I'm Upgrading My Plywood Workbench
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- Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024
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I would like a reunion episode where Paereu and Rob comes and visits you and you guys talk shit and work one the house for a weekend maybe! Would love to see the crew back together :)
They should all move in together make a reality carpentry show 👍🏾
I think it's awesome that you give Ron Paulk the credit and a shout out. Integrity. Well done, sir.
For the table saw a zero clearance insert would help. Also you could make a stand that goes on the end of your new bench and you can use the bench as an out feed table. Ron Paulk does the same. His stand directly attaches to the bench. This way you can just pick up the saw and throw it in the van when you need it for jobsites.
You can find what D Hammer is talking about on Darbin Orvar's channel way back
Same thought with a zero clearance, these saws don't come with much they are intended for rough jobsite work. And yeah I envisioned a larger rolling cabinet that he can drop the saw into and easily remove.
@@MikeWhitton I have pretty much the same table saw and I made my own zero clearance insert. A spot for the table saw at the end of his bench on a stand or similar would be by far the cheapest and easiest solution. Then if Scott wants to ever upgrade to a more permanent table saw for the garage then it is easy enough to alter the existing stand or build an new one.
Bench dogs uk do a saw edge that has a low profile track saw support
Agreed zero clearance inserts are great. Making your own inserts is nice cause they wear and lose their effectiveness. Once you make one you can use a router pattern bit to make multiples. Zero clearance is also nice for keeping really thin cuts from getting sucked into the blade...
Parallel guides for the track saw did the trick for me. No issues after employing parallel guides.
Good looking work bench .. SBC
I'm loving your videos from your new home, but it makes me so wish I could visit the south island again. It's the most beautiful and fascinating place I've ever been to. Keep enjoying everything ♥️
you get the like for "scott brownie here" never mind anything else. :) Thanks to both you for continuing to deliver such quality content.
Missed opportunity for 'Here; Scott's brownies!', though.
It is awesome! Your “ ruclips.net/user/postUgkxS-P9OAq3v4HNpPFqYFWNEq9A-E_PbZIN ” is a complete guide that highlights how I can easily build a beautiful shed from scratch. The writer of the SHED PLANS has given detailed blueprints and step by step instructions that even a beginner can follow without any trouble.
When he said "scott Brownie here" I completely lost it, that was hilarious!
Me, too :-D
Simp
Those plums look delicious. Makes me miss Santa Cruz. Thousands of plum trees were planted all over town and almost no one harvested them. We ate a lot of them and made jam with the rest.
check out the Smart Cradle that Ron makes. easily allows you to attach that specific table saw to the bench you just made. turns it into a huge outfeed table
I built a 3'x6' Ron Paulk bench. Love it ! It's my favorite piece in my shop.
Sometimes I want to leave the city and engineering behind and just work on a house and workshop like this full time.
That won’t be happening anytime soon. Great one, Scott. I’ll keep living that life through you hahaha.
Sometimes that's the best we can do..... the grass is indeed greener.
Do it, you won't regret it. As Rod Stewart said . "Life so brief, and time is a thief when you're undecided, like a fist full of sand it can slip right through your hand"
@@Starlight_GT Don't worry mate, I've got an old house here & a small detached garage for a "shop" (aka my tools sit in a corner and the car takes most of the space). It's not nearly as much shop space as Scott has, but that's ok! It's something!
Well, a workshop like that was a damn good reason to buy a house ... never seen a happier man ☺
My Pop used to have a plum tree when I was growing up. The best time of year was now, because there was a few days where the plums would be ripe enough to eat, but before the birds tore the tre apart. We'd get 100s. To many to eat, so Nan would make this unbelievable Plum Jam. Jess, get on it!!!!
Living in New Zealand looks incredible. Great video Scott.
Love this channel. So peaceful too!
Smoother cuts on sheet goods can be had by making a scoring cut first about 2-4mm then back over with the through cut.Totally changed the quality of my cuts on sheet goods.
This needs more up votes!
Good on you mate, you are a real Kiwi. Polite, soft spoken and honest.
Nice. I built the Ron Paul’s total station in 2015. I still love it.
Amazing work. This is by far my favorite youtube channel. Regards from Spain
Use the work bench as a outfeed table just like Ron does. Use the track saw to break down the plywood then fine tune with table saw. You might look into getting a Bora Centipede Workbench and buying or building a plywood tilt lift to place the plywood on the workbench. Also since you have skateboard you can use the wheels to make a plywood mover. Check out You Tuber Jay Bates for a infeed support for the table saw when you rip sheet goods.
Came here to say precisely this. Seconded.
Built my paulk bench over the summer with the table saw connected and router table./ lift built in. I just started woodworking this summer. It took me some time and one additional sheet of ply due to some mistakes, but I love that bench/work table. It really enables you to build organized and the experience of making it is probably one of the more complex things I’ve made, and what I’m most grateful for so far. Nice to give Ron credit as well 👍
Jess going hard with that crushed red pepper.
How good is it to have a home workshop?!? I can tell your enjoying it haha. Loving the progress!
I was going to suggest your channel. I like your compact work area
Lol absolutely 🙂
@@evieo1086 c
Nothing quite like the smile on a happy carpenter's face. Enjoy that shop!
Just like you, I wanted to build my own kitchen so I built a Paulk workbench and used the Parf Guide system for the dog holes. Then with some accessories I had a perfect track saw cross cut system for panels. The kitchen turned out great. The key is accurate cuts.
Your joy and excitement are palpable. It's always a joy to watch you. Cheers!
Paulk workbench is the nuts, use mine almost daily at work, once dog holes are done, just add 3 (400 x 1200mm) sacrificial pieces of ply/MDF for cutting full sheets. I fitted mine with simple 20mm oak pegs (2x for each piece) glued into the underside of them which correspond with the bench top, they sit there quite happily each end even with an overhang and one in the middle to stop any bowing! If you copy Ron's leg pattern (highly recommended) the upper shelf part of each pair of legs (with an extra simple shelf extension) makes for a great door support held securely with one clamp when routing hinges and morticing locks, just made fitting 23 doors on one job a pleasure! Very envious of your double garage home workshop Scott, I'm without at the mo, and have to rely on good weather, something we're lacking right now up here in the UK! Keep up the good work, looking forward to the new house renovations ;)
good to see some better weather up there for you....
I’m happy that you’re happy… you’re a good guy!
Scott Brown here, was translated in the subtitles to "Let's go around here" Great videos Scott.
It's a beautiful design. Nice to see you giving credit. So many people have modelled their benches and outfeed tables from his design. Brilliant.
C'mon Scott. I'm a mere painter who has been forced into finish carpentry and even I know how to get repeat cuts from a tracksaw....
On the paulk bench..
I built one of those as a first project from a plan. The things learned from that experience were priceless and I use them often in the field. I did have some fails because I was fresh into woodworking when I made it tho. I am going to buy plans for the newest version and even torture myself with a metric project.
I cant stress how many people see that bench on the job and are blown away by the fact that im not set up on the floor. There are guys still working like that. The paulk bench is thee bench! I'm also a Stanton bench fan but, they are 2 different animals
I came here to say zero clearance insert and bench for table saw with outfeed. I'm not alone in this assessment!
Another exciting episode mate 👍
I've just realized (via youtube) that a solid door can be a perfect workbench. FLAT, SOLID, HEAVY. I think I'll give it a go on my next bench.
I've purchased the same plans. Along with a few other of Ron's plans. Super cool stuff he's designed.
I'm enjoying watching you built out your new shop space. I'm nearly ready to start putting my own shop together. It's been a long time coming. Mine will be smaller...much smaller than yours as I only get a portion of a two car garage. About 1/5 of the space is allowed to me. It will have to do. It will have to do...
