Just picked this up at my local Rural King (It's like a Tractor Supply) store. 1/4" thick and 4' wide. I bought 2' at $6.99 a foot. It is heavy and lays flat. They also had it in 1/2" thick. I saw a couple other rubber mats in the dog area of the store but the corners didn't want to lay flat. I'm a Happy Camper.
What I ultimately chose was a solid neoprene sheet in 1/8" thickness and 60 durameter. So far I am really liking it. It sort of "grabs" the item I'm working on so it doesn't go skating across the surface when I apply some side force. I have an aluminum lip around the perimeter of the top to capture the rubber sheet and so far it's holding it well without adhesive. No adhesive will also allow me to flip it over to get some extra life out of it if/when it gets scarred up.
Have either of you let oil sit on either of those options for extended periods of time?
As a temporary solution I used the matt from the top of my USG 44" box as a bench mat. If you let puddled oil sit on it overnight it would swell up and create bubble. I'm hoping one of these options is more tolerance of standing oil, as I'm looking for a new bench mat.
I have not put oil on this mat and let it set. I really don't think I'll ever have oil spilled on it but you never know. Whenever I change the oil and filters in my vehicles I'm always on the floor with everything. I tinker more with wood and parts off my 49 so to clean up or repair so for me it would be more saw dust and dirt. I guess everyone would need to evaluate what they do and what mat would work best.

I've spilled oil on it plenty of times with no ill effects, but generally it gets cleaned up rather quickly.Have either of you let oil sit on either of those options for extended periods of time?
My general mode of operation with messy jobs like splitting a motorcycle engine case up on the workbench, for instance, is to do it in one of my shallow aluminum sheet pans when I expect oil to be running out and pooling up. That way I can just go dump/wipe it out easily when the job is done. I guess everyone's methods are different though.
That's a really good idea! Not sure if it would have worked for my 5spd trans due to size, but I'll give it a shot when I break my diff open in a couple months to catch whatever oil didn't drain out of the drain plug



That's what I've always done, too, with wooden benchtops. I use 1/4 tempered masonite, which holds up very well. When it gets nasty, I just replace it.I went with the cheap, easy route when I bought this house 20 years ago. Masonite/hardboard smooth side up....tacked down around the edges with wire brads. The idea was that it would get replaced occasionally since it's so cheap. In reality, I've never replaced it. Sure, it's got paint, oil spots, etc. on it - but it's a workbench...not a dining room table!![]()
Wow.. that work bench is super organized, super clean! Thx for sharing.
