How To Build an Assembly Table, Torsion Box Workbench - Woodworking

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  • Опубликовано: 10 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 51

  • @Benham_Design
    @Benham_Design  Год назад

    If you want build your own, Pick up a set of Plans. www.digitaldesignconcepts.art/product/assembly-table-torsion-box-workbench-woodworking-plans

  • @allenkotlan3606
    @allenkotlan3606 2 дня назад

    You have built exactly what I've been dreaming to do. Winter is setting in so as soon as I see a few days of dry, not too cold weather, I'll start my bench, soon( looking for work too before I buy the lumber) and hardware.Your bench is inspirational.

  • @normanspragg5036
    @normanspragg5036 3 года назад +3

    Finally someone who doesn't use 10 times more glue than is necessary…, Nice video. ;-)

  • @danielstellmon5330
    @danielstellmon5330 2 года назад +2

    I like that you give credit to other youtubers who gave you good ideas :)

  • @John-cf4iv
    @John-cf4iv 3 года назад +1

    I'm planning to build a NYW style work table very soon. The modifications you made (vice, dog holes) are exactly what I want to do. Very helpful video. Thanks!

  • @augieswoodcraft3317
    @augieswoodcraft3317 3 года назад

    Nice bench, glad to see my shop is not the only one that is covered in sawdust on the floor, and cluttered while working.

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  3 года назад

      Lol, I can never get on top of the mess. I guess I'd rather be build than sweeping!

  • @lebucheron9815
    @lebucheron9815 Год назад

    I'm impressed you were able to cut those grid pieces with what may be millimeter precision. That's the part I'm having a hard time with.

  • @chrisstearns10
    @chrisstearns10 3 года назад +1

    Never thought I would say this to another guy...Great looking box😄👍👍💚💪🪵 Definitely one of you more simple builds, but it's one of the most important tools of the shop. Looks good with the solid wood around the outside. Thank you for sharing 😁

    • @chrisstearns10
      @chrisstearns10 3 года назад +1

      @@Benham_Design always looking for your videos in my inbox🤣all these first today. No seriously you are a pleasure to watch and listen to my friend. Your top shelf work inspires me to try to do better. 😁

  • @robertbutler8004
    @robertbutler8004 2 года назад

    With some videos, it is more interesting to watch grass grow this video is a great example.

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад +2

      I think this will help spice things up for you. amzn.to/3FvIWxl
      Check it out!!!

  • @johnniewalker39
    @johnniewalker39 3 года назад

    Love this new style of video.
    Keep'em coming!

  • @jakovdl5329
    @jakovdl5329 3 года назад

    Great video and a great example for those of us planning to build one as well. Well done, and thanks!

  • @puntabachata
    @puntabachata Год назад

    Those are some really big shims 😮

  • @chipsterb4946
    @chipsterb4946 Год назад

    Interesting video. I like your miter saw “station”. Everything you need and nothing more.
    I would try to shim the surface underneath the build instead of the framework itself. A tiny thing - I would cut one piece for that last row and test the fit before cutting a bunch.

  • @tomlagatol4448
    @tomlagatol4448 3 года назад

    Good table. I enjoyed the vid.

  • @Alex_NC
    @Alex_NC 3 года назад

    Great video and easy to follow. Ive been looking for work bench ideas when time allows this is the route i'm going to go. thanks

  • @richardchiggas4328
    @richardchiggas4328 2 года назад

    Overkill! And I love it! You could have built a shed from all that plywood! Great video!

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад

      Some day I might build a shed in the shop 😂

  • @bobbyb1607
    @bobbyb1607 8 дней назад

    I like that you used plywood instead of mdf. How are you liking the bench 3 yrs down the road?

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  3 дня назад

      It is holding up great, and still super flat. Just a bit more worn looking. It's got some war wounds from use

    • @bobbyb1607
      @bobbyb1607 3 дня назад

      @@Benham_Design Thanks. My next bench will be a smaller version of yours. I'm downsizing.

  • @howardappel3596
    @howardappel3596 3 года назад

    I don't know, but it seems like fewer people are using torsion boxes lately. I think they are great for so many uses.

    • @howardappel3596
      @howardappel3596 3 года назад

      @@Benham_Design Yes and no. I have been woodworking for about 35 years and I admit that there are many many tricks / tips / techniques I still learn from the younguns on RUclips (and the old farts like me). But then you have all the idiots out there doing stupid and ridiculously unsafe things or showing the most basic things as if they were the first to discover them.
      By the way, love your channel, hope to see more.

