I made my own version of the MFTC last year, given the apparent non-availability of the Tim plans.
It is definitely possible to figure it out without the plans, and although my version is not perfect (and not as good as the original) it is fairly close.
I built mine out of a single sheet of 18mm birch ply (except the shelf which is 6mm). I already had a CNC'd MFT top which I cut down slightly to fit.
If anyone's going to try this, I would offer the following "lessons learnt":
- watch out for the leg depth, if they are too deep the table won't fold up
- for me the shelf height was critical - it needed to be higher than the CTL-MIDI under it, but if it's too high then the support rail will hit its corresponding rail on the base cabinet when folded up
- the wheels need to be bigger than mine - I used an axle below the cabinet to make it easier to build, but this means the wheels are too small
- the thing is HEAVY with 18mm ply, too heavy really, although mine only moves about 1m as it stays in my garage
- the shelf is critical to the table's stability, mine is fixed in place with Dominos glued on one side only, which works really well
- the drilling/installation of the hinge bolts needs to be done very carefully/precisely so that the table remains square to the base and legs - I don't have a drill press so this was a bit tricky (although it worked out OK)
- it's not cheap... including the hardware mine cost about £650 but nearly half that was the birch ply, so it could have been cheaper
- using the Sys-AZ drawers made things simpler
Originally I was just going to get the MW 1000. This is about £900 currently as a set. I realised this wasn't going to work for me because when set up it's too long to fit in my garage, plus the extension table is only 4 holes wide (vs 6 in the MFTC, which makes a massive difference). Also the holes are not CNC'd to guarantee a right angle.
Also worth adding that this was really fun to figure out and build. As a beginner I went to a lot of trouble to practise various techniques on this and really enjoyed the process. It probably took about 4 days to build but a lot of this was faffing about with sanding and Osmo.
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