After several months of cleaning, pitching, organizing, and building, I am now at a point where I can contribute to this thread and show you some pictures of the bench I just built in my basement workshop. Before I get to the bench itself, here is the entrance to my basement workshop, through the Scooby-Doo door I built -
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The construction design for the workbench itself was inspired by other benches I saw here in this thread -
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The uprights are mated 2x4's, with one running the entire vertical and the other being stacked along with the horizontals for the shelves -
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I wanted to maximize the storage area underneath, so I put the bottom shelf on the floor. Being in a (dry) basement, I probably should have raised the bottom shelf a few inches off the ground in case there ever is a moisture problem.
I built in drop-downs to keep the saws at the right height -
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In the design, I borrowed Jack Olsen's soffit idea for the sliding doors, and ripped tracks into the 2x4's for the Masonite doors. I also benefited from his advice and made the top tracks deeper so I could lift the doors into the top first and then drop the bottom edges into place.
The surface top is a hair or two higher than 40", which I needed to do to be able to roll the old Craftsman table saw under the bench. The bench is 32" deep over the saw, and the long side is 24" deep. I'm 6'1", and I read through other posts here to increase my comfort level about having a bench that high. I gotta say I am 100% thrilled with the height. The work surface consists of a single layer of 3/4" plywood (with extra 2x4" crossmembers underneath) with 1/4" Masonite screwed on top. The edges are higher grade wood (maple, I think). In this shot you can also see the 1/4" steel insert I put into the corner of the top. That came from my Dad's old workbench, in case I need to get aggressive with something. The small rounded anvil is removable too.
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Next up will be a bigger vise for the bench (not pictured) in the opposite corner, and pegboard over the long side of the pictured bench next to the poster from the 2005 Bonneville Speed Week.
For those who are interested, I freehanded the racer on the wall using a picture penned by Gus Maanum for inspiration. Here's an in-progress shot -
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I sketched it in pencil, then painted the cream on the walls (which have blue tone in the pictures here, but are actually a very pale green). Then I painted the black over the pencil.