To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Black & Decker Workmate

ChefRex

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2020
Messages
3,693
Location
NJ
2ff97c7dae3501f04d491caa7301dd0e.jpg
Out of the truck, quick clean up,2aab2db9ea59a0bacdb40d736d5db75a.jpg
Underbelly,87610d69748f34e6cbcad68811e89e8b.jpg
746d3c0d5068ad246aa8a7a91eb8331d.jpg


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Attachments

  • 2ff97c7dae3501f04d491caa7301dd0e.jpg
    2ff97c7dae3501f04d491caa7301dd0e.jpg
    196 KB · Views: 4
  • 2aab2db9ea59a0bacdb40d736d5db75a.jpg
    2aab2db9ea59a0bacdb40d736d5db75a.jpg
    145.9 KB · Views: 1
  • 87610d69748f34e6cbcad68811e89e8b.jpg
    87610d69748f34e6cbcad68811e89e8b.jpg
    75.3 KB · Views: 1
  • 746d3c0d5068ad246aa8a7a91eb8331d.jpg
    746d3c0d5068ad246aa8a7a91eb8331d.jpg
    78 KB · Views: 3
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
Picked up my first workmate today, a 300, always thought of them as a toy growing up and passed but I am surprised how solid it is! I can see the love.
Pics incoming.

Thanks, that's the original 300 model, the one I'm interested in. Yours is the earliest of three I have dates for so far - June 7, 1982.
 

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
First, looking at the other stamp, it is the model number 79-033. (Why they stamped it with different spacing, I don't know.) The label on the Workmate and most references in ads called it the Workmate 300, but 79-033 is its more specific official catalog number. It replaced the 79-001, which was the original Workmate for North America, sold from 1974 to 1982.

The TY1 means it is the 79-033 Type 1, i.e. first version. The 79-001 that preceded it went up to a Type 9. The 79-033 Type 1 shares many of its parts with the 79-001 Type 9. I'm not sure how many Types of the 79-033 were made.
 

ChefRex

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2020
Messages
3,693
Location
NJ
First, looking at the other stamp, it is the model number 79-033. (Why they stamped it with different spacing, I don't know.) The label on the Workmate and most references in ads called it the Workmate 300, but 79-033 is its more specific official catalog number. It replaced the 79-001, which was the original Workmate for North America, sold from 1974 to 1982.

The TY1 means it is the 79-033 Type 1, i.e. first version. The 79-001 that preceded it went up to a Type 9. The 79-033 Type 1 shares many of its parts with the 79-001 Type 9. I'm not sure how many Types of the 79-033 were made.

Thanks again, you are a wealth of knowledge:thumbup:!
 

doverla

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 25, 2016
Messages
64
Location
SE MN
Black & Decker Workmate

I received this between 1979 and 1982. It was sent to my workplace with my name on it. There are no numbers under the wood platforms. It is a 79-001.

IMG_3320.jpg

This is on the top but is illegible.

IMG_3322.jpg




Sent from my iPad using Garage Journal
 

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
An original owner -- that's great! It's a 79-001 Type 6, made between October 1978 and October 1979.
 

doverla

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 25, 2016
Messages
64
Location
SE MN
An original owner -- that's great! It's a 79-001 Type 6, made between October 1978 and October 1979.

Thanks. I started at that location in May of 1979 so those dates make sense. It is amazing how much I use it. Miter box saw, vise, bench grinder and just the simple portable work bench.
 

Dan in Pasadena

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,105
Location
Pasadena, CA
Way back when (eyes averted in shame!) I asked about replacement jaws for my otherwise great condition Workmate 550 I got from a Craigslist free ad. Never got around to doing anything with it.

Now I happen to have some spare 3/4" OSB. If I laminated two thicknesses of it together, sanded it, finished it, etc would it 'work" as replacement jaws or am I just being a cheap ******* and should go buy a full sheet of 1" hardwood plywood?
 

LS6 Tommy

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
26,162
Location
Northern NJ
I am no carpenter, so I may be 100% wrong, but I'd think OSB would chip/fall apart at the clamping edges unless they had some sort of protective metal jaws like on my 79-021 drop leaf workmate.

