To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Gladiator workbench size - 4' or 6'?

Makapuu

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 10, 2013
Messages
253
Location
South Bay, CA
I am going to get either a 4' or 6' Gladiator Maple top adjustable workbench for Father's Day. I am trying to decide which length. I live in a beach community where homes are side by side, and I have a 2 car garage that I can barely fit two cars. To allow for tool chest(s!), washer and drier, Christmas storage, etc etc. I have only one car in there - a 2008 GT 500 because it is far too wide a car to fit another car and everything else (including my wife's GT 500).

I like the adjustable feature because I have back problems and is difficult for me to bend over, and I want a tall workbench. In the space crunch I have, getting the 6 foot is really pushing it. I have plenty of tool storage and will not be using the workbench for any sort of tool storage - only ongoing projects. I may get a roller that slides underneath, but small enough (like a 31" griplatch) for some tool storage (and I don't really need it but we all know how that goes…) so I can still fit a chair under there or sit with my legs underneath while working.

Once I get a decent 4" or 5" bench vise bolted down, in practice, with a 4 footer, is there a lot of hassle getting projects done in that remaining space? Everything I do in terms of projects is usually automotive or household repair. On the flip side, is there a lot of benefit to the extra 2 feet of getting a longer six footer? What experiences have others had with workbench length in situations where you wish you had more space?

FYI we moved 2 years ago and I had a 3 car garage and it was a complete mess. To move close to the beach we needed to size down so I dumped my workbenches and a lot of my tools that I felt were not high-quality because I wanted to both size down and upgrade.

I have always had 4 foot workbenches in the past but used them for tool storage too so was always frustrated with them being too short. Now with an organized work area and lots of shelving and two tool chest stacks, I should have a clear workbench and won't have that problem.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
M

Makapuu

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 10, 2013
Messages
253
Location
South Bay, CA
I have the 6" and assembled it. Great high quality workbench. I am really happy I bought the 6', the 4' would have been too small.
 
OP
M

Makapuu

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 10, 2013
Messages
253
Location
South Bay, CA
In truth my 6-year old son assembled the entire workbench. No kidding. He is a project freak and as soon as I go in the garage, he follows me. I think it comes to him naturally because his Grandfather was literally a Rocket scientist. When he was a kid my Dad took apart everything electronic he could get his hands on to figure it out. Later, he worked under contract from NASA in the 1960's designing and constructing small nuclear reactors used in rocket propulsion systems. So now the kid is past doing legos, insists on doing everything during a project; the only thing I did was heavy lifting, and torqueing in the lag screws when they were too difficult for him:

workbench+1.JPG


Let me add that the adjustable workbench was an absolute necessity. I have 4 bad discs, so I set the height to 42" so I don't need to bend over when I work. So having the kid to help saves me lots of wear and tear on my back too! The fixed height Gladiator workbenches are 38.75 inches. That extra 3.25 inches may not seem like much, but it is the difference between bending over or not.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom