About 3 years ago I rebuilt my workshop, unfortunately things started to go pear shaped in my life after that, but to cut a long story short, I have lost a lot more of my mobility and my shop was not the ideal place for me to work in. Now I need to sit down most of the time, so over the last few months, with some help from my grandson, we have been making it a better place for me to work.
The first thing I had to do was get rid of my old workbench, I couldn't get my knees under it and it wasn't ideal for storage, plus a load of tooling and machines I will never use again went as well, they all went to good causes as freebies. I am really pushed for room in my shop, and now, it has to justify it's space, or it is gone.
So I bought a cheapo pressed steel bench, but once it was fixed to the wall, everything went completely rigid and perfect for storage of all my precision instruments.
http://www.machinemart.co.uk/shop/product/details/cwb1250-workbench
Little would you believe it, the boards around the bench and the backboard and shelf for tailstock storage actually took me about two weeks to complete, five minutes here, ten minutes there, purely because it required me to stand to do it.
But now it is to this stage, I will be able to sit down to finish it off. The side boards are to protect the work surface, as I have a lathe on one side and a mill on the other, and my bench used to get covered in swarf. I'm hoping these boards will stop most of that.
Over the last couple of years, I have been making tooling to fit both my lathe tailstock, lathe nose and other bits to allow me to swap over tooling between lathe and mill, so my small tailstock tooling rack was getting very full. This new shelf solves the storage problem, and gives me room to expand it further if needs be.
How often do you have to fold up your plans when you finish work for the day, or even have a problem hanging them up somewhere?
Well a very good friend gave me a shelf with side bearing runners, and it was duly fixed under my long machinery bench. It is nearly four feet wide and two feet deep, perfect for blutacking my plans to and sliding in and out when needed. It hangs about 1.5" lower than the frame, so if the made components will fit, they can be stored on there as well.
Many of you will remember my sidekick 'Bandit'. Well he has now retired from helping me in my shop and has gone to look after my better half, her needs are more than mine.
This is my new 4 months old workshop mate, called 'Turpin', and just like his namesake, if it isn't bolted down, it disappears into his basket, a true highwayman.
Unfortunately, he will only grow to about half of Bandit's size, he is a 'teacup' Jack Russell, and he has already learned to hide under the lathe when I am searching for him (about 4" clearance under the brake pedal).
So as I progress around my shop, fixing it up for me to work in, I will keep you updated. I am hoping to be cutting metal again in a couple of months, so I can finish off all the projects that have been waiting on the sidelines for the last couple of years.
John
The first thing I had to do was get rid of my old workbench, I couldn't get my knees under it and it wasn't ideal for storage, plus a load of tooling and machines I will never use again went as well, they all went to good causes as freebies. I am really pushed for room in my shop, and now, it has to justify it's space, or it is gone.
So I bought a cheapo pressed steel bench, but once it was fixed to the wall, everything went completely rigid and perfect for storage of all my precision instruments.
http://www.machinemart.co.uk/shop/product/details/cwb1250-workbench
Little would you believe it, the boards around the bench and the backboard and shelf for tailstock storage actually took me about two weeks to complete, five minutes here, ten minutes there, purely because it required me to stand to do it.
But now it is to this stage, I will be able to sit down to finish it off. The side boards are to protect the work surface, as I have a lathe on one side and a mill on the other, and my bench used to get covered in swarf. I'm hoping these boards will stop most of that.
Over the last couple of years, I have been making tooling to fit both my lathe tailstock, lathe nose and other bits to allow me to swap over tooling between lathe and mill, so my small tailstock tooling rack was getting very full. This new shelf solves the storage problem, and gives me room to expand it further if needs be.
How often do you have to fold up your plans when you finish work for the day, or even have a problem hanging them up somewhere?
Well a very good friend gave me a shelf with side bearing runners, and it was duly fixed under my long machinery bench. It is nearly four feet wide and two feet deep, perfect for blutacking my plans to and sliding in and out when needed. It hangs about 1.5" lower than the frame, so if the made components will fit, they can be stored on there as well.
Many of you will remember my sidekick 'Bandit'. Well he has now retired from helping me in my shop and has gone to look after my better half, her needs are more than mine.
This is my new 4 months old workshop mate, called 'Turpin', and just like his namesake, if it isn't bolted down, it disappears into his basket, a true highwayman.
Unfortunately, he will only grow to about half of Bandit's size, he is a 'teacup' Jack Russell, and he has already learned to hide under the lathe when I am searching for him (about 4" clearance under the brake pedal).
So as I progress around my shop, fixing it up for me to work in, I will keep you updated. I am hoping to be cutting metal again in a couple of months, so I can finish off all the projects that have been waiting on the sidelines for the last couple of years.
John