Svorhees
Member
Hi all, been lingering here for a little while soaking up some info. I am putting to gether a wood working shop in my 3 car garage and was wondering how much length I need to consider for the miter saw bench, any suggestions?
I am in agreement on this. I rarely need to miter really long pieces, so I just use my miter saw on a stand with extendable arms that reach out about 4 feet on each side. Truth is, mostly I use the miter saw to cut long pieces into shorter pieces. I set up a stop and then I can cut all the pieces at exactly the same length.When I operated my custom woodworking shop, I really didn't do much mitering that called for a long permanent miter table. I have three power portable miter saws (8", 10" & 16") and simply used them on my large 5' x 5' workbench with roller stands at each end as needed.
For small precision miters I used my 6 x 48 vertical belt sander with a simple jig for doing mostly 45 degree joints, I preferred cutting the small molding to a suitable length and sanding the angle which produced almost invisible joints.
.. I move the chop saw to where I need it and have other equipment/tables to act as supports. I can't see dedicating space to a saw that takes up that much depth.
I built a mobile stand for my saw and set the cutting height to match my work 7 foot work bench on the left side. On the right side the garage door is about 3 foot away so if there is any thing longer than that I just roll up the bay door and set a couple of saw horses. If I had to cut anything that that won't accommodate I can always pull the saw/stand out and set up some temporary wings.
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Here's what I have. Two saws and storage. 20' long. The height of every work surface is determined by the height of my Unisaw.
I don't understand this, please explain. If you are always cutting long pieces of crown molding, then you must be doing it as a business. In other words, you would be going to the customer's house and installing crown moldings. That being the case, why would you want to go back to your house/shop to cut the molding and then take it back to the customer's house to be installed? I would think you would want to cut the moldings on the job site and install them.If you're always doing 12' - 16'+ crown moldings and trim work then you have a unique circumstance and a permanent installation might be difficult.
