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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

Hi guys,
I am hoping to build a 7ft laminated workbench out of 2x4 douglas fir
studs (face-glued), the type you get at home improvement stores (maple
is too expensive and slippery). I bought 25 KD studs that came closest
to being quartersawn (along the 3.5" dimension), and let them
stabilize. (They have knots, but I can live with them if they are
under the surface).
The question is: how to go about dimensioning and surfacing them.
(I read posts dating to 1998, but few mention the surfacing problem).
They are so skinny that they are hard to keep stable on any machine.
Any kind of warping is hard to deal with to begin with. I have a table
saw, bandsaw, 6-inch jointer, and portable planer, all of which have
seen little use (I work mostly with hand tools).
The finished size of the workbench will be about 84 x 28 x 2.

Which machine should I use first?
How can I keep the original warp in the studs from interfering in the
surfacing?
If marking is indicated, (say, for the bandsaw)which marks should I go
with?
I thought about an accessory to the table saw, 'joint'r clamps',
but I would need a straight 8-ft piece of wood to begin with, right?

Can anybody help me out? Thanks in advance.

Kin

  #2   Report Post  
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

Kin, check out this link. They did what you are talking about without
any power tools:

http://www.terraclavis.com/bws/beginners.htm

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rich
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

Kin, I just finished my first bench last month. The article cited is
very good, and was similar to some plans I got at Rockler. But rather
than dealing with gluing the 2x4's for the top, I bought a ready made
top from Grizzly and used the 2x4's I bought for the base.

Built upside down on saw horses, I was able to mount the vices easily,
and as long as I cut the legs the same length, when I set them on the
underside of the top, they worked out just perfect. I screwed the base
to the top with 3 inch wood screws, and carpenters glue. And I used
glue and wood screws to construct the base.

Very simple, very strong.

After I turned it over, it didn't wobble, creak, or move. Solid as a
rock. Then I drilled a load of holes, 3/4" dia all the way down the
bench from the end vise, 6" apart, and the same across the bench for
the other vise. I did have to measure carefully to miss the vise.
Since I didn't have a better way, I made a jig on the drill press to
bore at a right angle on the bench, didn't want the hoiles at an angle
when I drilled them by hand.

Soon as I get that new table saw for Christmas, I'll make cabinets or
shelves/drawers for the area below the top. Hope this helps a little.

Regards,

Rich......

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BillyBob
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir


"rich" wrote in message
oups.com...
underside of the top, they worked out just perfect. I screwed the base
to the top with 3 inch wood screws, and carpenters glue.


I shuddered when you said you glued the top to the base. That's not a good
idea because of wood movement.

Bob


  #5   Report Post  
Luigi Zanasi
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

On 20 Oct 2005 13:07:42 -0700, scribbled:

Hi guys,
I am hoping to build a 7ft laminated workbench out of 2x4 douglas fir
studs (face-glued), the type you get at home improvement stores (maple
is too expensive and slippery). I bought 25 KD studs that came closest
to being quartersawn (along the 3.5" dimension), and let them
stabilize. (They have knots, but I can live with them if they are
under the surface).
The question is: how to go about dimensioning and surfacing them.
(I read posts dating to 1998, but few mention the surfacing problem).
They are so skinny that they are hard to keep stable on any machine.
Any kind of warping is hard to deal with to begin with. I have a table
saw, bandsaw, 6-inch jointer, and portable planer, all of which have
seen little use (I work mostly with hand tools).
The finished size of the workbench will be about 84 x 28 x 2.


I made mine out of 2X6 doug fir ripped in half.

First step is to get one flat face. That's what a jointer is for. If
they wobble too much on the jointer table, take off the high spots
with a hand plane. Alternatively, you could flatten using the planer
if you made a cradle, and support the wobbly pieces wood with shims.
Take light cuts.

Then through the planer to flatten the other face. Table saw should
work to remove the rounded corners and to straighten if they're not
too bowed. If you want square dogholes, you could cut dadoes with the
table saw on three of the 2X4s (assuming you want three rows of
dogholes.

Then glue up. I used pipe clamps and battens across the width held
with F-clamps to keep the top more or less aligned. You could also use
biscuits. Then flatten with hand planes as the glue-up will probably
be too big for the planer. Alternatively, do three glue-ups, flatten
each in the planer, and then glue the three together.



Luigi
Replace "nonet" with "yukonomics" for real email address
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/humour.html
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/antifaq.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikiped...ct_Woodworking


  #6   Report Post  
Stephen M
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

Basically echoing Luigi he this is the order of operation that you want
to use:

1. Crosscut to 84.5" (smaller piece are easier to handle and require less
stock removal to true up).
2. Face joint (one flat face)
3. Edge joint (another flat face at 90 degrees and get rid of that 2x4
radius edge)
4. Rip to 3 - 1/8 (two edges parallel)
5. Thickness plane individual boards... there is not reason to make them all
the same thickness, take off as much material as you have to (to make the
surface flat) but no more
5.5. Make dog hole dados now if you want them.
6. Glue up 4 subassemblies about 7" x 3". I think that this will be about
as much as you want to try to manipulate. Smaller if you must, bigger if you
dare.
7. Run the subassemblies back through the planer to clean up the joints
8. Run both "edges" of the subassemblies through the jointer just to make
sure you still have a square edge. If you don't, your final glue-up to the
top will have a big honk'n cup that will take a long time to remove with a
hand plane
9. Glue together your subs
10. "touch up" with a hand plane :-). I smile because when I did this on a
nearly similar-sized maple top I "declared victory" after 4 hours.

