thomashenry
Established Member
Very happy with it, and fully recommend making this bench if you are into hand tool woodworking.
For planing boards you only need one dog at the left hand end (assuming you are right handed). Mine's a 30mm square rod tight fit in a hole - sticks down below so I can knock it up with a mallet. If you don't have a tail vice you won't miss it. I'm not really sure what they are for TBH, except as an extra vice - I've got one on the other side of my bench.Osvaldd":1305bqu3 said:Im looking to build a workbench this summer. Can't decide whether to go with PS design.
Couple questions, did you modify/add anything since building this? There are no bench dogs nor a tail vice in his design, do you not miss those when planing the faces of long boards?
They rest across to the far side, or just plonk an mdf board or similar over the whole top as necessary. Much better to have a tool well than not - most of what you do will be on the front edge of the bench and having a well is really handy for tools, shavings, reducing clutter, keeping working surface clear, etc etc.I like the tool well, but what about when you need to plane large panels? As per PS design the solid worktop is only 12" wide, how would you deal with very wide pieces?
woodbloke66":285hjb15 said:Nice job on the bench, looks a cracker, but why anyone would want to build in a front apron beats me. I know it's traditional, I know it will add a bit of mass and I know it will help to prevent the dreaded 'racking' etc (<which covers everything else) Wait though, until you need to use G or F cramps to secure something to the top as I do almost every time I use my bench. You'll find it's almost impossible.
Make the top thick enough and you don't need an apron.
Tool wells are excellent whichever way you slices it - Rob
Most workpieces can be worked on the top with no holding, but not if biggish and held in the vice against the apron - that's when/where you really need the g clamps..... until you need to use G or F cramps to secure something to the top as I do almost every time I use my bench....
Osvaldd":2h76uwh5 said:@woodbloke66 would you care to tell us more about your bench? few photos. Im looking to build a bench and I too don’t like that big front apron.
MikeG.":2h76uwh5 said:That's a slightly odd argument, Rob, if I may say so. It's sort-of the equivalent of saying "I've got this fancy new carbon fibre racing bike, and it's no good because I can't ride it wearing wellies". You are wanting to use clamps for the job normally done by holdfasts. If you have a bench with the traditional apron, then you use the traditional way of holding work: holdfasts, not clamps. You're actually arguing that an apron is no good because it stops you using the wrong piece of kit on the bench.
The point is that if you want to use clamps, then have a bench without an apron. If you want a bench with an apron, you don't suffer any disadvantage whatsoever because you simply use the tool designed for the purpose, the holdfast.
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The thickness of the top has no bearing on the job done by the apron. The apron's principle role is to act as bracing between the top and the legs, so that the bench doesn't rack under horizontal load (such as when planing). If you eliminate the apron, you'll need something else to do the bracing job, which can be a diagonal brace, or a sheet of ply.
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