Also, I've purchased the Parf guide system you spoke of. It's all new to me, being an old school carpenter. All the videos I've seen of it make it seem very useful and highly precise, which is what I'm going for here. Especially in the small space I have I need to be innovative and efficient with every square inch. So, no cabinet saw for me. Track saw city!
Thanks for taking us along in your builds!
really impressed with the coat hook conversion for the dust extraction. somethings just work!!
Table saw tear out, make a zero clearance insert. Also make a small table on wheel the same height of the sawbench, it can be used as an infeed, outfeed or a side extension.
An out feed table and new blade will certainly help.Good video!
Make plum, black pepper and lime fruit paste to go with cheese and crackers..delish...... For table saw, a portable stand on lockable wheels and magnets so you can connect to your new workbench.
It's awesome that you have your own workshop now mate! Exciting times ahead!
Nice, I like happy people makes me happy
For my portable table saw I bought folding picnic table with height adjustable legs, cheap one from box store, put it right behind the saw and adjusted it to same height. Been using it for a year now when I am working with large materials. I just fold it up whenever I am cutting large sheets of plywood and fold it back when i am done.
I built the Ron Paulk bench and it’s been great.
Great work Scott - looking good.
For anyone who goes down the route of the twin full size Paulk workbenches they are heavy and large enough to be a pain to manhandle around by yourself. I have mine standing on end next to the wall (they just fit between my garage door rails and the wall). To make them easier to manoeuvre (and protect the garage walls from gouges) I use put some small plastic furniture moving wheels in a wooden frame that slides underneath the workbench when I want to slide them out from the walls.
A strip of felt floor tiles glued to the underside top edge of the workbench allows the bench to slide smoothly down the wall until I get to about hip height, from which I can wheel the around and slide them onto the Paulk a-frame struts.
Just work up to all my tools stolen out of my garage. Watching you going about your day is cheering me up!! Cheers
I built Ron’s Bench six years ago, i think everyone should build one.
You should look up the New Yankee Workshop. Norm Abraham is a legend, he has a quality workshop. Another great video Scott. Looking forward to see what you and Jess do with the house. 👍
Awesome home workshop!! 🙌🤩⚒
Hi there from Auckland.
Great video Scott.
I just built myself the same Paulk bench. Used Eurolite ply to keep the weight down and built the Smartcart so I can move it around the garage. I also added Ron's smart cradle and redesigned it so I can hang my Dewalt Table saw off the end of the bench. Works great for cutting bigger panels. Definitely recommend the 20mm dog holes.
connect the table saw to the work bench.
Use the plums to make jam and chutney.
Hi Scott,
A couple of ideas
1. Make an H frame for your new bench and add casters to the bottom, save all that humping it about, you can just wheel it about the workshop instead
2. When cutting plywood I run masking tape along the cut line, this reduces tareout
3. Why not hinge your extention flaps on your smaller bench?
good video as usual. plum jam and plum and garlic chutney. both will be delicious. a zero clearance insert for your table saw and a proper plywood blade will give you perfect cuts every time. as a retired furniture maker who occasionally uses ply, i always break down the ply with a skil saw and then do final dimensions on the table saw. i have a variation of this bench which is great for assemblies as it is beautifully flat. but you can't really pound on them. doing your own kitchen is really easy. there is nothing to kitchen cabinets, but a good table saw is a must. build your own kitchen and use the savings to get a half decent table saw. you can often get a decent used one at half the price. but new or used they will need to be set up properly.
Self install a Kaboodle modular kitchen from Bunnings Scott. They look amazing and so much more quick and easy.
This is a completely non-building comment, but make plum crumbles and freeze them for when it gets cooler. Just did the same with the plums from my brother's tree. When I renovated his kitchen a couple of years back, I found 15 x 1 kg jars of home made plum jam in his pantry that was 15 years old. Took me 18 months to get thru them, but the jam still nice :)
@7:37, eating nori sheets ... plain ones? Here we get them with ginger, turmeric, salt etc... really love the stuff
A good idea for your work bench is to add a sacrificial work top on your bench. Something like 6mm MDF that can be replaced cheaply when it gets chewed up by your track saw and other such tools.
