9VIDEO Simple Workbench Plans Tour
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Jan 25, 2024
9VIDEO Simple Workbench Plans Tour
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In this video, I want to give you a tour of some workbench plans. I've designed
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this bench myself. It's based on a design that I first built back in the early
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1980s and I still have that bench. It's not my regular woodworking bench anymore
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but I still use it as a utility bench. It's a great design. Probably
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thousands of people have made their own versions of this bench from the plans
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you see here and it works really well. So I just want to explain how it's put
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together, some of the fine points that you might not think of as you're just
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looking at these plans. I also want to point out that if this thing seems too
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complicated for you to build right now, that's okay. This isn't really a
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bottom-of-the-barrel beginner's project. It's a little more advanced than that but if you stick with woodworking at all, you're really going to appreciate a
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bench like this in time. So if you don't feel up to building it now, just put the
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plans away for a while. It won't take you long before you understand how something
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like this goes together and how to do a great job building one for yourself
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The first thing I want to point out is the legs. They're shown here as 4x4s
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and you might be thinking, well that's an awful lot of wood. Does it really need
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to be that heavy? And my answer is yes, because that is one of the attributes
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of a good workbench is that it's got some mass to it. I mean technically you
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could use something smaller than 4x4s for the legs but they do such a good job that I recommend you stick with that. You will be pleased. You could make
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a kind of an L-shaped version of the legs so you put two 2x4s together to
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form an L shape and that will give you the same sort of width you want as the
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4x4 but it's not going to give you the solidity and it is an extra step
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You have to glue and join them together so just go with a 4x4 as if at all
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possible. Another thing that I need to point out here is a kind of a danger and
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that has to do with the problems that many workbenches seem to show after a
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while and that's called racking. So if you look here at the front view, imagine
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for a moment that the bottom of the legs stays put on the floor of this bench but
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the top can kind of move back and forth. That would be called racking and it's a
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result of the fact that the legs would be free to kind of hinge or bend as
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where they're attached at the top and resistance to racking is why these long
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rails are here. I mean they do provide extra support for the bench top that
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goes across here like this but most importantly it prevents the racking
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action and the way it does that is by firmly fastening to the top of the legs
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Now these long rails they're 2x6s which means they measure about five and a
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half inches wide which is enough width to make a strong joint here and here and
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here where the long rails meet the legs and we're not just using deck screws
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here either because if you just use deck screws on their own to hold the long
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rails in place they would definitely not be securely fastened enough to prevent
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racking. So that's why you see the carriage bolts here. Can you go with
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thinner ones than 3 8ths diameter as shown here? Yeah you probably could but
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in my experience building things stout and strong and beefy might seem like
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overkill at first but it's actually what's required for something to last a
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long time in the real world. So just a point of this 3 8ths that's the
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diameter of the carriage bolts and the 6 inches is the length. Now in addition
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to the carriage bolts which are nice because you can do the nuts up as tight
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as you want and it'll draw everything together. You can see the nuts here the
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back nut nuts and flat washers to distribute the pressure otherwise the
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nuts just going to sink right into the wood and not be very strong for you but
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other than these bolts I strongly recommend in fact I insist that you use
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high quality wood glue on all the joints here that will do an enormous amount of
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good to make your bench solid and as I mentioned before a solid bench is
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definitely something you want. Solidity is one of the most important features of
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any workbench. Another thing to consider here is this little note that you see
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right here 24 to 48 inch leg spacing, leg frame spacing. Now that's kind of a
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widespread so what you need to understand here is depending on what you
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plan to use the bench for and also the material that you're going to use for
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the top here the top boards and the shelf you can dial in more or less leg
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frame spacing. As I explained in the instructions for this bench making the
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leg frames is the first thing you do and you kind of make a judgment call about
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how many you're going to need and you make these frames up so that they're all
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identical there's three here shown in the plans but you could have as many as you want depending on how long the bench is. So you make the frames up first and
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then what I recommend is that you do a little bit of testing just a little bit
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of mocking up so you set these things up with say the material that you plan to
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use for the shelf and just see how it looks see how well supported that shelf
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is do you need to have 24 inch spacing between frames that would be fairly
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close and that's what you want if you plan to put on some heavy things onto
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these shelves and also a closer spacing allows you to get away with thinner
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material for the shelf too if you wanted to economize. 48 inches is
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probably about as far as you'd want to go I mean that that's what it says here
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on the plans I don't think I'd ever go 48 myself maybe 36 at the most but like I
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said it just depends on what you're going to be using for especially the
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bench top and the shelf I'm recommending two by six top boards here so that's an
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inch and a half actual thickness they can span a pretty good a pretty good
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distance so I would aim for a spacing of maybe 24 to 30 inches or so and also too
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you can fudge that a little bit too there's no need to have an exact measurement for instance if you're making this bench to fit between two
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walls for instance and you want and you want it to fit all the way between two
