Advice needed!
I am having a ply MFT top made that will sit on a basic frame of CLS or ply (or possibly a simple torsion box).
When in use I will use a pair of Toughbuilt C700 Sawhorses/ Trestles (pictured) as the base and this will be used on the drive in our very dry and warm wood- and human-friendly climate.
Though these sawhorses do have expandable channels at each end that will hold a 2x4 (a US 2x4 to be precise, but as I say it expands, so will take UK sizes, they just won’t be flush with the top unless you size them)
I can’t these channels to secure the worktop as they are about 980mm apart and I can’t have the worktop that wide because…
I am incredibly tight for space, so when not in use I will hang the workbench top on a wall behind a cupboard. (I thought it made more sense to hang it on the wall rather than just stand it behind the cupboard as that felt like it would be less likely to warp, but happy to be told other opinions)
Pic of space that will be even more limited as I’m fitting architrave to the door frame soon. The wood currently behind the cupboard will have gone.
As the space is behind a cupboard, I can’t access it from the front, but instead will have to access it from the side to slide the benchtop in and lift it to hang it on the wall (unless I put castors under the crappy Ikea unit in front and pull it out of the way to access, which isn’t ideal)
I would ideally like some sort of fixing that I could use both to secure the workbench top to the sawhorse when in use and use the same connection method to secure the sawhorse to the wall
I can screw wood battens to the top of the sawhorses to attach fixings.
Ideally set up / break down will be quick (days that are predicted to be dry that turn out to be comprised of hourly showers are the standard MO for the days I choose for making things)
The thought process I’ve been down so far are:
Button-fix flush fastenings
Which feel elegant, but would need a lot of precision mating so I’d be nudging the sawhorses back and forth under the worktop and it might be tricky to heft it over and onto such a small fitting when hanging it on the wall
French cleats
Could work well for the wall hanging as I could set them out from the wall and lift and slide the worktop on. Could use at one end of the sawhorse top and secure the other end another way but it feels like it could be done better.
Wide dowels on bottoms of worktop that locate in holes in wood on the trestle top. Workable but means more depth to the worktop, meaning it’ll stick out from the wall more or if I put the dowels on the trestle top I can’t stack then on top of each other or use them for anything else
Anyone done similar or has an idea for a type of fixing I’m not aware of?
Thanks
I am having a ply MFT top made that will sit on a basic frame of CLS or ply (or possibly a simple torsion box).
When in use I will use a pair of Toughbuilt C700 Sawhorses/ Trestles (pictured) as the base and this will be used on the drive in our very dry and warm wood- and human-friendly climate.
Though these sawhorses do have expandable channels at each end that will hold a 2x4 (a US 2x4 to be precise, but as I say it expands, so will take UK sizes, they just won’t be flush with the top unless you size them)
I can’t these channels to secure the worktop as they are about 980mm apart and I can’t have the worktop that wide because…
I am incredibly tight for space, so when not in use I will hang the workbench top on a wall behind a cupboard. (I thought it made more sense to hang it on the wall rather than just stand it behind the cupboard as that felt like it would be less likely to warp, but happy to be told other opinions)
Pic of space that will be even more limited as I’m fitting architrave to the door frame soon. The wood currently behind the cupboard will have gone.
As the space is behind a cupboard, I can’t access it from the front, but instead will have to access it from the side to slide the benchtop in and lift it to hang it on the wall (unless I put castors under the crappy Ikea unit in front and pull it out of the way to access, which isn’t ideal)
I would ideally like some sort of fixing that I could use both to secure the workbench top to the sawhorse when in use and use the same connection method to secure the sawhorse to the wall
I can screw wood battens to the top of the sawhorses to attach fixings.
Ideally set up / break down will be quick (days that are predicted to be dry that turn out to be comprised of hourly showers are the standard MO for the days I choose for making things)
The thought process I’ve been down so far are:
Button-fix flush fastenings
Which feel elegant, but would need a lot of precision mating so I’d be nudging the sawhorses back and forth under the worktop and it might be tricky to heft it over and onto such a small fitting when hanging it on the wall
French cleats
Could work well for the wall hanging as I could set them out from the wall and lift and slide the worktop on. Could use at one end of the sawhorse top and secure the other end another way but it feels like it could be done better.
Wide dowels on bottoms of worktop that locate in holes in wood on the trestle top. Workable but means more depth to the worktop, meaning it’ll stick out from the wall more or if I put the dowels on the trestle top I can’t stack then on top of each other or use them for anything else
Anyone done similar or has an idea for a type of fixing I’m not aware of?
Thanks