ns_in_tex
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2002
- Messages
- 914
- Location
- East Texas
- Tractor
- Kubota L4610 HSTC, International 2400, Hesston 1280,
I certainly wouldn't say my shop was the best layout because it has been a work in progress for over 30 years.
A couple of ideas for any shop, which I find very handy are:
1. Mount as many things on wheels as possible so they can be easily moved from wall to center of shop if more space is needed.
2. Make all work areas the same height so it will just be a table for the long item project. This includes welding table, chop saw, table saw, mitre saws, ETC.
3. Make steel welding table (I like expanded metal top) with a completely flat top, so anything larger than the table can be put on it and lay flat. Throw a piece of 3/8 plywood on it and it becomes a woodworking table. A piece of cardboard & it is a paint table, or it is just a stand (already adjusted to the right heighth) for that 20' angle iron you are cutting off with your chop saw.
4. Now then for all the things you want on a normal welding table, either make them to mount as quick attaches for vises, or holders for hand tools low enough to be below table top heighth. This way you will use the table with the vise mounted most of the time and when you need a flat table, slip the vise off and the table is flat, without moving all the hammers, screwdrivers, ETC.
A couple of ideas for any shop, which I find very handy are:
1. Mount as many things on wheels as possible so they can be easily moved from wall to center of shop if more space is needed.
2. Make all work areas the same height so it will just be a table for the long item project. This includes welding table, chop saw, table saw, mitre saws, ETC.
3. Make steel welding table (I like expanded metal top) with a completely flat top, so anything larger than the table can be put on it and lay flat. Throw a piece of 3/8 plywood on it and it becomes a woodworking table. A piece of cardboard & it is a paint table, or it is just a stand (already adjusted to the right heighth) for that 20' angle iron you are cutting off with your chop saw.
4. Now then for all the things you want on a normal welding table, either make them to mount as quick attaches for vises, or holders for hand tools low enough to be below table top heighth. This way you will use the table with the vise mounted most of the time and when you need a flat table, slip the vise off and the table is flat, without moving all the hammers, screwdrivers, ETC.