on finished timber and from some research this seems to be the best solution.
I've got loads of questions but I'll leave it at that for now. My Dad was big into woodworking back in the day but Ive never had the money to take the plunge until now. I've been lurking on here for ages, unregistered, I cant wait to get cracking, pretty gutted today when I got the saw together and couldnt even make a cut as I cant even turn it on. :-(