Here's mine:
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^ VERY NICE! Is everything hanging up with french cleats? Do those rolling cabinets stay pretty still? I might steal this idea as it's super cheap looking.
^ VERY NICE! Is everything hanging up with french cleats? Do those rolling cabinets stay pretty still? I might steal this idea as it's super cheap looking.
Very nice looking.
I wanted to use the French cleat system but I didn't have a table saw. Now I have a table saw, and I don't know if I have room for the French cleat system anymore. It's definitely awesome and inexpensive way to have a modular storage system.
Small world. I've got a DR 650 and a xc300. I've followed your sprinter thread on advrider. Also an avid mtn biker. Good to see you have a nice place to store that ktmOJ: Thanks for the tip on Sakurama - he has a great thread on ADVrider - we've both been members of the Orange Crush there forever [emoji481]
I have a Sprinter build thread on ADVrider as well that has over a million views:
http://advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=715683
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...so I need to decide if I have time to do more than one build thread
[emoji481]
18 years ago I installed cheap kitchen cabinets in the garage and set two Formica counter-tops on them (a 6-foot and an 8-foot). I like them because they are relatively cheap and they clean up easy. It's impervious to just about everything. When I spill epoxy on it, a quick wipe with acetone and it's gone. If the epoxy sets up. a razor blade takes care of the residue.I always thought that a 8 of 10 ft length of formica counter top wojuld make a perfect benchtop but I hardly see any here. Is there something I'm missing about it's usefulness? Or is it that people are building tops themselves that are less expensive.
I just think it gives it a cool finished look. Or does it look ghetto?
18 years ago I installed cheap kitchen cabinets in the garage and set two Formica counter-tops on them (a 6-foot and an 8-foot). I like them because they are relatively cheap and they clean up easy. It's impervious to just about everything. When I spill epoxy on it, a quick wipe with acetone and it's gone. If the epoxy sets up. a razor blade takes care of the residue.
The only thing I don't do on the counter-tops is weld steel or aluminum but they've seen quite a bit of copper pipe sweating.
Yes, almost everything I do is kind of ghetto or at least red-neck (note the trash compactor/can crusher and window A/C unit).
Looks fantastic Bob![]()
18 years ago I installed cheap kitchen cabinets in the garage and set two Formica counter-tops on them (a 6-foot and an 8-foot). I like them because they are relatively cheap and they clean up easy. It's impervious to just about everything. When I spill epoxy on it, a quick wipe with acetone and it's gone. If the epoxy sets up. a razor blade takes care of the residue.
The only thing I don't do on the counter-tops is weld steel or aluminum but they've seen quite a bit of copper pipe sweating.
Yes, almost everything I do is kind of ghetto or at least red-neck (note the trash compactor/can crusher and window A/C unit).
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A little progress. Gotta get some stands for my grinder and buffer.
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A little progress. Gotta get some stands for my grinder and buffer.
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My thought exactly.I feel like no mater what I have broken I could fix it on this bench.



Workbenches are made from craigslist office furniture stripped and painted to match my hunter green master force tool chests which just happen to be in the other garage still.
Diamond plate will eventually cover the bottom 5.5" as well as act as mud board along the walls.
Tops are 2 layers of 3/4" plywood covered with 14 gauge steel. I just got the steel today.
All is well and good except I didn't want to spring the extra $'s for stainless but when I picked up the tops today the bluing of the cold rolled was a lot darker than I anticipated. I really like shiny metal so I decided I'd go after the bluing with my belt sander - DANG! I spent 6 hours and many belts to just get the top surface of 1/2 of the large bench shiny but not yet polished.
I went as coarse as 36 to start and although it ate the bluing it clogged up quickly. I moved up to 80 and it worked to take the bigger scratches out but didn't do much to the bluing. Eventually I'll go to 120 to try to get a nice polish on it with minimal scratches.
Does anybody have any suggestions for how to get the bluing off easier and hopefully quicker?
BTW: This bench will be used and will get dinged up so it doesn't have to be perfect but I would like it to look good to start.
Jmiller, That is a really nifty idea with the office cabinets for tool and material storage. I really dig that idea man. Are they just a generic style steel office cabinet?
What brand of cabinets?
Flat tire: that is one awesome bench!
