coldfoot_luke
Active member
1st post, been lurking here about a year.
Background: I'm an engineer at a bearing plant, the job is part mechanic/troubleshooter, part machine component/tool designer. I do woodworking for family projects and a bit of car work, planning on doing metalworking at the house in the future.
I've been renting a house with no garage, just a carport, so half my time spent working outside is setting up and putting everything back in a utility shed. About 6 weeks ago I bought a house with a two car garage...
...so to celebrate I started laying plans for a "new" workbench.
At my plant, I'm able to take home scrap, and as luck would have it one department was getting new (company bought) toolboxes, the old ones were getting trashed.
Inspired by the guys making benches with boxes, I picked up two old craftsman boxes.
Unfortunately, this department grinds steel, and the whole area is pretty dirty with coolant... and the guys there don't really take care of their boxes... They are in sad condition to say the least.



So, it's going to be a resurrection project. They have all sorts of **** welded to it, covered in grime, broken vice missing the jaw, welded to the top. I like how someone welded on a hack job paper towel holder - to wipe his hands after touching his box, I guess.
First step was to cut all that junk off... ironically the only weld that was any good was the one holding the vice. I had to cut off part of the top, which was separated from the sides anyways.


I've been stripping the paint, have one box primed. Using rattlecans, epoxy from autozone, wet sanding between coats. It's not going to be getting beat up every day so I'm not going to break the bank on it.
These pictures are at the old house with the car port. I had to put this on hold for a little while during the move...
Then two days after the move I got some more scrap from the plant: two 4x6x12' beams that a machine was lagged to for transportation. These are going to be the legs. Also, picked up two solid core doors from a Habitat Restore for the top and bottom.

Cutting the beam into feet. I'm going to do big rabbits for these into the bench for a bit of extra support. I do a big deal of woodworking by hand - my daughters (6 and 1.5) like to "build" with me, and the noise of power tools scares the youngest one still.

Got one of the doors stripped of veneer. I'm planning on staining everything ebony with a satin polyurethane coat.
Now my wife is visiting her mom for a week so it's time to get this knocked out... I've seen a lot of people post about wooden workbenches with metal toolboxes, hopefully this will be interesting to come...
Background: I'm an engineer at a bearing plant, the job is part mechanic/troubleshooter, part machine component/tool designer. I do woodworking for family projects and a bit of car work, planning on doing metalworking at the house in the future.
I've been renting a house with no garage, just a carport, so half my time spent working outside is setting up and putting everything back in a utility shed. About 6 weeks ago I bought a house with a two car garage...
...so to celebrate I started laying plans for a "new" workbench.
At my plant, I'm able to take home scrap, and as luck would have it one department was getting new (company bought) toolboxes, the old ones were getting trashed.
Inspired by the guys making benches with boxes, I picked up two old craftsman boxes.
Unfortunately, this department grinds steel, and the whole area is pretty dirty with coolant... and the guys there don't really take care of their boxes... They are in sad condition to say the least.



So, it's going to be a resurrection project. They have all sorts of **** welded to it, covered in grime, broken vice missing the jaw, welded to the top. I like how someone welded on a hack job paper towel holder - to wipe his hands after touching his box, I guess.
First step was to cut all that junk off... ironically the only weld that was any good was the one holding the vice. I had to cut off part of the top, which was separated from the sides anyways.


I've been stripping the paint, have one box primed. Using rattlecans, epoxy from autozone, wet sanding between coats. It's not going to be getting beat up every day so I'm not going to break the bank on it.
These pictures are at the old house with the car port. I had to put this on hold for a little while during the move...
Then two days after the move I got some more scrap from the plant: two 4x6x12' beams that a machine was lagged to for transportation. These are going to be the legs. Also, picked up two solid core doors from a Habitat Restore for the top and bottom.

Cutting the beam into feet. I'm going to do big rabbits for these into the bench for a bit of extra support. I do a big deal of woodworking by hand - my daughters (6 and 1.5) like to "build" with me, and the noise of power tools scares the youngest one still.

Got one of the doors stripped of veneer. I'm planning on staining everything ebony with a satin polyurethane coat.
Now my wife is visiting her mom for a week so it's time to get this knocked out... I've seen a lot of people post about wooden workbenches with metal toolboxes, hopefully this will be interesting to come...

Interesting on the solid core door, I never realized what was inside of them. Is that end grain I see mixed in?








