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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?

Would the plywood warp over time? Is that the reason? I'd rather learn
the answer from someone knowlegable now than build it and learn the
hard way.

There must be reasons for the choice of real lumber for these
workbenches I see foir sale (other than they are beautiful).

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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

As somewhat of a beginner I'll just say that making mistakes and
learning from them is part of the process.

Mike

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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

Ben wrote:
I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?


If you want a relatively low cost bench, built like a brick out house,
let me suggest the following:

Build a frame with doubled 2x6's, then covered with two (2) layers of
1/2", 4 ply, CDX.

Cover the CDX with a sheet of 3/4" MDF followed by a sheet of 1/4"
hardboard which is considered expendable.

Build the legs with doubled 2x6's, then bolt to the frame using 3/8-16
bolts, nuts and fender washers.

Angle brace the legs with 1x4's, bolted in place.

Keep it dry and it will be around longer than you will.

Lew
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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber


Ben wrote:
Would the plywood warp over time? Is that the reason? I'd rather learn
the answer from someone knowlegable now than build it and learn the
hard way.

There must be reasons for the choice of real lumber for these
workbenches I see foir sale (other than they are beautiful).


Actually, engineered sheet goods would be more dimensionally stable
over time than solid wood, I'm pretty sure.

You can make a fantastic cheap bench top, in my opinion, out of el
crappo OSB or other sheet goods laminated on both faces with hardboard
(Masonite), tempered side out. You can trim it out with dimensional
lumber or even hardwood, which will stabilize the nasty plywood edges
and give screws a place to go when you attach stuff like vices.

The top will be slick, smooth, dead flat, and hard as a freaking brick.
If you gouge it totally to hell, you just glue on another layer of
hardboard (instead of weeping over your destroyed heirloom).

I made a 24"x48" top like this out of a 1/4 sheet of 1/2" A/C ply and
some Masonite and rigged it up to clamp into a Sears-brand Workmate
clone. Drilled a load of 3/4" dog holes in it, stuck in a lower shelf
made of particle board scraps, and weighed the whole thing down with
about 120 lbs of rocks. My "tail vise" is a clamp-on job. The threaded
bolt and guide rods ride over the top of the bench, so I made a little
block to go over the ends of them, and with the vice pushing closed,
this does the same thing as a dog on a tail vise, if you can picture
it.

I can take it all down and throw it in the truck in less than 5 minutes
and set it back up anywhere in the same time.

I did this because I'm currently stuck with just about the smallest
workshop possible. Otherwise I'd slap together a permanent base out of
2x4s and make the top longer and out of thicker sheet goods. I'd still
weigh that down with a couple bags of Quikrete.

Here's a pic of the top before dog holes (with only the front edge
trimmed out) and another of the cleats-n-wingnuts assembly for clamping
it under the Workmate jaws.

http://i16.photobucket.com/albums/b5...rktop_over.jpg

http://i16.photobucket.com/albums/b5...ktop_under.jpg

It works. Still, I drool over the Sjobergs Elite 2500.

--Scott

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CW CW is offline
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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

Many good benches have been made from plywood and/or MDF. Not a thing wrong
with it. The only real downside is reflatening it if there is a need but, if
built right and not damaged, there likley would not be a need. A common
technique is using two layers of 3/4 MDF for the top and covering that with
1/4 masonite. The masonite is easily replaced if damaged.

"Ben" wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?

Would the plywood warp over time? Is that the reason? I'd rather learn
the answer from someone knowlegable now than build it and learn the
hard way.

There must be reasons for the choice of real lumber for these
workbenches I see foir sale (other than they are beautiful).





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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber


CW wrote:
Many good benches have been made from plywood and/or MDF. Not a thing wrong
with it. The only real downside is reflatening it if there is a need


The cool thing is, making a new one is probably less trouble or expense
than reflattening a solid wood top.

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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

Ben wrote:
I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?


The classical woodworking bench is designed for use with hand tools.
This means that you generally have substantial vises that need to be
mounted, that you'll be pounding with a mallet on the bench, and that
you'll be using bench dogs.

These are all more convenient if you have a heavy, strong, solid top.

That said, you can certainly get away with laminating sheet goods for
your top. I'd suggest at least two layers though, and three would be
better.

Chris
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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber


Ben wrote:

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?


Because it's too thin. Laminate two sheets of 3/4" ply together and
then you're talking. Cheap spruce shuttering ply is the best deal.
Stick some 4mm MDF over it with double-sided tape, wax polish the top
and you have a couple of years' life replaceable top to take all the
chisel slips.

This is regularly discussed - seach the archives.

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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

On 5 Sep 2006 15:15:43 -0700, "Ben" wrote:

I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?


What I've seen recommended instead of something like a 4x is a 2x12.
Rip off two pieces from the outside of the board and discard the
middle. This gives you a much better grain orientation for stability.

The problem with putting plywood over it would be different
expansion/contraction than the doug fir under it. You'd be better off
with just a piece of replacable hardboard.