Tommy
 

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
I would think it would depend entirely on how you use the Workmate. For some uses it would be fine, for others it wouldn't hold up very well.
 

Dan in Pasadena

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,105
Location
Pasadena, CA
I am no carpenter, so I may be 100% wrong, but I'd think OSB would chip/fall apart at the clamping edges unless they had some sort of protective metal jaws like on my 79-021 drop leaf workmate.

Tommy

So....I AM being a cheap ******* huh, Tommy? :lol_hitti


Ok, yeah, I kinda figured I was being cheap. Even ordinary fir plywood is pretty soft. I suppose I can use 3/4 oak? If not then I'll be in the market for a half sheet (if anyone sells it) of 3/4 or 1" hardwood plywood.
 

madison069

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 5, 2010
Messages
4,123
Location
Monroeville, PA
Seems like it's either hang on hooks:

View media item 56242
put them on a dolly:
attachment.php
attachment.php


or just leave them out as movable benches:
IMG_0662Medium.jpg~original


I guess you could hang them from the ceiling in the folded flat against the ceiling way if you don't use it much. Kind of a pain to get it down though.

"Someday" I plan on making a rolling holder that will store two workmates and a Keter folding bench and perhaps even a folding welding table. It'll also have a drawer for all the accesories. The design keeps getting bigger in my head, probably why it isn't built yet. :eek:

Out of those options, I think the hook idea is what I will use. but I might do one of those roll around cause I've been thinking about getting a cart for awhile, so why not use what I already got and just add some wheels to it!

Mine just leans against whatever is convenient until it's in the way, then it leans against something else for a while.

Tommy

That's the exact situation I'm in now! LOL

But currently they are all in use holding various parts of the camaro waiting to get painted. But when I'm done it will go back to leaning on the wall or whatever until I get it up on the wall with hooks!
 

madison069

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 5, 2010
Messages
4,123
Location
Monroeville, PA
So....I AM being a cheap ******* huh, Tommy? :lol_hitti


Ok, yeah, I kinda figured I was being cheap. Even ordinary fir plywood is pretty soft. I suppose I can use 3/4 oak? If not then I'll be in the market for a half sheet (if anyone sells it) of 3/4 or 1" hardwood plywood.

I acquired a new workmate afew weeks ago and the wood on it is not in good shape. I actually thought about replacing it with 2x6 or 2x8 and when I drill the holes, I'll enlarge the hole on the bottom side to the proper depth so the dog cleats can still latch in place. My cleats pulls out easily enough that I'm not worrying about pinching it from the underside, so this would work for me.

This would give me more surface area to clamp what ever I'm working on in the jaw, and make it a little more robust.
 

Vahispd

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2012
Messages
141
Location
SE VA
I rebuilt a WM 300 for my son-in-law earlier this year and used 5/4 x 4 inch pine from the blue box store. I think the wood came from New Zealand or thereabouts, but it worked great. Thicker than the original particleboard and machined nicely. I added dog holes and v-grooves then finished with some BLO. I'll need to dig up the pics.
 

Vahispd

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2012
Messages
141
Location
SE VA
Found the pics.

The dogs were original. I had to replace the plastic leg catches.

The WM was dusty and had a little rust that turned into a lot of rust once it was cleaned up. I wire brushed and sanded the rusted areas to clean metal, primered and painted with Rust-oleum.
 

Attachments

  • 20200629_202215.jpg
    20200629_202215.jpg
    149.2 KB · Views: 67
  • 20200629_202204.jpg
    20200629_202204.jpg
    124.8 KB · Views: 73

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
Thanks again, you are a wealth of knowledge:thumbup:!

I have spent a lot of time studying vintage Workmates the last few years, but it has been a fascinating pastime to see what I could uncover. And a large amount of what I have learned has been thanks to stories, photos, descriptions, etc. shared by the members here, so - Thanks, everyone!

Chris
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Dan in Pasadena

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,105
Location
Pasadena, CA
Found the pics.

The dogs were original. I had to replace the plastic leg catches.

The WM was dusty and had a little rust that turned into a lot of rust once it was cleaned up. I wire brushed and sanded the rusted areas to clean metal, primered and painted with Rust-oleum.