Your workshop is coming along great, really enjoying your videos.
Scott Brownie here! Classic dry kiwi humour, got to love it!
Another vote for the Ron Paulk table saw addition. Also the router table from Ron
Always enjoy watching your videos Scott, watching you renovate your house will be great viewing and even though Im a joiner in my later years you are never too old to pick up tips and tricks. Really jealous of that work space you have, Im in England with a small back yard and a 3m x 3m gazeebo which I use on site for setting up my festool gear under because it pretty much pisses down most weeks lol.
Enjoy the vids. Get the tso rail guide system. It’s a game changer for the track Saw. Repeatable cuts! And the tear out from your table saw; you need to make a zero clearance plate. The stock one should only be used for angled cuts. Cheers
With your kitchen, l used a prepack group in Melbourne for the skeleton Then used some of their doors and some old stuff to give the kitchen character eg 2 17th C French doors for the pantry and frosted glass with an old bakery sign for above the fridge
Cheers again
Adrian
Langwarrin Sth Australia
Looks like you’re having a blast. Felt sure when Jess rocked up that there was a plum based segue to Squarespace coming 😂
Scott - I have seen on Ron Polk's channel where he has that exact same or very similar compact DeWalt table saw that sits on 2 round metal pipes that stick out from his workbench; then said workbench becomes the outfeed table for the table saw.
I bought Ron’s plans and then built a hybrid of his miter station and the large workbench. I used electrical conduit to make 2 rails the slide out of the bench for mounting my table saw, Dewalt DW745. I have a recessed area in the bench top my miter saw slides into and locks into place and a router plate. You could easily add the conduit to yours to make an out feed table for your table saw. The short I feed distance is still an issue, but I use a roller stand for heavy sheets.
I use a zero clearance insert on the table saw. It supports the wood fibers on the bottom of the plywood and there is no tear out.
You truly have chosen the place in NZ to call home mate....Nelson,Mapua region and n the South Island 🌴 is the ideal location in my books...the property market is pretty affordable and it’s just so much nicer than any other part of NZ...where can live and still be able to work the normal 9-5 or being self employed.....love the house you have just brought has heaps of potential and land size is great as well....good luck Scott I’m sure you can establish a carpentry/building business their on the South Island with the skills you possess mate....
I had made the first Paulk Workbench, two separate 24 in X 96 in, that squeeze together for 48 W X 96L, 4 years ago and love it, did dogs holes with the UJK kit, to ease transportation I have cutted two separate grab handle hand wide to pass my hand in the middle of both top panels parallel to the 24in sides at elbow lenght for me it is way easier to carry the casing.
@2:15 Ahhh Scott rocking the vacuum holder thingy! I see a veneer vacuum project in the near future 😄
Your channel is my anti-anxiety treatment. Thanks.
Worth watching just for the Brownie joke.
And shots of... Golden Bay?
For a bashy-bangy bench, one easy thing to do is to take a sheet of 1200x3600x16 MDF, halve it each way, and laminate the resulting pieces together. Legs made from 4x4s with 2x4s in a stiffening arrangement will give you a bench that is able to take the demands of chiseling, etc. Heavy though, which is the whole point, and flat. Make sure you set the legs in far enough from one end at least that you can install a face vise if you want one. For sheet goods handling, if you didn't have that free buzzy thing I would suggest a gorilla gripper, which is pretty cheap and grips the top edge of a sheet in a very nifty way.
Thanks for the videos, and they are always fun! I loved the Scott Brownie comment - laughed a lot.
You can use a sheet of peg board with a step bit to make a template, then use a pattern bit on the router so the template lasts. Just check the peg board holes for square in a couple spots incase.
Scott, you should cut a slot on the small pieces of plywood and attach it with a wing nut on your bench extension, then you could use any materials on the bench top for cutting and make it flat in second.
