Over the past several years I have been needing and wanting to buy or maybe just make a workbench. I have gone to five woodworking shows in three states over the past two years. At these shows and in several magazines or catalogs I have noticed many of these really nice woodworking benches that are way far out of my reach as far as the $$$ involved. Finally after a elongated sick spell lasting nearly two months I finally get few boards together, screws, a very few nails and other items that I have been collecting for who knows how long and got the nerve to build myself a workbench. I needed something to be able to spread tools out on and to be able to work on…something, anything. I started this project inside a breezeway where I have a “summer kitchen”, so I had to make it portable. So that it can be moved out into the garage when the weather permits.
I went to the nearby Lowe’s, where they really don’t know…and got about $35 worth of 2x’s (not really that much these days). I had in a scrap pile a sheet of 1/4” tempered hardboard. The hardboard as you will see is to be used as a replaceable top once it gets scratched or cut too many times. I had purchased a door from the Indianapolis Habitat for Humanity Warehouse last year. (I go to Habitat for Humanity at least once a month!) I purchased an old woodworking vice at a flea market in Brown County Indiana last year. That is about all I had collected over the last year in anticipation of this my new workbench.
The solid core door from Habitat for Humanity was purchased last October for the sum of $12. Even the hole predrilled for the door handle will turn into a holder for pencils once I get done. Using one of those plastic frozen juice cans.
The quick release woodworking vice was purchased for $25. That’s all I could get him down to. It is a 4×7 Richards-Wilcox vice made in Aurora Illinois. It seems very old. From what I find on the internet it may be about 100 years old(?). The company is still in business, but not making woodworking vices. I had to make the handle. It needed a 7/8” handle diameter and all I had was a 1” dowel so I took to it with a cabinet scraper and got it down to the right dimension. Drilled a 3/8” hole in either side and put a 3/8” dowel plug and glued a cabinet knob, after drilling them also, on each end. Besides the handle I had to wire brush off some rust, tap the holes and attach new plywood to the jaws.
These are the holes drilled into the solid core door. First I drilled 6 holes with a 1” Forstner bit about 1/2 inch deep to sink the head of the bolt. Then I continued down into the door/2×6’s with a 1/4” bit for the 5/16” lag screw. This removable “lid” made the possibility of moving the workbench from it’s current place out into the garage when it gets a bit warmer and maybe back again this fall, possible. Again a sheet of 1/4 inch hardboard will cover the door.
After about 4 hours it looked like this. The door bolted with 6 lag bolts to the 2×6 frame. The frame for the bottom shelf is made of 2×4’s. I used all-weather screws to put this whole thing together. Cost of lag bolts, small trim nails and screws would be about $5.
Here’s my “new” vice installed. In this picture you will noticed the 1/4 hardboard laid out on top of the door. No trim around the outside edge of the door yet.
I now have the vice installed in it’s location and have the trim abound the outside edge of the door. The solid core birch door was coated with two coats of polyurethane when I purchased it. So I simply got some good double sided carpet tape attached it to the door to hold the hardboard flat. When I need to replace the hardboard all I have to do is pry up the hardboard. The slick finish on the hardboard and door makes it a relatively easy thing to do.
As you can see I have the over-hang hung over enough to accommodate my Jet and Bessey clamps all the way around the edge. A closer view of the scrap trim around the door also. I routed the corners of the trim so I wouldn’t stick it into my leg while working around the bench. The bench is 34” tall. The trim cost would be about $7.
Here’s the bottom shelf installed. Call the price on this damaged piece of 5/8” ply about $10(?).
The new plywood and handle on the vice. The vice works really well now…...
I added this 48”long, 12 outlet, Surge Protected power strip just this morning. (Surge Protected up to 400 Joules) The power strip cost me $30.
I added this Yesterday. This is a KREG Universal Bench Klamp, if you haven’t seen one. (I got it from Woodcraft – http://www.woodcraft.com/family.aspx?familyid=4770 ) I like it so much that I will be adding another to the far corner as soon as it gets here. This is a very, very handy item to have. This little “set” is priced at$35, so times two equals $70.
This makes the total cost of my customized workbench to be near the $160 bracket.
Lest I forget, which I did, I have four (4) bench dogs and have yet to drill holes for them. This cost is about $35 for all four dogs. I will be placing them on the oposite side of the Kreg Klamps. I think about 3-1/2” apart(?) can anyone tell me? Now the cost is about $195 +/-.
Don’t mind saying so, but I think it turned out pretty good for an old novice such as myself.