Layers of MDF would give you more mass for less work on the top, but
require more support underneath.


-Leuf
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Ben Ben is offline
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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

Thanks everyone - some great tips, I'm happy now to have a go without
the worry that I'm on a fools errand. I think I'll try layering some
Plywood/OSB and creating a raised edge around so there is enough room
to place a sheet of 1/4" Masonite in the 'tray' created. With some
doble sided tape to hold it in place I think it will suit my purposes
well. Thanks again.



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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

Ben,

Ernie Hunt still maintains this site where he posted some work bench plans I
made up a few years ago. Someone asked how to make a workbench with
specific tools that they had available to them and these plans, based on a
FWW design, were the result.

http://www.huntfamily.com/work_bench.htm

I've made several workbenches and hobby benches for others and a good
solid - bounce free - top can be made by making a frame ( milled 2x4's),
screwing 3/4" thick MDF to that and then screwing down tempered hardboard on
top of that. A well made frame with cross-pieces every 16", dado'd into the
sides and screwed together will make it rock solid. The MDF adds the heft
and gives a nice flat surface. The 1/4" tempered hard-board can be poly'd
to help it resist absorbing finish materials or water rings from your cans
of ---- soda.

The plans are in both formats for AutoCad or in PDF format. Use them as a
guide and modify as you see fit. Consider them a starting point and adjust
the height of the bench accordingly to suit your needs. You can Google and
get a zillion hits on articles that discuss the height of a workbench. In
the end, it's what suits you but if you make the height the same height (or
slightly lower) than the height of your tablesaw, it makes for a handy
outfeed table too.

Bob S.


"Ben" wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

Since I am operating on a smaller budget, I was wondering what reasons
are there why a sheet of plywwod - 3/4" or 1" oak or birch supported by
doug. fir (4x) lumber would not be used?

Would the plywood warp over time? Is that the reason? I'd rather learn
the answer from someone knowlegable now than build it and learn the
hard way.

There must be reasons for the choice of real lumber for these
workbenches I see foir sale (other than they are beautiful).



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Default Workbench - plywood or laminate lumber

"Ben" wrote:

I'm looking at building a woodworking bench for myself and have
familiarised myself with the plans that are sold on the internet. All
the Kits and commercally availiable, ready built benches feature fine
lumber of 3+ inch thickness for the top - be it birch, beech or other.

snip
There must be reasons for the choice of real lumber for these
workbenches I see foir sale (other than they are beautiful).


You've gotten lots of good advice here about building of a bench top
with sheet goods, but not much in the way of answer to this question.
I'll chime in with my $0.02. Yes, beauty is one of the reasons.
Secondly, these benches are optimized for traditional methods, and
those using such methods have an affinity for solid wood, and tend to
eschew MDF, plywood, and the like. Most of the practical advantages of
a solid top (such as stiffness) can easily be compensated for in the
proper design of the sheet good top. On the other hadn, you can't
easily put a shoulder vise or European tail vise on a plywood top, and
the skirt needed to properly stiffen the plywood may interfere with
easy clamping of goods to the top (especially if, like I, you fail to
anticipate that need in building your base).

I built a traditional bench a year ago and just love it. But I will
not allow any electrons to be consumed in work at that bench; it is
strictly for my hand work. I have that luxury because of my first
bench, which is a bench made of material not yet mentioned in this
thread, a solid core door. For an only or first bench, I'd suggest a
solid core door or a sheet good (doubled or tripled 3/4") bench.
You'll give up a little convenience when you plane or hand cut
dovetails, but will benefit more with the larger surface for glue-ups,
etc. In fact, I just had to draw an ellipse. Thought nothing of taping
some construction paper to my old bench top then stapling string at
the focii to draw the ellipse. If all I had were my new traditional
bench, I'm not sure how I would have done it, since I am sure I would
not approach it with a staple gun!

--
Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently.
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BobS wrote:
Ernie Hunt still maintains this site where he posted some work bench plans I
made up a few years ago. Someone asked how to make a workbench with
specific tools that they had available to them and these plans, based on a
FWW design, were the result.

http://www.huntfamily.com/work_bench.htm


Very cool plans. In the interest of speed, laziness, and general
ineptitude, I can't resist the urge to offer for consideration a
dumbed-down but still solid version. Mainly my goal is to rival the
simplicity of butt joints while avoiding horrors like putting screws
into endgrain. Wondering what you'd think.

So... for the frame, I'd glue and screw the rails straight to the edges
and faces of the legs, thus avoiding my inevitable struggle with M&T
joinery. The result wouldn't look like an heirloom, but it would be
just as sturdy, I think.

For the cross-members, I'd think about cutting notches in the rails 1
1/2" deep by 3 1/2" wide to receive the 2x4s on their faces. Or maybe
I'd notch both the rails and the cross members 3/4". Although that's
twice as much work, it's still butt simple compared to M&T. Cross laps
aren't as nice as M&T, but glued and screwed in, they'd sure stop the
frame from ever twisting or racking, and they'd take the bounce out of
any top you attached.