Looks excellent. Mine is in pretty good condition but has no wood so I need to make new. Looks like you made new jaws too(?) Are those 1x or 2x lumber?

Why the groove in the jaws and the little v's cut into them? By any chance did you find dimensions for making new jaws somewhere online?
 

fartymarty

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2012
Messages
1,348
Location
Fort Worth
Why the groove in the jaws and the little v's cut into them?

It matches the original jaws.
attachment.php


Q:
Are those 1x or 2x lumber?

A:
I rebuilt a WM 300 for my son-in-law earlier this year and used 5/4 x 4 inch pine from the blue box store. I think the wood came from New Zealand or thereabouts, but it worked great. Thicker than the original particleboard and machined nicely. I added dog holes and v-grooves then finished with some BLO. I'll need to dig up the pics.
 

Attachments

  • Untitled.jpg
    Untitled.jpg
    78.4 KB · Views: 317

ChefRex

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2020
Messages
3,693
Location
NJ
Picked up a another today, 79-001 type 6?
fba4175897de43b4017bb4aef19a3e54.jpg
A little rust but not too bad, missing a rubber foot for the flip out legs, source?
I looked around but my Google fu is lacking.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Attachments

  • fba4175897de43b4017bb4aef19a3e54.jpg
    fba4175897de43b4017bb4aef19a3e54.jpg
    132.7 KB · Views: 1

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
Which type of foot is missing - the screw-in foot or one of the 3 boot feet?

And does it have a production code you can find stamped in ink on the bottom of the wooden jaws that you could provide?
 

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
I think it was McBrownie here who posted about the replacement boot-style feet that he had success with. Maybe a year ago, maybe more.. Not a real specific answer, I know.
 
Last edited:

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
There's a 79-001 Type E in an online auction in the Los Angeles area:
https://ctbids.com/#!/description/share/679212
The metal surfaces aren't in great shape, but it appears to be complete, and with nothing broken. It's unusual to find one with all eight feet and the four blue dogs. The sale just started and runs until 12/16. It has been bid up to $3!
 

Bugeyed Earl

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2012
Messages
211
Location
Davie, Florida
I found this Workmate either at a yard sale or a thrift shop, and it's been with me for more than a decade. The little swiveling hobby model probably arrived the same way, and the ShopBox was an Offerup purchase, I was specifically looking for one of those to carry my electronics repair tools.

The jaws on the full size model are pretty badly delaminated, and I have some nice old oak jaws ready to go, but I've been thinking about just repairing the originals, which will be a lot lighter (this early version is pretty heavy already.)

attachment.php


attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20201207_100008103.jpg
    IMG_20201207_100008103.jpg
    96.1 KB · Views: 259
  • IMG_20201207_095756324.jpg
    IMG_20201207_095756324.jpg
    91.4 KB · Views: 263

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
I found this Workmate either at a yard sale or a thrift shop, and it's been with me for more than a decade.

Hey could you find the production code number stamped in ink on the bottom of the jaws and post a photo or tell me what it is? I have the codes from only seven Type 1's, and need more. Thanks.

You're right, the 79-001 Workmates from late 1974 to late 1976 were the heaviest. In late 1976 they lost about 3.5 pounds.
 
Last edited:

Bugeyed Earl

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2012
Messages
211
Location
Davie, Florida
Hey could you find the production code number stamped in ink on the bottom of the jaws and post a photo or tell me what it is? I have the codes from only seven Type 1's, and need more. Thanks.

You're right, the 79-001 Workmates from late 1974 to late 1976 were the heaviest. In late 1976 they lost about 3.5 pounds.