-- Carpe Lignum - Seize The Wood,


































19 comments so far
Tomcat1066
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556 posts in 187 days
posted 154 days ago
Looks pretty solid! Nice job!
-- "Give me your poor tools, your tired steel, your huddled masses of rust." Yep, I ripped off the Statue of Liberty. That's how I roll!
GaryK
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8183 posts in 379 days
posted 154 days ago
Pretty cool bench. Looks like it will get the job done for sure.
-- Gary, East TX -- The longest journey begins with a single step.
jcees
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396 posts in 190 days
posted 154 days ago
Nice work, that’s a gitter-done bench, a purpose built puppy for sure. Way to go. What’s next?
always,
J.C.
-- "Imagination is more important than knowledge" -- Albert Einstein
pat sherman
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349 posts in 763 days
posted 154 days ago
nice bench. wish we had a warehouse from humintiy around here.
have been looking for an old vise like that for years. is a nice one. nice bench also.
-- pat,ohio...http://s5.photobucket.com/albums/y198/patshwigar/
Scott Bryan
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7806 posts in 213 days
posted 154 days ago
This is a nice addition to your shop. We all need someplace on which to work. This one looks real solid.
Thanks for sharing.
-- With God's help all things are possible- even woodworking. Woodworking is not just a hobby, it is an (expletive deleted) expensive hobby.
bnoles
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27 posts in 318 days
posted 154 days ago
Well…it’s super sturdy, it’s heavy, it’s functional and it even looks good.
I like it! I am curious on your choice of placement of the vice. Very interesting location and varies from the norm.
Great job and thanks for sharing it.
-- My woodworking pictures http://s107.photobucket.com/albums/m292/bnoles616/
chamoruboy
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113 posts in 399 days
posted 154 days ago
Cool beans, a workbench is also on my “to do list” of projects (there’s about 100 items on that list).
Thanks for sharing it. It gives me some super ideas. I’m definitely going to add the Kreg clamp on mine.
I also regularly visit the habitat store and have made some awesome purchases there too.
-- Greatness is not found in possessions, power, position, or prestige. It is discovered in goodness, humility, service, and love.
RickL
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56 posts in 331 days
posted 153 days ago
PJack, turned out better than just pretty good, turned out great, good job!
-- Rick, Jackson, TN "Do What You Like. Like What You Do" Life Is Good
Mario
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686 posts in 442 days
posted 153 days ago
Very nice setup and a great price. In all of your travels you have probibly never seen a bench at that price.
-- Hope Never fails
RoyBoy
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71 posts in 454 days
posted 153 days ago
Looks great! I added the Kreg Klamps too – love them!
-- Brian, Alabaster, AL
Blake
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1811 posts in 265 days
posted 153 days ago
It’s perfect! It’s essentially how I made my bench too. You’ve got some great features, though, with the clamp holder and the power strip.
-- Dust collectors suck.
John Gray
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479 posts in 276 days
posted 153 days ago
GREAT JOB!!!
-- Only the Shadow knows....................
Douglas Bordner
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2261 posts in 454 days
posted 153 days ago
PJ, that’s a beauty. And the price is right.
-- "Bordnerizing" perfectly good lumber for over a decade.
WayneC
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5693 posts in 488 days
posted 153 days ago
Well done. Looking for some projects built on it now…
-- We must guard our enthusiasm as we would our life - James Krenov
Aubster
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105 posts in 419 days
posted 153 days ago
Looks kinda like work bench but better built. I have inspired me to re do my bench. Thanks for posting this, you did a really good job.
Aubrey
-- A man who moves mountains starts one stone at a time.
anthony
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20 posts in 162 days
posted 143 days ago
GREAT JOB ON THE WORKBENCH!i am impresed
-- anthony pelton
woodentiger
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14 posts in 132 days
posted 126 days ago
gret job on the bench! i am impresed by the way you used a old door to make the bench. you got me thinking that way now!
-- Terry,SARTEL,MN
PanamaJack
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4454 posts in 468 days
posted 126 days ago
Thanks ya’ll. Just need a bit warmer weather so I can “open my shop” for the year!
-- Carpe Lignum - Seize The Wood,
trifern
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1920 posts in 158 days
posted 126 days ago
Nice looking work bench. I love your vise, it has alot of character.
-- Depend on the rabbit's foot if you will, but remember it didn't work for the rabbit.