  • @anarablehill5691
    @anarablehill5691 3 года назад +1

    Nice project. Was the plywood cheaper (2021) than the steel like you had for your other project? edit LED shop lights are cheap ;)

  • @upnorthoffcuts929
    @upnorthoffcuts929 3 года назад

    Nice job on this one. Keep up the great work. I went to your web site and tried to look on the Plans link and it can not find the page for some reason. Hope it gets fixed, looking forward to seeing them. Thanks for the great video I enjoyed it.

  • @RyanJensenEE
    @RyanJensenEE 2 года назад

    Excellent Video! Does that wheel mechanism work well for you? I have seen that style of wheel mechanism before and the workbench didn’t seem to roll around very well at all.

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад

      Thanks man, I think the key is putting good casters under it. The bench before didn't roll well because the weight of the bench bound the casters up. I put a heavier duty caster on this one and it rolls much better.

  • @johnbowman6073
    @johnbowman6073 Год назад

    What would be the structural difference (if any) if your long members of the web went crosswise instead of lengthwise? Reason I am asking is that it seems you can more accurately mill the crosspiece of the web than the long pieces of wood. Trying to use a 6" jointer to flatten a 6 to 8' piece of plywood seems dang near impossible unless using "golden" Baltic birch also known as "unobtanium wood."

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  Год назад +1

      That was my thought too. I think if I half lapped each joint I probably wouldn't have had a problem. I stapled each cross brace piece and I think those staples had just enough flex for the table to end up out of flat, as it sagged over the length.

    • @johnbowman6073
      @johnbowman6073 Год назад

      Sorry to hear about the sag. I was ready to try my approach since I already had a base built ala King Fine Woodworking. Guess it is back to half lap. Thanks for the response.@@Benham_Design

  • @HomesteadEngineering
    @HomesteadEngineering 2 года назад

    I am looking to build an assembly table and just came across your channel. Odd thing: As I'm watching your video and before I even saw your name I was thinking to myself that you remind me of a childhood friend of mine. His name was Rich (Richard) Benham. Are you any relation to a Rich Benham? I knew him from Belmont Elementary School in the 1970's. BTW: Nice table!

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад

      Thanks, I don't think I'm related to rich. As far as I know, I'm the last of my kind.

  • @rw7532
    @rw7532 2 года назад

    Why did did you choose to use plywood for the grid rather than MDF? I am going back and further about building a torsion box or just laminate two sheets together. If I go the torsion box route I figured to use ply wood as I would think mdf would have a tendency to compress if a piece of work was hammered on and thus create a low spot on the surface,

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад

      I think you nailed it, plywood structurally is much stronger than MDF.

    • @Rainman270
      @Rainman270 Год назад

      ( We call MDF " Glit " = Glue and Shit.)

  • @farmcat3198
    @farmcat3198 2 года назад

    Where are you getting flat plywood from?

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад

      I don't think such a thing exists just making do with what I got

  • @mitchblackmore5230
    @mitchblackmore5230 Год назад

    Sorry, this might be the dumbest question in the history of woodworking, but how did you attach the torsion box to the base/legs? All I saw was you setting in on top of them. For the life of me, since a torsion box is hollow and generally made from pretty sheet goods, I can't understand how the base/legs can be attached and still be sturdy. Anyone?

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  Год назад

      I attached aprons to the legs which made them stable and then used pocket hole screws to screw into the bottom of the box. I don't remember what thickness I used for the underside of the box, but it was thick enough for the screws to get a good grip. Probably minimum of 1/2"

    • @mitchblackmore5230
      @mitchblackmore5230 Год назад

      @@Benham_Design Ok, thank you very much for your reply. There are a million videos on YT on how to build a torsion box, but I've yet to find one that clearly shows how to attach it to a base.

  • @subrotochatterjee5788
    @subrotochatterjee5788 3 года назад

    That nail gun.....pointed toward the stomach when in use. That’s a no-no.

  • @montewoods4766
    @montewoods4766 3 года назад

    Very kuhl

  • @TheLukemcdaniel
    @TheLukemcdaniel 3 года назад

    I'd imagine cutting slots through half of each board at the crossings so that they all held each other inplace would be better than using all those nails

  • @robertbutler8004
    @robertbutler8004 2 года назад

    That steel is not 3 inches thick at all it is 3 inches wide.

    • @Benham_Design
      @Benham_Design  2 года назад

      Thank you for paying attention to the fine details