I am fresh out of college, where I studied product design with a focus on furniture. There I had a nice shop with everything I could possible need. Now on my own, I want to build my own place. I am interested in a predominately hand tool based setup but had trouble figuring out what to build first. A workbench would be ideal but do I need a workbench to build a workbench? Could I build a saw bench so that I have something to build a workbench on? If I build a shaving horse first, than would it be useful to build other workspace necessities?
I like time efficiency and would hate to think that I would waste a bunch of time on a workbench that I know is going to be replaced for a better one and its only purpose is to build the better workbench.
Just start somewhere. Tools like those you're suggesting get tweaked and changed and sometimes sawed in half. One of the beauties of your skills is that you can do just that-repair and remodel your shop as you go and as you perceive your needs and indeed as they change!
Examples: I have an assembly table that started out 3×7 and now it's 4×8…little drawer units installed below as I needed them.
I have a bench that has served, virtually unaltered, for 30 years. I don't have any particular feelings about either one; that is, they could both get changed tomorrow or they could go on and on.
You'll eventually find your own personal sweet spot somewhere between ridiculously intense attention to detail and building for function alone. To some extent you want to show your talent in this sort of thing but on the other hand, will a visitor/client in your shop be impressed? Probably not. Their overarching interest is the product you're going to build for them.
You can never have too many workbenches, if you've got the space. Your first workbench will not be your last, and it certainly won't be the be-all-end-all. (You'll find this applies to many things in life - like your first house)
I just started from scratch a few years ago. The first tool I got was a miter saw which I sat on an old dining-room table that I plan to refinish someday.
Then a table saw, and a planer. I sat the planer on a table made from a couple of sawhorses and a solid-core door from the local Habitat for Humanity. That gave me a solid surface make some boards to build a couple of simple but sturdy bases for workbenches.
Those first workbenches were the basis for many other projects and the solid-core doors were an easy way to get a really heavy, thick top. Had to cut em down and that was a mess.
I still have those benches. I use one for small stuff and the other for painting and finishing.
I like the idea of building a couple of sawbenches that you can then use to build your workbench! Like Lee says, though, break the inertia / get busy! And, Good Luck!
You can build a sturdy assembly table and use that to build your workbench. Then you'd have two horizontal workspaces-both of which I'm sure you'll find use for.
I like the idea of sawhorses and doors for beginning setup or as an assembly table. Spend your money on tools instead. And when you make more money down the road you can go for a nice workbench and use the sawhorses wherever. My first 'bench' was a 1950s steel kitchen sink base cabinet with a plywood top.
Oh, one other idea - I don't know how far you are from your college, but I took one credit hour of study so I could continue to use facilities for a year.
I feel like most of your work you would be doing to make a workbench would be too large to actually be doing on top of a workbench. Try using a folding table, saw horses, even an old dresser, kitchen table, or cabinet if you are so desperate for something to work on top of to start.
Thanks for all the posts. There is a historical reenactment place here in town with a full size woods hop that is never demonstrated. I thought about volunteering and exchanging time while having a location to work on a bench.
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