As others have suggested an outfield table helps with longer pieces. My recommendation is to look at Microjig products. The gripper helps with maintaining pressure on the wood as it goes through the table saw plus the added safety. I use a sheet of plywood cut with dovetail groves to aid in clamping pieces. I do not have shares in Microjig but their products are first class.
A set of parallel guides for the tracksaw make all the diff in the world for breaking down sheet goods reliably and very accurately. TSO is one company I like. You can also make your own if you were so inclined. Great video!
Your 40v collection is a thing of beauty🤩
You can make plum jelly/jam. We mix it with blackberries and it always turns out great.
Yes, yes, yes to parallel guides for repeat cuts with tracksaw. Plenty info on RUclips. Buy some or build yourself. Tracksaws are the best for sheet goods.
Hi Scott.
I see that you are building the full size bench this time. I did as well and as you probably know, this is a moveable bench, but it is too heavy to be considered portable. Mine stays at home for stationary work. It's set at the exact same height as the jobsite saw that I own, and it's a great outfeed table when I do woodworking.
For the job sites, I built a much smaller one. Larger but smaller than yours. It fits well in even in the width of the van. It's ok since I'm a plumber and don't need to break great sheets of plywood. I call it "the dwarf".
Now I've got the best of both worlds.
I found out about paulk's benches right here on your channel, went on his, bought the plans, built the benches, and am fully satisfied.
Thanks for sharing, it greatly helped.
Build your own cabinetry Scott, you can do it! I'll be watching every single detail so I can make mine 😆
Parallel guides for the track saw are a game changer Bangood sells a set that are great and cheap.
Looking forward to the renovation videos.
Looking forward to the shop vac setup.
I've made myself some similar workbenches and figured out a way to mix portability with size. My benches are only 60cmx100cm but I have holes in them so I can clamp/bolt multiple of them together and make a bigger or longer bench.
My suggestion build a table for your table saw. Lot of ideas on RUclips. Lets you handle larger pieces on the table saw.
Great work again, Scott Brownie
Loving this upload schedule Scott... Finish my week of work, wake up Saturday morning, make a coffee and watch "Scott Brown here".
I suggest going deeper than standard depth for the kitchen cabinets. Having a deeper work surface is great since you're width limited. The cabinets also hold a bunch more when they are deeper.
Can’t wait for the kitchen reno video!
Greetings from Florida, USA 🇺🇸 Nice work! Looking forward to more videos.
I was going to recommend the Festool STM 1800 but since its 2800 NZD!!! I think your bench is perfect
need to build the table saw into a bench which is wider to help with full sheets of ply, it made a world of difference when I did that both in accuracy and safety, i also put a dropdown extension table on the end to act as an outfeed for larger sheets.
Can vouch for Ron's workbenches. I've built four of them so far. The plans are cheap as chips so go buy them.
Can also vouch for the Parf Guide System for making all the dog holes (I'm just across the ditch if you need to borrow one).
Also, get yourself a Gorilla Gripper or similar to make handling sheetgoods easier.
That's an utterly nice bench.
For your table saw how about a folding feed in and feed out table that can be packed away when not in use? You could make a cut out in the back edge of the feed in table and the leading edge of the feed out tables to accommodate the table saw and then use some latches to fix the two tables together.
I regret that I can only provide one like for the "Scott Brownie" pun. Well done, sir. This is the type of quality commentary that keeps me coming back for the next exciting video.
Fast Cap also has some Zero Clearance PVC tape. That way you don't have to replace the insert right away. It also comes with a few pieces, so you can add some to the miter saw as well. Eventually making a dedicated zero clearance insert is the way to go, and I've made several for different things. 1/4 dados, 45 degree, and straight cuts.......but the tape will get you by until you get to that.
SO much brighter in the garage with a splash of white paint!
(yes, I know it's not raining today)
Some inexpensive LED shoplights would help as well.
I can get 5,000 lumen units in 57k for about $20 here in the U.S.
Scott look at UJK parf system and adding it to your workbench you can then get very accurate repeated cuts with a track saw
Man this b roll is stunning!