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Thread: Working area in small spaces

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Geezer's Avatar
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    Default Working area in small spaces

    Here is a short pictorial as to how to get a work-space into an apartment, rental, or small area.
    HF 4ft bench, Assembly required! About an hour in another room with space to get around it; then have a buddy help you move into place. A buddy is good to have help you put it together also. I did it myself then a buddy came to help me move it after his workday.
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    Flooring is just one box of inexpensive click together flooring to cover the floor carpet. That makes it easier to slide a stool or clean up after bench use. Easier to locate dropped stuff too. Obviously, if you have more room, then cover more area with the flooring. A buffer is not recommended!!

    A Bench pin...Google it! Mount it to a removable board to allow its clamping to the table. That will make cutting scales out with a coping/ Jewelers' saw ( blade cuts teeth pointed down.) Or, just board with a "V" slot in the front, like the one at the right side of the bench above. The notch should be about 1+ inches out from the benchtop.When screwed to the table top. Using Screw anchors to allow use of machine screws would make mounting and un-mounting faster!

    I chose to add two cheap "Assembly Required" cabinets from a local store. I did not attach the bench to them! I slid the bench into place wedged with a heavier plastic foam..."sill sealer" About $6 a roll at a local hardware/ builders' supply.
    Total with the cabinets, about $150

    Have fun!
    ~Richard
    Last edited by Geezer; 03-04-2018 at 03:21 PM.
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    32t
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    I LOVE your use of a bench pin. This is my favorite version. unscrew the set screw to remove it and sit closer or replace it with something different.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Geezer's Avatar
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    Thank you! I forgot about that one! Thank you! I have the mounting and pin from back a few years.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Richard

    That would be a luxury in a condo. My tools are in a small cabinet in the closet. My work bench is a piece of 12 inch by 18 inch pine shelving. That all the space I get to work on my razors. I can sit on the sofa, watch TV and work.

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    Senior Member joamo's Avatar
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    Nice setup, good use of space.
    I'm lucky that I get a whole room on the main floor and 2 areas in the basement, one for a wet saw and another for lapping. I'll post pics some time if I ever get it straightened up enough to be presentable.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    Richard. Have looked at those at HF a couple of times, how sturdy is the drawers on it? I don't need something for tight spaces I have plenty but it looks to be a great way t add some bench top and storage on the wall for other things like a drill press and band saw put two of them together. Tc
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    Senior Member criswilson10's Avatar
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    I like the idea of the cheap flooring. My workshop floor is concrete and I constantly worry about dropping a blade on it. That flooring would help a lot.
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    Quote Originally Posted by tcrideshd View Post
    Richard. Have looked at those at HF a couple of times, how sturdy is the drawers on it? I don't need something for tight spaces I have plenty but it looks to be a great way t add some bench top and storage on the wall for other things like a drill press and band saw put two of them together. Tc
    I would not hesitate to put a small drill press and bandsaw on one. The drawers are steel sided and a piece of fiberboard laid into them for a bottom. If fastened it could be plenty strong fo tools. Check out the shaky showroom models at a store for details. The final product is a LOT better.
    Cheerz!
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    You can accomplish quite a bit of dust control with a nice shop vac with a heap filter. The poly spun filters you can wash, so you get to avoid airborne particle cleaning them. Over time dust control has helped me keep my mess to myself.
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    Quote Originally Posted by criswilson10 View Post
    I like the idea of the cheap flooring. My workshop floor is concrete and I constantly worry about dropping a blade on it. That flooring would help a lot.
    Foam jigsaw mats would be good on concrete.

    On 2nd thought if you use a chair with casters ,hard rubber sheets would be better. Like the type for horse stalls.
    Even so, I've lost a razor to the concrete floor. Unless the foam is wall to wall, razors have an internal targeting device for concrete.
    Last edited by onimaru55; 03-04-2018 at 11:34 PM.
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