BTW this will yield a roughly 3" thick top. More is better. Starting with
2x4's you would simply be throwing it away otherwise.

I hope that jointer is a not a benchtop.... pieces of this length and subs
of that weight kind of require a floor model. Also 84" is a pretty long
bench. IME it is considerably easier to true up 6' stock than 7' stock. That
is the difficulty/waste associated with truing stock increases
exponentially, not proportionally with length. Scaling back the length a bit
*will* make your life easier.

-Steve

"Luigi Zanasi" wrote in message
...
On 20 Oct 2005 13:07:42 -0700, scribbled:

Hi guys,
I am hoping to build a 7ft laminated workbench out of 2x4 douglas fir
studs (face-glued), the type you get at home improvement stores (maple
is too expensive and slippery). I bought 25 KD studs that came closest
to being quartersawn (along the 3.5" dimension), and let them
stabilize. (They have knots, but I can live with them if they are
under the surface).
The question is: how to go about dimensioning and surfacing them.
(I read posts dating to 1998, but few mention the surfacing problem).
They are so skinny that they are hard to keep stable on any machine.
Any kind of warping is hard to deal with to begin with. I have a table
saw, bandsaw, 6-inch jointer, and portable planer, all of which have
seen little use (I work mostly with hand tools).
The finished size of the workbench will be about 84 x 28 x 2.


I made mine out of 2X6 doug fir ripped in half.

First step is to get one flat face. That's what a jointer is for. If
they wobble too much on the jointer table, take off the high spots
with a hand plane. Alternatively, you could flatten using the planer
if you made a cradle, and support the wobbly pieces wood with shims.
Take light cuts.

Then through the planer to flatten the other face. Table saw should
work to remove the rounded corners and to straighten if they're not
too bowed. If you want square dogholes, you could cut dadoes with the
table saw on three of the 2X4s (assuming you want three rows of
dogholes.

Then glue up. I used pipe clamps and battens across the width held
with F-clamps to keep the top more or less aligned. You could also use
biscuits. Then flatten with hand planes as the glue-up will probably
be too big for the planer. Alternatively, do three glue-ups, flatten
each in the planer, and then glue the three together.



Luigi
Replace "nonet" with "yukonomics" for real email address
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/humour.html
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/antifaq.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikiped...ct_Woodworking



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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

Hi guys,
Thanks so much for your quick and detailed response. I saw the link
mentioned, but they don't mention much in the way of surfacing:

"Just to make sure you don't have a problem with twist. This is a
good time to do a loose fit. Can you put the boards together without
much of a gap? You should be able to close any gap with just hand
pressure. If you can't you should replace the crooked boards with
straighter ones - even if they are cosmetically inferior. "

Since some of the studs have more than 1/2" of warp to them, I'd rather
not just glue them up, leaving too much tension in the finished bench.

From your answers so far, I guess making a jig for the hand planer
might be one solution (I cringe at the thought of hand planing the stud
faces, since they have quite a few knots to them). I'll also run some
stud faces through the jointer (floor model), but it'll take quite a
few passes, given their warp. Here in the East Coast, we don't get the
cream of the DF studs. I'll compare the results of the 2 methods and
go from there.
It is tempting to leave the thickness at 3", but among other reasons,
SWMBO and I couldn't lift the darn thing for assembly.

Kin

p.s. Does the band saw have any role in this project? When would it?

  #9   Report Post  
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

A suggestion I have read more than once (although I haven't tried it
yet) is to make up your bench completely, legs and all, just short of
adding any hardware to the top (e.g., vises and bench stops). Hardware
requires that the bench top be pretty close to finished.

At any rate, get the bench assembled, with the feet all flat on the
floor, then clamp two very straight boards to the long sides of the
benchtop. These are to be guides for a router. Thus, they should be
firmly clamped, straight, smooth along the top edges to allow sliding,
and clamped so that they won't flex in use. Make sure that these
boards are leveled very carefully. It's worth the time to make sure
that the top edges of the planks lie in the same plane and are level.
If they are not you will wind up with a bench top that is twisted or
unevenly thick and thin. Also,

Use the planks as guides for a sled for your router. This sled must
allow the router to slide the width of the benchtop and must allow a
straight bit to reach deep enough into the surface of the bench top to
flatten the entire surface.

Now, just rout the top of the bench (lots of passes, you bet!). If you
are very careful you shouldn't have to do much, if any, finishing, but
if you care and the top is a little raggedy, you can grab your scraper
or smoothing plane to clean it off.

I would suggest NOT putting any kind of finish on it, or if you must,
then apply the same finish top and bottom to make sure the moisture
content remains even throughout the top to avoid warping.

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John Girouard
 
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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir

p.s. Does the band saw have any role in this project? When would it?

BS can be handy for tenons on the end of long stock.

-John


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Default Workbench out of QS laminated 2x4 Douglas fir, thanks!

Hi guys,
Thanks to all who replied to my question. I'll post an update when
the bench is done.

Kin

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