Woodworking Bench Tool Tray
In the past i have shared your ambivalence for the tool tray, and have finally arrived at a point of a conceptually similar but much less elegant solution. btw the video is "must watch" for anyone interested in a high performance hybrid work bench.. I go over the process of how i built the tool tray for my workbench. i talk about how to creat the tounge and groove with both hand tools and a router table.. The bench is made of box store pine (local home depo), i departed from the pans by adding a an extra 5″ behind the tool tray. this will allow me to set a chair on the bench when i am working on it. i also set the bottom of the tool tray into a rabbit and dovetailed boards onto the ends to hide the end grain..
The well is called a tool tray. the idea is to place the tools you are using in it instead of on the bench so you do not knock them of the bench when moving large planks or furniture on it.. The bench plane has three jobs in the woodshop: to straighten the wood, to smooth it and to remove it. it sounds so simple when you put it that way, but many woodworkers are confused by all the different sizes of bench planes available, from the tiny 5-1/2″-long no. 1 smooth plane up to the monstrous 24″-long no. 8 jointer plane.. This rock-solid workbench incorporates two vises a laminated top and options for a hanging tool tray or under-bench cabinet< p> project measures 72 long by 36 deep by 35.
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