Here are photos of my sharpening station, which uses the Tormek T8 and various waterstones. I built this station in the basement laundry room so I could have a sink with hot and cold running water, as well as a dedicated sharpening system. It is separate from the main shop areas. Originally, I was going to use the Belfast sink I purchased and shipped from the Birmingham B&Q at great expense, but it would take up too much space in the cabinet and not leave enough room for the water heater and pump. I'll likely use the Belfast sink when I redo my kitchen.
The right cabinet under the sink is where the water heater and lift pump are installed. The basement is below grade and the sewage drain is about one meter above the basement floor, so I needed a pump to get rid of the water. The vertical gray pipe is the drain from the pump and the white pipe next to it is the cold water feed that I spliced into the washer connection.
The Tormek T8 is stored in the middle section on a slide-out tray and is placed on a support that fits in the second drawer in the middle section. This drawer uses heavy duty full extension slides that can handle 45KG each. The other full extension drawer slides are rated at 25KG each. The 800 and 1200 grit waterstones are kept partially submerged on edge in the gray box. The blue Dychem mat is a non-slip mat that holds the waterstone in place while I abuse the chisels and plane irons. I keep the 6,000 and 10,000 grit waterstones in the top drawer of the middle section and spritz them with water from the green bottle when I am using them. The DMT diamond flattening stone is standing on end leaning against the wall.
The six drawers in the left section are for the Tormek jigs and accessories.
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Here is a photo of the gray box showing the 800 and 1200 waterstones.
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Here is a photo of the gray box without the waterstones. I hot glued three sections of 20mm PVC pipe to the bottom of the box to provide support for the stones and keep them off of the bottom. The pipe sections are intentionally shorter than the width of the box so the water can circulate. This also makes it easy to flush the box when needed.
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Here is a photo of the 800 grit waterstone on the Dychem mat. In normal use, the stone does not move as I sharpen the chisels or plane irons with the honing jig.
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