Workstations and Tool Storage
Store, Protect and Get More From The Valuable Tools
In Your Workshop
By The
Editors of Fine Homebuilding
Make
Your Woodworking More Efficient with Customized
Workstations
Woodworkers are always looking for ways to make
their workshops work better for them. Dedicated
workstations for tools or essentials like sharpening
and assembly make woodworking more efficient. For
space-challenged woodworkers, modular systems allow
the benefits of a well-equipped shop in a minimum of
space. This book shows how to apply the workstation
approach to the shop and how to store and protect
your valuable tools.
What's inside:
- Roll-away workshop
- Clamp storage solutions
- Stack and saw lumber rack
- Vacuum hold down table
- Rolling chopsaw stand
- An elegant chisel cabinet
- Heirloom tool chest
Introduction:
I have about 100 times more
money invested in machines than in hand tools, but
its the hand tools I cherish most. Unlike a machine,
a well-tuned hand plane or razor sharp chisel allows
me to engage with wood in a personal, satisfying
way. Its like driving a car vs. taking a walk. One
method gets you there faster, but the latter allows
you to see every ripple in the landscape.
Because of our fast-paced
lives, we are thankful for machines; otherwise we
would not do as many projects promised to our family
or to our clients. But at some point all woodworking
requires the use of some hand tools. Although you
may not think of them as such, a ruler, a marking
knife and a square are hand tools that are essential
for layout as well as for machine setup. Knowing how
to choose and use these tools will make you a better
woodworker.
There are times when a
handplane or chisel comes in handy, even if you work
mostly with machines. Nothing pares an oversized
tenon as accurately as a fine swipe across its cheek
with a shoulder plane. To shape curvy parts like a
ball-and-claw foot, you will need files, rasps and
rifflers.
To do honest period work, you
must cut your dovetails by hand. A fine-tooth saw
and chisel will have to be employed and eventually
sharpened to continue working. For certain details,
like a narrow bead with a fine quirk or groove, you
are best off making your own simple tool, a scratch
stock.
These and other hand-tool
articles are excerpted here from the pages of Fine
Woodworking magazine. Once you start using more of
these tools, you will see your work reach a higher
level of refinement and realize that the extra time
spent doing hand work is well worth every minute.
--Anatole Burkin, Editor, Fine Woodworking
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Section 1: Workshop Systems
Fine Tune Your Shop
Roll Away Workshop
Section 2: Storage Solutions
Versatile Shop Storage Solutions
Four Ways to Get Organized
Clamp Storage Solutions
Section 3: Dedicated Workstations
Stack and Saw Lumber on the Same Rack
Tilt-Top Shop Cart
Convertible Clamping Workstation
Low Assembly Bench
Vacuum Hold Down Table
Rolling Chop Saw Stand Saves Space
A Doundraft Sanding Table
Section 4: Workbenches
Power-Tool Workbench
New Fangled Workbench
A Bench Built to Last
Rock Solid Workbench
Section 5: Sawhorses
Build a Better Sawhorse
Sawhorses for the Shop
Section 6: Tool Cabinets and Chests
Making a Case for Dovetails
Making a Machinist-Style Tool Chest
Fine Furniture for Tools
A Chisel Cabinet
Tool Cabinet Design
An Inspired Tool Chest
Heirloom Tool Chest
Soft-cover, 8-1/2 x 10-7/8
in., 160 pages with color photos and drawings
ISBN: 978-1-56158-785-8 |