Dave Ronyak said:
Sounds good, Tinker. When are we going to see some photos of your projects, including this work table concept? I thought the folding legs and two-piece braces of the Blum tables nicely designed and implemented. Some X-braces added to an MFT will make it much more stable against racking loads such as those imposed by hand planing. Connecting two MFTs with their legs at right angles will also make them much more resistant to racking loads; an MFT 800 joined to the end of my MFT 1080 is my standard setup for general work.
Dave R.
Dave, I tried sending pics to the site some time back. not much luck. One of these days, I'll spend a little time to figure it out. E-mail pics work ok for me, but to send onto the FOG seems to give m problems. I have upgraded once or twice since I last tried so maybe it is more possible now. I'm just a bit computer challenged. My GS knows moe than I do, and he is only 10.
As far as the work bench, I never took pics of it that I can locate. I had a couple in my photo files at one time, but they got eradicated with one of the computer upgrades. If you have old FWW files, you can look it up.
FWW #139 (currently in the 200's, so you can see it goes back a little bit)
on page 98. The main strength of the bench is a center beam. I used a piece of 2"(actually a little thicker) x 10" red oak. the rest of the frame was of 2x4. with the top about 3 2x6's with MDF pannels down center that could be rearranged, as needed, for clamping. I don't have any of the pannels or 2x's left from the bench. The end frames and the main beam are still out on the barn. I am trying to determine a way to make use of them for planing with less space involvement. The torsion box bench shown above might provide an answer. I'm in the headscratching stage right now.
I have tried using my 1080 and 800 locked in tandem. It does make for a little less flex when planing. The problem is space. i still use both MFT's, but found better use of space by locating remote from each other. The main problem with usig the MFT for edge planing with hand planes is that it is a pain to try to clamp to the sides of the MFT frame. Short pieces are fine, but wide and long can present a problem, I had been thinking of Jaw Horse from Rockwell (Rockler now carries that one). The torsion box shown in this discussion above might work better for me. I have all sorts of scrap lumber and pipe clamps (pipes and fittings) in the shop so for now, it will be less expense to go for the box. I already have a couple of old WorkMates and I think they will work well in tandem with the torsion box.
Sno on the way. gotta run and get my equipment ready to push gold dust. A couple more sno storms this winter and I can afford an MFT/3 to go with everything else. i might even be able to afford a few more pieces of lumber from sources other than fire wood pile. :
Tinker