I wish to build a workbench for general garage use. I'd like it to be
heavy, strong and durable.
A helpful fellow at my local hardware store suggested the use of merbau
timber. Merbau is a beautiful hardwood which is dense and very strong -
perfect for the job! Unfortunately it comes from rainforests in South-East
Asia. I do not want to contribute to the destruction of the world's
remaining rainforests.
My question:
Can anyone suggest a type of timber which is:
- A heavy and strong hardwood.
- Readily available in Australia (New South Wales).
- Produced/grown in an environmentally responsible manner.
A bit of google research would indicate that some possible candidates are:
- Yellow Stringybark
- Yellow Box
- Sugar Gum
- Red Ironbark
- Grey Box
- White Cypress Pine
I don't know a great deal about timber and would really appreciate any
thoughts or comments!
Thanks in advance.
Alan
--
Alan R. Turner | Live never to be ashamed of anything you do or say.
To reply by email, remove Mr Blobby.
I wish to build a workbench for general garage use. I'd like it to be
heavy, strong and durable.
A helpful fellow at my local hardware store suggested the use of merbau
timber. Merbau is a beautiful hardwood which is dense and very strong -
perfect for the job! Unfortunately it comes from rainforests in
South-East
Asia. I do not want to contribute to the destruction of the world's
remaining rainforests.
My question:
Can anyone suggest a type of timber which is:
- A heavy and strong hardwood.
- Readily available in Australia (New South Wales).
- Produced/grown in an environmentally responsible manner.
A bit of google research would indicate that some possible candidates
are:
- Yellow Stringybark
- Yellow Box
- Sugar Gum
- Red Ironbark
- Grey Box
- White Cypress Pine
I don't know a great deal about timber and would really appreciate any
thoughts or comments!
For a garage workbench? If you're not doing critical joining, just
general use, I'd use the cheapest environmentally responsible stuff
that meets your needs, and a skin of hardboard or the like for the top.
Easily replaced "durability". HTH. Tom
But, on that ply top I would go further personaly,
...and glue-laminate 2x2" together going from one end to the other as
several smaller gang gluings, then one final, using "titebond II extend"
if you can get it. This is something like butcher block but not smaller
pieces, full length and width.
For this you will need lots of clamps. If not common pine then the
cheapest hardwood decking you can get, each ripped down the middle
and stood up side by side for the gluing.
--
Alex - newbie_neander in woodworking
cravdraa_at-yahoo_dot-com
not my site: http://www.e-sword.net/
IMHO: What you want and what you need seem to be two separate subjects.
If you are going to impress your fellow woodworkers- go for the expensive
wood by all means.
If you truly just need a general garage use work bench:
Build the frame with what ever is heavy and massive and has some adjustment
for leveling. You are going for mass here, so when you hand plane a piece
of wood, the wood is shaved with out the bench moving. If you could figure
out how to connect the top, concrete in a 6 or 8 inch diameter cardboard
mold would do for the legs. You know, the cardboard molds sold for fence
post concrete support.
The Top, however, must be made of wood, be flat and level and remain flat
and level over time. A plus is to be able to replace the top skin when you
lose concentration for a moment and your lawn-mower gas engine gets repaired
on your work-bench. (the spilled oil is bad when it gets on your wood
projects; some wood finishes don't like engine oil.)
A thick wood top is usually needed for the many vises and bench dogs. But
that can be overcome with thinking through your options.
Again, if you are trying to impress someone, go for the expensive, if just
to fit your needs, well spend you money on good fancy wood where it counts,
in project wood.
Phil
"Alan Turner" <al...@mrblobbybiccard.com> wrote in message
news:pan.2005.07.02....@mrblobbybiccard.com...
MBR
Thanks for the many helpful replies - they are much appreciated.
The idea of using concrete seems to be a good one, but I don't think I
will do that as I need to be able to disassemble this bench and move
it easily (I'm likely to move home in the near future). Perhaps a whole
lot of small concrete blocks (or bricks) sitting in a wooden frame would
add useful mass.
Most houses here are built using pine framework. I think perhaps I will
use pine to build the legs and frame with the benchtop made of some kind
of composite (MDF or ply). That seems to be in line with most of the posts.
I also like the idea of a replaceable hardboard surface.
Thanks again!
Regards,
>Hi Folks
>
>Thanks for the many helpful replies - they are much appreciated.
>
>The idea of using concrete seems to be a good one, but I don't think I
>will do that as I need to be able to disassemble this bench and move
>it easily (I'm likely to move home in the near future). Perhaps a whole
>lot of small concrete blocks (or bricks) sitting in a wooden frame would
>add useful mass.
>
>Most houses here are built using pine framework. I think perhaps I will
>use pine to build the legs and frame with the benchtop made of some kind
>of composite (MDF or ply). That seems to be in line with most of the posts.
Mine is a pine base, with a pine top (2x4's glued face-to-face and
then planed flat) Works really nicely, and it's as heavy as I could
ever want. It gets a few dents from time to time, but nothing that
makes it unusable by any means. It was about the same price as the
plywood would have been, but much bulkier, and looks better with the
vise installed.