They look excellent for the money.View attachment 153554
Here are the castors I bought. Got them from Amazon, they seem pretty good so far. Can't remember the rating but they were more than enough.
Martin
They look excellent for the money.View attachment 153554
Here are the castors I bought. Got them from Amazon, they seem pretty good so far. Can't remember the rating but they were more than enough.
Martin
Probably after finishing this build you will be closer to that balance.Sounds interesting, I will look forward to your updates.
I do feel like I am managing my over thinking situation a little better nowadays. I'm aware of it, and I'm compensating. I'm still nowhere near the right balance but im making progress, and that pretty good going even if it has taken me 47 years....
Martin
Yes, that's what I meant with overhang arm.Yes I've seen loads of John's videos, and also Dennis (my MFT design is inspired by him as I explained earlier)
I will be handling extraction with shop vac and may add a movable boom to hold the hose for the track saw and other machines. Similar to the star wars woodworker guy, forget his name. Oh, it's Lincoln Street Woodworks.
I won't be adding a paint booth as I don't need to spray anything
Martin
I work in the cellar of my Victorian house and use the joists in exactly the same way, just one question, Are you sure you have enough drills ?I don't know if these photos will be helpful. My ceiling beams are 2.4m off the floor, and I'm 1.94 tall. All of the tools are above head height for me, but are pretty easy to grab.
Buy non locking wheels and construct bench lift like the Properdiy on YouTube. Simple way and works well.Yeah, I feel you. I need to buy 5 of those sets and I pay almost 50% extra for duties and shipping to my country. So, for the time being I only admire and recommend them.
The only thing I want to add to your topic is to be careful, at £5 a set they do sound way cheap. Make sure their supported weight matches your needs.
Yeah that looked pretty cool to be fair. One reason I didn't go that route is because I wanted the locking function to be accessible. If bench is in corner or butted up against other things then you can't lock it.Buy non locking wheels and construct bench lift like the Properdiy on YouTube. Simple way and works well.
regards,
Dave
Hi BradYes, that's what I meant with overhang arm.
The main idea with this small spaces is to think of our benches and furniture the same way as we think of Transformers. Multi-function, multi-purpose and modular. For example, those sawhorses you have are awesome but, at the same time, they occupy a lot of room. If you use two mobile benches instead, after cutting you put those back to the wall, the mdf or plywood sheet vertically behind benches, and you have all the rest of the space free again. I know the same goes with the sawhorses but if you do this with benches you will always have extra room because the benches are not Schrodinger's cat and don't occupy two spaces at the same time.
These are just thoughts, I'm telling them equally to myself.
In respect of the paint booth, it's similar in my case. I do need to spray, but I don't need to do it during the winters and I have a big yard. My solution is precisely what one of our colleagues said, 'use waxes and oils'.
For the last year and a half I've been working under a temporary contract and I did restoration of antique furniture. That way I got to experiment with certain specialised brands. Not just the spearhead brands/products such as Rubio monocoat, but affordable and great quality alternatives. I checked and found that you have a UK distributor for my favourite of these brands and I do recommend anyone to try them out. For the time being and untilmy new shop is ready I only make small items as gifts. One is a 2k hardwax oil very similar to Rubio monocoat but at a portion of its price and the other is a monocomponent hardwax oil. Both can be wiped-on or brushed or rolled and buffed by hand or by machine. I'll drop links to both, one from the uk shop and one from the international shop because I see the products names differ in the UK. Also, link to a good hardtop oil.
https://bormawachs.com/dettaglio_new.php?idrcvnz=49512K - Parquet Oil 2k (interiors)~4&lang=2https://bormashop.co.uk/interiors/1...lor_0000/1035-format-1_lt/1101-sheen_gloss-10https://bormashop.co.uk/interiors/1...r_0000/1096-format-750_ml/1101-sheen_gloss-10
I can also recommend their wood flour fillers, which I used in restoration with flawless results (and I'm no fan of fillers!).
https://bormashop.co.uk/touch-up-li...tml#/604-color-white_f0050/1080-format-125_ml
I know I deviated from the topic at hand, that's how my mind works when trying to see the big picture, I sometimes go to far in the future. I'm about to start planning with the pen and paper, and as soon as I'll have something worth sharing, I will.