This is the best I can do until the natural lighting improves (it's raining...) Appears to be "504?3" or "504 3?" I'll try to see if I can locate the missing digit, but the first 3 definitely get us in the ballpark. Thanks for putting together your great site by the way, fantastic resource!

attachment.php


attachment.php


Does anyone know how to straighten out these leg clips? I've tried to reshape them with some needlenose pliers, but the spring steel snaps right back to the misshapen state. Maybe I need to apply some heat?

attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20201207_095503309.jpg
    IMG_20201207_095503309.jpg
    148.1 KB · Views: 262
  • IMG_20201207_095520118.jpg
    IMG_20201207_095520118.jpg
    140 KB · Views: 261
  • IMG_20201207_095645692.jpg
    IMG_20201207_095645692.jpg
    79 KB · Views: 270

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
This is the best I can do until the natural lighting improves (it's raining...) Appears to be "504?3" or "504 3?" I'll try to see if I can locate the missing digit, but the first 3 definitely get us in the ballpark. Thanks for putting together your great site by the way, fantastic resource!

Thanks, it's just "504 3". The Type 1 was stamped with only four digits.

I have a Type 1 that was made just five days later.
 

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
Does anyone know how to straighten out these leg clips? I've tried to reshape them with some needlenose pliers, but the spring steel snaps right back to the misshapen state. Maybe I need to apply some heat?

I don't know much about working with metal, but I think heat might be necessary. I have one leg clip that is bent and I have worked on it at least ten times with pliers, but just like yours it won't stay fixed. Another owner sent me photos of how he fixed his bent clips by cutting about 1/8" off the end. His was bent the same way as mine is, so I'm planning to try that fix myself. Your bend is different, so shortening it won't help.
 

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
Haha, how cool is that?!

I have collected production codes for 157 Workmate 79-001's now, covering 396 weeks from late 1974 to mid 1982, and it's interesting to see how they are scattered and grouped in time.

I have five pairs with codes that match each other exactly, same year, week, day, and shift. Four other pairs were made on the same day, different shift. In one really dense period, I have ten observations in a span of just over 4 weeks in 1977.

At the other extreme, there's a span where ten consecutive Workmates cover a period of a year and a half, from late 1979 into 1981. The longest gaps with no documented codes are 37, 21, 15, 14, and 12 weeks.

I can't tell if the distribution of the codes is just random, or if the pattern indicates times when production was running at full capacity vs. other times when it was perhaps shut down completely.
 
Last edited:

RandyIA

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2020
Messages
142
Location
Iowa
...

Does anyone know how to straighten out these leg clips? I've tried to reshape them with some needlenose pliers, but the spring steel snaps right back to the misshapen state. Maybe I need to apply some heat?

attachment.php

I'm not a metallurgist but I would strongly suggest not using heat to work on spring steel. That is unless you can re-heat treat it back to original. I've not bent one of these particular springs but I have bent flat springs and they need to go seriously past where you want them to end up. But there is always the possibility that they will break since spring steel is hard. They will invariably break at the screw hole, or in this case the rivet hole.

I think the needle nose pliers are your best bet, just need more 'bending' to get them back to where they work. Use a crescent (adjustable spanner) wrench to help twist the pliers if necessary. Try to get it done quickly (in one fast bend) because hard steel only gets harder the more times it's bent. By one fast bend I mean just bend it once. Not a snapping type bend. Just bend it and watch how it's working closely, you might need to re-adjust where you have grabbed it with the pliers to get the best radius.

Another edit- It looks like this one needs to be lifted with the radius almost a smooth arc? I'd suggest not lifting any while bending it. Use the frame to hold the bottom of the spring steady and push down slightly while bending the kinked portion up. An alternative bending method would be to use as big of a crecsent wrench as will fit on the spring clamping the spring slightly between the jaws from the end or the spring and slipped on to the kinked area and then twist out and down. You might need to use both ways to get it right. The crecsent wrench will afford a lot of leverage.
 
Last edited:

wolfcj

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
599
Does anyone know how to straighten out these leg clips? I've tried to reshape them with some needlenose pliers, but the spring steel snaps right back to the misshapen state. Maybe I need to apply some heat?

I've seen these fail in three different ways. Does one of these describe how yours behaves?
1) The end of the clip doesn't align with the slot in the leg, so the end of the clip hits the leg as soon as you start to close it.
2) The clip goes into the slot okay, but then the leg gets hung up when it tries to slide over the curve in the clip.
3) The legs slides over the clip properly, but then the end of the clip jams against the inside of the leg.
I hope those are clear enough; it's tricky to describe them.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom