Having taking so much time away from the thread I actually had to go back through my pictures and figure out where I left off. I had just laminated the counter top for my tooling bench.
Originally I had planned on using the same material as before (red 1/2-inch HDPE from Woodcraft) however, a week ago I found that the local store was “temporarily out of stock”. Supposedly the inventory they had was defective? Never seen defective HDPE. Bummed I had to drive there to find out, guess it didn’t matter...they have none so I needed another option. After looking around I found some 1-inch black from amazon which ended up cheaper anyway which arrived prime in 2 days.
I programmed the two different hole arrays and got to making chips. With he first piece cut to size, I used two of the tools to keep the piece in place (like thumb tacks).

I added a 1-inch overhang to account for the eventual drawer faces.
I know it’s been awhile - earlier this year I added a flip up top to give me additional work surface between the machines. Here’s the perfect example why.
Cycle start, cut, finish, set in place, and repeat.
With all of the front pieces made, I now need to make he back row. This is where I’ll keep the larger and heavier tools.
Shop vac attachments keeps the chips from going everywhere.
Test fit.
Mocking the two pieces together
The angle needs to equal 30*. I set the table to 15* and both sides are trimmed.
With all of the machines setup now, I just flow through the remaining pieces.
Fab first for me - what if I use the domino and machine the HDPE pieces so I can perfectly align them using wood tenons? I was hesitant at first worrying that the chips wouldn’t evacuate as well which could cause heat buildup and then break the cutter. Worked just fine tho.
Fit together with the tenons.
Hot damn that turned out sweet. The seam isn’t noticeable even when you’re up close. It actually looks like one piece.
Takes 4 of these assemblies to make the complete top.

Countersunk some screws to retain them to the cabinet.
Before the reveal - heres the old tooling rack for comparison. Previous setup has the upper shelf supports which weren’t really needed even though I thought they were. What they did do well is interfere with accessing the tools in the back and it made tooling station feel a little closed in.
And the new rack loaded.
Though it does look like I have room for expansion, I actually have about 10 ER Collet Chucks that I still need to setup and eventually add to the rack. Excited to have a bigger and better space to work in.