Alan Bain
Established Member
It’s time to build a new heavier work bench - my old Sjoberg one is too small, too light and has had years of use which has taken its toll (not abuse - but many of the joints are loose which could be fixed but the other problems remain).
I have a planer thicknesser (12 in) and definitely prefer the idea of a design that needs less hand planing (so no giant slab tops even if I could buy the timber).
After reading though the Schwarz books I know more than I could ever imagine about benches but an none the wiser which one to build. Too much choice. I am drawn to some of his modern takes on the French designs with laminated tops (but with a metal vice) as I like the ease of clamping from no aprons.
I don’t want to make a display piece from Purple Heart with fancy dovetails. It’s a workbench not an apprentice proof of skills demonstration. I do want to use the bench to hand cut dovetails on drawers etc.
I’d very much welcome any thoughts...especially considering the challenges of getting timber. I live in the Chiltern and every second tree seems to be a beech but as timber it seems hard to source!
I have a planer thicknesser (12 in) and definitely prefer the idea of a design that needs less hand planing (so no giant slab tops even if I could buy the timber).
After reading though the Schwarz books I know more than I could ever imagine about benches but an none the wiser which one to build. Too much choice. I am drawn to some of his modern takes on the French designs with laminated tops (but with a metal vice) as I like the ease of clamping from no aprons.
I don’t want to make a display piece from Purple Heart with fancy dovetails. It’s a workbench not an apprentice proof of skills demonstration. I do want to use the bench to hand cut dovetails on drawers etc.
I’d very much welcome any thoughts...especially considering the challenges of getting timber. I live in the Chiltern and every second tree seems to be a beech but as timber it seems hard to source!