Even if you wanted to place the cross members on edge for even less
bounce, I guess you could still cross-lap them. I suppose I'd
counterbore the hell out of the screw holes so I could use shorter
screws. Seems like this design wouldn't resist twisting as well, but
with the top attached, it's not going anywhere.

Those are my so-called thoughts on how to do this with less time and no
skill. I'd be interested to hear if you think it'd work.

Thanks for the neat plans.

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alexy wrote:
I have that luxury because of my first
bench, which is a bench made of material not yet mentioned in this
thread, a solid core door.


I've seen people leave the hinges on and attach them to a cleat on the
shop wall. Add gate legs, and it's a fold-away bench.

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"boorite" wrote:

alexy wrote:
I have that luxury because of my first
bench, which is a bench made of material not yet mentioned in this
thread, a solid core door.


I've seen people leave the hinges on and attach them to a cleat on the
shop wall. Add gate legs, and it's a fold-away bench.


Neat idea. Kinda heavy to lift, but if space is at a premium...

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"boorite" wrote in message
ups.com...
BobS wrote:
Ernie Hunt still maintains this site where he posted some work bench
plans I
made up a few years ago. Someone asked how to make a workbench with
specific tools that they had available to them and these plans, based on
a
FWW design, were the result.

http://www.huntfamily.com/work_bench.htm


Very cool plans. In the interest of speed, laziness, and general
ineptitude, I can't resist the urge to offer for consideration a
dumbed-down but still solid version. Mainly my goal is to rival the
simplicity of butt joints while avoiding horrors like putting screws
into endgrain. Wondering what you'd think.

So... for the frame, I'd glue and screw the rails straight to the edges
and faces of the legs, thus avoiding my inevitable struggle with M&T
joinery. The result wouldn't look like an heirloom, but it would be
just as sturdy, I think.

For the cross-members, I'd think about cutting notches in the rails 1
1/2" deep by 3 1/2" wide to receive the 2x4s on their faces. Or maybe
I'd notch both the rails and the cross members 3/4". Although that's
twice as much work, it's still butt simple compared to M&T. Cross laps
aren't as nice as M&T, but glued and screwed in, they'd sure stop the
frame from ever twisting or racking, and they'd take the bounce out of
any top you attached.

Even if you wanted to place the cross members on edge for even less
bounce, I guess you could still cross-lap them. I suppose I'd
counterbore the hell out of the screw holes so I could use shorter
screws. Seems like this design wouldn't resist twisting as well, but
with the top attached, it's not going anywhere.

Those are my so-called thoughts on how to do this with less time and no
skill. I'd be interested to hear if you think it'd work.

Thanks for the neat plans.


You're welcome but to clarify a point.... the workbench plans and my post
about making a top (essentially a torsion box) really do not relate to each
other and the frame in the plans does not lend itself well to adapting to a
framed top without a lot of modification. Two different designs but....

The M&T joinery as shown in the workbench plans is butt simple too. The
lower frame is made by laminating milled 2x4's and 2x6's (nice flat
surfaces), gluing them together and then cutting the M&T's using a tablesaw.
Racking is a big concern for any workbench that isn't attached to a wall and
the joinery shown in the plans is designed to prevent that - for the long
term. Yes, your ideas will probably work but not having any details other
than your explanation - I would say the joints you propose will not last for
the long haul.

I made a version of that workbench for my own shop and it's now over 15
years old and still standing strong. I've had a ~ 300lb jointer plus me on
top of it and no racking or wiggling at all. I have two vises mounted on it
and can take a long board and hand-plane it and that bench doesn't move. As
I said, the design came from a FWW article way back when and they used solid
hardwoods - throughout, and not laminated 2x4's and 2x6's. The cost to
build it back then with a maple top was over $600 for the top alone plus
another $200 or so for the frame as I recall. The design is simple and has
stood the test of time and some hard use over the years.

You can research the relative strength of almost any joinery technique you
want to use but you will find that most of the time, M&T is selected because
of it's strength. You can certainly use other techniques, such as those
you've pointed out. Do you think it will hold up to hard use or will you be
building another one 6 months from now? A workbench is a really good
project to start learning with. It's a workbench - nobody will notice the
mistakes or care but you will learn a lot by making it the best you can -
and it will serve you well for many, many years to come.

Bob S.


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BobS wrote:

You can research the relative strength of almost any joinery technique you
want to use but you will find that most of the time, M&T is selected because
of it's strength. You can certainly use other techniques, such as those
you've pointed out. Do you think it will hold up to hard use or will you be
building another one 6 months from now? A workbench is a really good
project to start learning with. It's a workbench - nobody will notice the
mistakes or care but you will learn a lot by making it the best you can -
and it will serve you well for many, many years to come.


Good points all, and it sounds like what you have is a bench that
really is solid as a rock and a good learning experience as well.
Thanks for the posts.

--Scott

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