Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In working on the redesign of my shop, I'm planning some sort of outfeed
table. The table bit is obvious enough. I'm trying to think what else to do with the space. The saw eats most of my itty bitty shop, and the outfeed area is a corner that has always been poorly utilized for one reason or another. I've had all kinds of stuff there over the years, but have never found an efficient way to use the space. I have room for a table perhaps as much as 36" deep while still allowing enough of an aile to get in between it and the wall to stand there and do something. (Only about 48" outfeed area; it's the best I can possibly manage.) I'm tossing around different ideas for how to make use of the space under the table. * storage cubbies * drawers * shop vac housing I'm also tossing around different ideas what to do with the top of the thing. * router table ? * general-purpose place to use free-standing Crapsman router table (nah), homeless belt sander, bench grinder, scrollsaw * horizontal item accumulator I'm thinking what to do for the top itself too. I have a waterbed I've been keeping around for years now, trying to find some use for the thing. SYP probably. I'm thinking to use this bed for whatever underneath bit I come up with, but I'm going to have to buy something for the top. I suppose the top could be anything from a hunk of plywood to a closeout special piece of melamine-encrusted particle board countertop or something. The ultimate use I pick out for the thing will have some hand in dictating what I make the top out of, and the bottom too for that matter. So anyway, throw out some ideas. Picture in your mind a Crapsman 24/24 Contractor's saw with waffle wings. You have a big dead space behind it about 48" deep. You want to put something there to catch cutoffs, and you want to make the space double as something else, or as several something elses, as efficiently as possible. Is a router table about the best I could do? The only router table I have now is one of those silly Crapsman ones with the corrugated top and the two piece fence. The (Crapsman) router in it is a complete POS that's almost completely useless. My budget is extremely confined, but I have half a mind to skimp on lunches and scrounge $99 for a bottom of the line P-C router, and stick it under some kind of table. So far, I never have used my stupid two part fence for much of anything on the POS router table. I usually just use a ball bearing pilot. I don't really expect having fancy tracks and fence-age would change how I use the banshee. To me a banshee is a machine for putting fancy edges on frame members, and putting rabbets on the back of frames. I don't want to joint with it, do router lettering, mortises, tabletop surfacing, or any of umpty dozen other things you banshee afflicted people rave about with the thing. I do as much of that kind of stuff by hand as I can, because I hate the scream of a router, and I love the gentle shick of hand tools, and I have no deadlines, and no reason to try to speed things along. I just want a mechanical way to do a few select jobs that really suck to do with a combination of hand tools and a table saw. I could just about do a plain table and stick the Crapsman crap-o table on top of it (with a P-C or similar router retrofitted onto it) for what little I plan to do with the thing, but that table is SUCH a POS. Well, anyway, have fun. Feel free to start raving about the incredible virtues of banshees too. If I had a real banshee with a 1/2" collet that actually held a bit securely, and a depth adjustment that worked, I might even stop hating the screaming, obnoxious things so much. Maybe. I still don't ever expect to use it out of a table though. A hunk of carbide whirling at 25,000 RPM 4" from my squishy parts? Nah. Playing with matches is more fun, and less dangerous. -- Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621 http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/ http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/ |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
General International Table Saw Dimensions | Woodworking | |||
New bandsaw saga PartII (long) | Woodworking | |||
Right AND Left Tilt Table Saw? | Woodworking | |||
Jet table saw table out of tolerance | Woodworking | |||
Building an extension table. | Woodworking |