Activity › Forums › Furnitology Woodworking Forum › Woodworking Weekend Warriors
-
Building a small panel door for a broom closet It goes in the door jam that’s about 2 ‘ thick in my in my sons 120 year old house
-
-
-
Those are awesome! I what a great idea. They are beautiful too!
-
This reply was modified 6 months, 1 week ago by
Furnitology.
-
This reply was modified 6 months, 1 week ago by
-
-
-
Wow! Impressive how quickly you can crack these out. They are so cool!
-
-
-
They are kits, from Stewmac basically show casing the finishing. No woodworking magic. Just yet. Going try my hand at a full build soon.
-
Finish up repairs, stripping and finishing old oak rocking chair.
-
Just dismantled a coffee table and reworked it to fit the living room.
Now empty the Workspace and build a wall-long work table/storage rack.
-
I taught a beginning woodworking class to middle and high school age home school kids last fall. I’ll be teaching it again starting in September. Our workbenches were vinyl topped folding tables. Lots of racking and no clamping space. I’m trying to build some low cost portable workbenches. Ideas?
-
I believe @rexkrueger has a few YouTube videos on workbenches that can be broken down and build with construction grade lumber. I’ll see if I can find them for you.
-
I’m not sure how well this will work for you but I bought a pair of Stanly folding Saw horses from Home Depot that are notched for 2x4s and found them to be very robust (they are made from plastic but I have not broken one yet and I use them often). Usually, I just stick a piece of plywood on top to make temporary, semi portable workbench. I’m planning to add some notched 2x4s to the plywood to increase stability and decrease racking. I have added concrete blocks before to the saw horse shelves and that increases stability without adding a lot of cost.
-
-
Log in to reply.