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All Replies on What do you think of this super sawhorse from down under?

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View Texchappy's profile

What do you think of this super sawhorse from down under?

by Texchappy
posted 377 days ago


18 replies so far

View a1Jim's profile (online now)

a1Jim

87110 posts in 1745 days


#1 posted 377 days ago

Interesting idea ,really is a mini bench.

-- W James Brokenbourgh Custom furniture maker http://artisticwoodstudio.com/

View Bob817's profile

Bob817

606 posts in 550 days


#2 posted 377 days ago

That is an Awsome idea!

-- ~ Bob ~ Newton, N.H.

View Bill White's profile

Bill White

2604 posts in 2128 days


#3 posted 377 days ago

NO WAY would I use that in the shop. I’d put it next to my chair in the house and just wax it every day. That ain’t no workshop tool. That’s furniture.
Great post.
Bill

-- bill@magraphics.us

View Texchappy's profile

Texchappy

231 posts in 389 days


#4 posted 377 days ago

I’m still looking for a first project because I can’t find the top of my ‘general stuff’ workbench in the basement. Was thinking this might help kill two birds with one stone.

-- Wood is not velveeta

View helluvawreck's profile

helluvawreck

10405 posts in 1035 days


#5 posted 377 days ago

I can easily see how this bench could be used in a lot of ways.

helluvawreck
https://woodworkingexpo.wordpress.com

-- If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. Henry David Thoreau

View RussellAP's profile

RussellAP

2394 posts in 454 days


#6 posted 377 days ago

I’d need to brace it on the lower end, there is no way you could plane on that without collapsing it.

-- Failure does not stop me, it makes me try harder..... because I'm crazy.

View waho6o9's profile

waho6o9

2902 posts in 745 days


#7 posted 377 days ago

I like it.

View Julian's profile

Julian

276 posts in 858 days


#8 posted 377 days ago

Looks like a great workbench especially if you have a small shop. I agree with Bill; it looks too nice to use in the shop.

-- Julian

View knotscott's profile

knotscott

4187 posts in 1544 days


#9 posted 376 days ago

Nice!

-- Happiness is like wetting your pants...everyone can see it, but only you can feel the warmth....

View Texchappy's profile

Texchappy

231 posts in 389 days


#10 posted 376 days ago

I think I’m going to try to combine this and Chris Swarz’s traditional. My thinking is to start out with the traditional design with the appliance holes and any slight modifications if I wanted to add vises like his later.

What do you think?

-- Wood is not velveeta

View Texchappy's profile

Texchappy

231 posts in 389 days


#11 posted 376 days ago

Kinda excited about this really. Two questions to help me on my way…

1. what wood choices – top and/or structure?
2. why does the traditional bench have that ‘bird’s mouth’ on one end?

-- Wood is not velveeta

View mtenterprises's profile

mtenterprises

623 posts in 861 days


#12 posted 376 days ago

I too like this.
Bill White and Julian – Just think as furniture you could also use it for cracking nuts and crushing beer cans.
MIKE

-- See pictures on Flickr - http://www.flickr.com/photos/44216106@N07/ And visit my Facebook page - facebook.com/MTEnterprises

View MrRon's profile (online now)

MrRon

1578 posts in 1411 days


#13 posted 376 days ago

That’s a great looking sawhorse, but it doesn’t look sturdy enough to do any planing. I have a pair of sawhorses that I made years age; see sketch. It is wide and they stack.

View ShipWreck's profile

ShipWreck

534 posts in 1921 days


#14 posted 376 days ago

If that saw stool is stable, I think it would be great!

View Loren's profile (online now)

Loren

4877 posts in 1816 days


#15 posted 376 days ago

Oh I think it’s sturdy enough for planing but not long enough
and probably not heavy enough.

A lower stretcher might help a bit but imo it needs to be
either substantially weighted-down or substantially lengthened
to resist the forces of planing that lift the back of the bench
off the ground and mess up the cut.

Maybe I’m wrong though. I usually use a bench stop when
planing, not dogs.

View Greg Miller's profile

Greg Miller

1 post in 376 days


#16 posted 376 days ago

I can offer some thoughts about this piece, ‘cause I am the proud owner. It was made to do serious woodwork on.

I made it specifically for use on site when I am doing repairs to joinery. It is heavy. Other than the 3 inch thick pine top, the rest of it is all made from jarrah, a heavy west australian hardwood. I have since added wheels on one end which contact the ground when you lift the other end. This makes it much easier to get it into my customers’ backyards, around building sites, etc. Before that it was killing my back to lug it around.

Those splayed legs are housed into the top, so no stretcher is required down lower. It is solid as a rock, and the splay in the legs in all directions means it never tips up. I use mostly hand tools for the work that I do on it, and much of this work requires a high level of accuracy – so a wobbly bench won’t do the job. I do a lot of hand planing on it, and due to its weight, it takes this well. I chop mortices on it, cut housings, use a shooting board on it, saw wood on a bench hook and in the vices, and more. It has lots of holding power and cramping options, as I use it to cut many complex joints. In addition to the two vices, the holes in the top take both bench dogs and holdfasts. I also cramp directing onto the bench with F-Cramps.

The top size is intentionally small, to aid portability, and I have since got around one of the disadvantages by making a removeable tool shelf which sits across the lower end rails. My main regret is I used an el-cheapo vice on the front rather than a good one. The current vice racks too much, but I get around that. One day I will replace it with a nice 9” good quality quick action vice.

I teach woodworking hand skills, and have found that this bench is ideal for doing demos of tool use when I am working with my groups. People can easily gather round it.

So as an experiment, it has worked really well for me. If I was needing a solid bench and had little space to keep it in, I would opt for something like this.

Meanwhile, when it is not out on a job somewhere, or standing up in the back of my ute between jobs, it lives on my front verandah! There it is a useful surface too. Every now and then it gets a coat of orange oil and comes up looking like a million dollars again. ...It’s a beaudy!

-- www.gregdmiller.blogspot.com

View Mosquito's profile (online now)

Mosquito

2767 posts in 460 days


#17 posted 376 days ago

I like it, and having no shop of my own, I am thinking about making something similar… I have to constantly haul tools in and out of a basement through a patio door, and my “workbench” is a 4’ folding table clamped to a 6×6 porch beam on one end. To plane an edge I use 2 Jorgensen parallel clamps on their sides, clamped to the table. It’s not ideal, and I would have a hard time planing the face of any boards this way. I have been thinking about building a smaller portable or collapsible work bench for a little while now, and this may be the direction I go. Great work Greg!

-- Mos - Twin Cities, MN -- Stanley #45 Evangelist - www.youtube.com/MosquitoMods

View Texchappy's profile

Texchappy

231 posts in 389 days


#18 posted 375 days ago

Thanks for checking in Greg. Enjoy your blog.

-- Wood is not velveeta


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