Just a final note, think what you will mainly use your bandsaw for and how often you will need it. That should prioritise its position in the shop. Mine for example is used for resawing. Or will be as soon as I deal with its fence misalignment issue. For resawing I've seen lots of woodworkers keeping it similarly to the position it has in your picture above - near the wall, so you have room both in front and behind it. For curves I have a second benchtop bandsaw which I can put away after use. AND remember that some bandsaws are multipurpose as well - you can switch their blade for an abrasive strip (link below, for my saw which is similar to yours) and use it as a strip sander, should you need such a contraption.
https://www.probois-machinoutils.co...8-bandsaw-80-grit-set-of-3-4007430310811.html
Cheers,
Brad
I have some overhang on both sides of my bench and some buckshee box section so I use a lever to lift the bench at each side and then lock it down by putting a dowel in the leg. When I’m back home I’ll try remember to post a pic.Yeah that looked pretty cool to be fair. One reason I didn't go that route is because I wanted the locking function to be accessible. If bench is in corner or butted up against other things then you can't lock it.
It might have been a mistake because I think it would be far more sturdy with the DIY locks.
Thanks for the suggestion though.... It's not too late for my other benches.
I was worried about hitting the screws with the blade. But now I think about it screwing from underneath doesn't actually help, it probably makes it worse as you don't know where the screws are. Sounds like I will be simply screwing it down.As long as the screws were properly countersunk is there any reason why the MFT top has to be fixed from the bottom? I would build a torsiom box with the MFT top so that any dust gathers in the box. easy enough to hoover out occasionally
except that when you slid it out all the dust would fall into the drawer below............ sort of defeating the purpose.Or I could also have a removable 'lid' too I suppose, that slid out, just above the drawers....
What you suggest is actually what dennis has done so I imagine it's a good solutionexcept that when you slid it out all the dust would fall into the drawer below............ sort of defeating the purpose.
could you build the mft top with a drawer immediately below it designed to catch the dust etc
Hi,What you suggest is actually what dennis has done so I imagine it's a good solution
Hello,I have put together a rough plan for my workshop interior (at long last), 4m x 3.5m
- mitre station and wood rack on left
- bandsaw at back
- mft and workbench on right
View attachment 152597
View attachment 152600
Cabinet structure
View attachment 152601
here is status quo:
View attachment 152598
View attachment 152599
I am primarily looking for thoughts on the following at this stage:
Considerations
- structure of the cabinets - is there a cheaper or better way to do it
- I'm planning on using untreated construction timber/CLS/C24 for the skeleton but also considering MDF or cheap ply (I would ideally do it all in birch ply or valchromat but I don't have the budget)
- material for tops/sheathing/shelving
- nice ply, cheap ply, MDF?
- thickness=18mm, 12mm, 6mm?
- I do want it to look nice, but I also want to try and use cheaper materials where I can get away with it - so thinking of things like drawer carcass being cheap ply but birch ply drawer fronts. Or cabinet tops being birch ply and interior cabinet sheathing and shelving being MDF
- I haven't yet figured out what type of storage to have in the cabinets - maybe shelves, maybe drawers, maybe a mixture - advice on that welcome
- I also NEED to create a rack for my clamps (they are in a plastic box on floor and driving me mad), don't know where to put that yet though
- at some point I will create a french cleat system on the wall for storage of hand tools and some other stuff I might want easy access to - perhaps that would be good for my clamp storage seeing as I don't know where I want that yet
- my woodworking style will be a mix of power tools/MFT track saw stuff and hand woodworking - haven't really found my groove yet so I'm doing a bit of both, maybe a bit of both IS my groove....
Description of the general concept
- everything on castors
- the cabinets from the mitre saw area will be wheeled over to the MFT area when I need a bigger working surface (such as if I cut down full sheets)
- everything is set at 950mm (including castors) so its all compatible, other than the workbench which is 850mm (and the funny little mitre saw stand which is about 900mm)
- mitre area situated near the french doors in case I need to cut very long stuff
- workbench near the window for max light
cheers
Martin
thanks but I wont need metal working or paint spraying. Air tools would be quite handy and I like how light they are, but I just don't want a compressor.Hello,
Dust and sawdust extraction is something you should consider. Plus I would allow an area that could be a multitask area for metalwork, and paint spraying. This would involve welding, metal grinding etc so it would be good to have an area that one could keep separate. Further an air compressor is useful as it adds extra tools, and some of the air tools one can get are wonderful to hold and use. Blow guns, pin guns etc, you can simple install an air hose and quickly attach each tool with a quick attach fitting. Choose a quiet compressor. Also look at the flooring, something like I have is thick aluminium with a heavy duty carpet between the rails, makes a big difference.
Regards
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