10" table saw also used as a stand for a small bench top drill press...
I did the same thing with a defunct Craftsman 10" table saw but mine has a "full sized" table-top drill press of the 1950's cast iron variety. The table saw is plenty strong enough for the abuse it suffers. And the size of the table top allows me to store many items there: drill indexes, blocks with a "V" groove in the top to hold round objects, drill press vises, wood blocks, etc. This DP is for metal ONLY. I have a floor model for wood use. This way I never have steel shavings in my wood projects or sawdust in my metal projects. Both of these DPs are 65 year old (+/-) cast iron Craftsman that are identical except for column height.
This is the metal working one on the table saw table. Note in the pix that there are several holes in the drill press table that weren't from the factory. These are tapped. You can also see that a couple of these holes have studs sticking up from them. These are actually bolts with the heads ground off. They are quite handy to rest your workpiece on to keep it from spinning. Very few of you can honestly say that you've never had a drill bit grab your workpiece and spin it out of your hands; usually with a cut/gash or at least yelling an obscenity.
Unfortunately I don't have any pix of all the stuff I've got on the saw table but take my word for it: there's hardly a square inch that doesn't have anything on it.
edit: I've added a pic that better shows the bolts threaded into the drill press table.