01-17-2016, 01:03 PM
Now that I have your attention...
Next week we are going to start a "Hand Tool School" 10-week class at the Kansas City Woodworkers' Guild. And about two weeks after that starts, we also start a "Beginning Woodworker" class -- the equivalent of Jr. High woodshop. So we were in need of MORE bench space to be able to run both simultaneously.
Mike Siemsen runs a woodworking school in Minnesota and a couple years ago put out a DVD called "The Naked Woodworker". Not as racy as it sounds. Essentially, it is a strategy for getting started on the cheap, focusing on hand tools and rehabbing vintage tools.
Anyway, we decided to build three of the benches he demonstrates in the video as an experiment. They are relatively inexpensive (we have maybe $90-$100 in lumber in each), very stout and easily modified. Since most people taking the Hand Tool School class are also beginners and don't have home shops, this gives them a way of building their own bench at home on the cheap. Most expensive non-wood component is a pair of holdfasts, the $35/pair ones from Gramercy fill the bill nicely but you can use whatever.
You could build these entirely with hand tools but we decided to do a blended build since the KCWG shop offers all we need. Furthermore, if our members decide to build their own, that's the most likely way they would fabricate parts for at home anyway.
Finally, we made the benches three different heights (35", 34" and 33") and made them double sided and reduced their length to 6' instead of a more standard 8'. Normally, you would only have one crochet and one set of apron holes. The shorter length is to accommodate squeezing in three extra benches. The vast majority of what one builds as a hobby can be done on a 6' bench.
Granted, these are ugly as sin but they do work very well. Part of the experiment was to build them as cheaply as possible, so we used the cheapest construction lumber we could get. Spend a few more bucks and be a bit more picky and they would be nicer looking.
A few intrepid members have started using the benches but we will have to have some education sessions because these benches don't have traditional mechanical vices for work holding. They rely on dog holes, fences, battons and holdfasts. You can hold just about anything but it does take a little more though. Maybe next weekend during the Lie-Nielsen Handtool Event at the KCWG shop (https://www.lie-nielsen.com/hand-tool-events) I'll get some pictures of how various pieces are held and worked on these benches. Also Mike Siemsen has a nice video on his YouTube channel that demonstrates most of the operations one would perform when going from rough stock to joinery using these benches.
Next week we are going to start a "Hand Tool School" 10-week class at the Kansas City Woodworkers' Guild. And about two weeks after that starts, we also start a "Beginning Woodworker" class -- the equivalent of Jr. High woodshop. So we were in need of MORE bench space to be able to run both simultaneously.
Mike Siemsen runs a woodworking school in Minnesota and a couple years ago put out a DVD called "The Naked Woodworker". Not as racy as it sounds. Essentially, it is a strategy for getting started on the cheap, focusing on hand tools and rehabbing vintage tools.
Anyway, we decided to build three of the benches he demonstrates in the video as an experiment. They are relatively inexpensive (we have maybe $90-$100 in lumber in each), very stout and easily modified. Since most people taking the Hand Tool School class are also beginners and don't have home shops, this gives them a way of building their own bench at home on the cheap. Most expensive non-wood component is a pair of holdfasts, the $35/pair ones from Gramercy fill the bill nicely but you can use whatever.
You could build these entirely with hand tools but we decided to do a blended build since the KCWG shop offers all we need. Furthermore, if our members decide to build their own, that's the most likely way they would fabricate parts for at home anyway.
Finally, we made the benches three different heights (35", 34" and 33") and made them double sided and reduced their length to 6' instead of a more standard 8'. Normally, you would only have one crochet and one set of apron holes. The shorter length is to accommodate squeezing in three extra benches. The vast majority of what one builds as a hobby can be done on a 6' bench.
Granted, these are ugly as sin but they do work very well. Part of the experiment was to build them as cheaply as possible, so we used the cheapest construction lumber we could get. Spend a few more bucks and be a bit more picky and they would be nicer looking.
A few intrepid members have started using the benches but we will have to have some education sessions because these benches don't have traditional mechanical vices for work holding. They rely on dog holes, fences, battons and holdfasts. You can hold just about anything but it does take a little more though. Maybe next weekend during the Lie-Nielsen Handtool Event at the KCWG shop (https://www.lie-nielsen.com/hand-tool-events) I'll get some pictures of how various pieces are held and worked on these benches. Also Mike Siemsen has a nice video on his YouTube channel that demonstrates most of the operations one would perform when going from rough stock to joinery using these benches.
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things. -- G. Carlin