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walls to take up all the space well maybe maybe you'll put that maybe all
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you need is a center leg frame in that case because of the distance involved
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and so maybe you'll put it at you know 29 and a half inches from its neighbors
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just whatever it is in the center so not critical for dimensions it's not like
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drywalling a house where you have to have the studs at a certain position so
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that they line up with other building materials that come later it's really
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just whatever works and whatever is solid and suits your situation as well
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another thing to pay attention to is the way I have arranged these cross pieces
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here on the ends in relation to the legs so you can see that the cross pieces on
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the inside face of the the pair of legs here same on the other end and you might
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think well why wouldn't I not want to put it on the outside wouldn't look
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nicer just sort of seem a little more like it should be but there are
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practical reasons for putting the cross pieces on the inside face and one is you
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can see here it leaves the washers and nuts exposed to be tightened easily
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without having to climb underneath and put a wrench in it you know from time to
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time you know maybe once every couple of years or so you might have to tighten up
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these nuts in order to keep the bench stable that's one of the nice things
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about bolting it together is that you can reintroduce some solidity to the
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bench of it if the wood shrinks and the bolts start to get loose so that's one
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reason another reason just take a look down here you see with the cross piece
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on the inside face of the legs it's very easy for us to have the shelf fully
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supported along its end even where the legs are because the leg doesn't enter
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into it but if the cross piece was on the outside we'd have to cut notches in
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the ends corners and corners of the shelf in order for it to fit on here and
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extend past the legs in order to be supported by the cross piece if it was
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on the outside but so you can see here putting the cross piece on the inside
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solves two problems and just it's one of the reasons why this bench is fairly
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easy to make even for beginners at this stage I wanted to point out something to
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do with the top several things actually look here you'll see the optional raised
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side and back pieces now those are optional because you don't need to put
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them on but it is kind of nice to have a kind of a raised rim around the top it
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stops things from rolling off especially at the back of the bench you
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know something rolled off a bolt or a nut or a screwdriver or something you
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need to fall down and fall down behind the bench and under the shelf and it's
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hard hard to get it hard to retrieve that thing again so the side and back
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great idea you'll like the bench more if you put those on another thing to the
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optional replaceable plywood top now I like the two by sixes for the bench top
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because they're solid there's a fair amount of wood there inch and a half and
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the wood is fairly wide five and a half inches so those those pieces of wood are
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pretty strong and they do deliver a fair amount of mass to the bench and as I
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said that's that's important for a solid bench that you can rely on the problem
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is the gaps between them I mean if you're doing something on the bench that
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involves some creating some sawdust for instance or you know anything that's
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this messy and leave some sort of dirt behind it's gonna fall through those
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cracks I mean you can you can make the boards as tight as you want but the the
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gaps will open up between them so not only will the whatever dirt or sawdust
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fall down and get on your shelf underneath and everything that's on it
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but when it comes time to sweep that bench it's even worse because now you're
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moving the dust around with your little broom and you're kind of working it down
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in the cracks and gaps so that's why I like the replaceable plywood top now I
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say replaceable because you should not fasten it with glue you're not fastening
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it for the long haul you really only want to put it down with screws and that
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would be enough screws to hold the plywood firmly but but no extra so
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screws along the end maybe one in each 2x6 board underneath on both ends and
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then maybe one or two more rows of those screws in the center the idea is is
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twofold first of all now you can clean your bench and you can sweep it properly
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without dirtying everything underneath also the top of any workbench eventually succumbs to damage and it sure is nice to be able to just take a ratty old
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piece of plywood off and you know get rid of it after it's been there for five or ten hard years of use and replace it with something fresh so the bench becomes
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maintainable then and it's something that never really gets rickety or broken
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down or too marred to be useful just before I finish up I wanted to point out
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that this bench can be used for other things other than just as a workbench a
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woodworking bench or a repair bench here you can see a rendition a version of the
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bench that is outfitted for use as a potting bench and I guess the big thing
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that makes it a potting bench is that you've got this basin here the tap you
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see is not plumbed into a house as such it's just sitting there but there is
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some quick-release fittings underneath they're easy to put on and you see here
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is a garden hose so you can kind of position this bench wherever it makes
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sense in your yard during the potting season and connect a garden hose to it
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quick-release fitting will allow you to have running water here so you can wash
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your hands you can you can water plants it's just kind of nice to have running
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water there the bucket underneath catches the water the wastewater and there's room for a watering can and other tools here too and I recommend
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that you save the piece of wood that you cut out to fit the sink if that's
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what you're doing and that's what you can see on the right-hand side here so
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you can replace that when you want a completely solid bench because you don't
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always need or want the sink in place but bottom line simple project it'll
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last a long time and it's a very versatile design as well
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