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    Results 1 to 7 of 7
    1. #1
      Join Date
      Jan 2000
      Location
      Thousand Oaks California
      Posts
      10,184
      Country Flag: United States

      Workbench questions: Size and surface materials

      Since I now have a real garage (small but real) I want to build a wall with cabinets and a work bench.

      What works for you or what do you hate about yours? Should I go 6' or 8'? Steel top? Butcher block? Laminate?



      I know I want to bolt a vise to it and the bench to the ground. I also want to be able to hammer on it and bend stuff in the vise without the bench collapsing or moving.

      I also need to store a tall chair under it so I can sit at it and solder or?????

      Oh, and I think about 20" deep is as far as I can go.
      Larry Callahan
      Founder/Administrator of Pro-Touring.com, G-Machines.com and HostMyJunk.com
      To advertise on Pro-Touring.com click here


    2. #2
      Join Date
      Aug 2011
      Location
      North Platte,NE
      Posts
      876
      Country Flag: United States
      My bench top is 12' long and made out of 1 1/2 solid oak doors lol! It works excellent and I also wrapped it in 20 gauge galvanized sheet. So its now chemically resistant as well.

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Sep 2008
      Location
      Jacksonville, Florida
      Posts
      634
      Country Flag: United States
      I would suggest two tables. A "clean" and "dirty". I use a steel table as my dirty, vice, bang on it, etc... that also incorporates a small channel on the back that dumps into a 5 gallon bucket. I have several used restaraunt stainless tables as my clean work surfaces. They are available in all different sizes, with or without back splashes and are super easy to clean.
      Craig Scholl
      CJD Automotive, LLC
      Jacksonville, Florida
      904-400-1802
      www.cjdautomotive.com

      "I own a Mopar, I already know it won't be in stock, won't ship tomorrow, and won't fit without modification."

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Feb 2011
      Location
      dallas, tx
      Posts
      1,731
      Country Flag: United States
      post your work space. Im researching the same thing now. Maybe we can help each other

    5. #5
      Join Date
      May 2007
      Location
      Mooresville, Indiana
      Posts
      1,874
      Country Flag: United States
      Larry, I have multiple benches and am getting ready to build a new one for the new garage/shop. I'm looking at an 8' section of bowling alley. Should be well sealed and durable.

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Nov 2012
      Location
      Sacramento, CA
      Posts
      1,918
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by sccacuda View Post
      I would suggest two tables. A "clean" and "dirty". I use a steel table as my dirty, vice, bang on it, etc... that also incorporates a small channel on the back that dumps into a 5 gallon bucket. I have several used restaraunt stainless tables as my clean work surfaces. They are available in all different sizes, with or without back splashes and are super easy to clean.

      X2

      I always need a place to beat, grind & shape metal. And you need a clean, smooth surface for assembly, lay out, etc.

      .

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Aug 2011
      Location
      North Platte,NE
      Posts
      876
      Country Flag: United States
      I have my work bench and then I have my welding table. And they're probably 20 ft apart. I recently bought a flame retardant blanket that I plan to put up as a curtain around the welding table.




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