Spec me a man bench!

Soldato
Joined
18 Oct 2002
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10,676
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Castle Anthrax
I went for full overkill, but then I wanted to be able to do metal fabrication, welding and gearbox builds etc on it.

Welded up a frame from 50x50 steel box then put a 10mm steel worktop on it. It's absolutely bomb proof, it's heavy enough that it won't move when smacking stuff with the big hammers.

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Have moved house since making it and I could do with some more bench space so I'm looking at making a couple more in the same style with a slightly less heavy duty worktop.
 
Soldato
Joined
11 Sep 2013
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12,308
That looks ideal, what was the cost of materials?
£78 for all the timbers including a load of spares which, together with the offcuts, will be used to make additions, a few end shelves, a drawer or two, and so on...
Couple of quid for a big box of wood screws and the four coach bolts that hold it all in place (yes, it's a takedown). Vice was £35 off the 'Bay.

The best part of this design is the aprons on either side, which keep it solid by preventing the legs from racking and give you a massive, solid platform to which you can fit pretty much anything - Shelves, tool holders, extensions, or whatever. Drill out a load of dog holes for work holding, or something.
 

SPG

SPG

Soldato
Joined
28 Jul 2010
Posts
10,255
Euro pallets make a great bench pop off the tops, cut in half put back the tops without a gap and whatever you want as legs.
 
Soldato
Joined
18 Oct 2002
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4,544
Location
Nottingham
Interesting idea that.

For those with sliding mitre saws. How do you cope? My workbench is 60cm deep but i've found that i can't slide it all the way back. It's very annoying. Think i'm going to have to build a little shelf to extend the depth!

I picked up a portable stand from Lidl which is a godsend when using the mitre saw.

2019-12-31-18-12-56.jpg
 
Soldato
Joined
9 Jul 2003
Posts
9,595
I picked up a heavy duty kitchen table for next to nothing second hand and just added a bit more support to make it rock solid.

I wanted mine to be moveable though not bolted to the wall.
 
Associate
Joined
9 Nov 2011
Posts
687
Location
Stoke-on-Trent
zSKt83p

I went for full overkill, but then I wanted to be able to do metal fabrication, welding and gearbox builds etc on it.

Welded up a frame from 50x50 steel box then put a 10mm steel worktop on it. It's absolutely bomb proof, it's heavy enough that it won't move when smacking stuff with the big hammers.


Have moved house since making it and I could do with some more bench space so I'm looking at making a couple more in the same style with a slightly less heavy duty worktop.

I welded mine too, mainly because I wanted to learn to weld. Used a kitchen work top though.

workbench.png
 
Soldato
Joined
13 Jan 2003
Posts
23,663
It’s just construction timber.

If you go to any b&q/wicked they’ll have loads of it.

Usually costs about £3/length of 2.4m.

that’s exactly what I did - bonded two lengths to make the legs etc. It’s little soft and may warp as it ages but cheap.
 
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