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• #2
Terrible picture from my ancient iPhone but I just put a wooden work bench up in my basement.
Vice not bolted on yet and drill press position only temporary
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• #3
Drill envy. Started stripping the vice - the nut that holds the nut in is a bit seized so I've started things off with WD40.
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• #4
Crap, my non-bike project thread is now redundant and could probably fit here. Nevermind. @umop3pisdn glad I'm not the only one with with a vice for vices. The trickiest part of refurbing my Record was removing the screws that hold the jaws on. Patience, WD40 and mainly a manual impact driver helped a lot. Studying your workbench it looks like you're covered.
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• #5
My brother refurbished his vice as well, after watching this video.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sCVXyq413nk&t=602s
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• #6
Stage one rust removal with an overnight soak in citric acid
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• #7
So, I needed a place at home to sit behind a computer (iPad and keyboard) and pretend to do actual work. Problem is my apartment is 30m2 and I really didn’t want to put a desk in there. Lying on the couch and using the screen to type didn’t cut it either anymore. I do have a low bookcase on one wall, an IKEA Besta, 65cm high/ 40cm deep/ 240cm long. And I have acces to a shitload of scrapped oak beer benches that have been sitting in a field during the aftermath of our first lockdown. The oak tops are very weathered and the legs are rusted. So we’ve taken them apart and I (we) can use the boards as we like. Cue running nine of those boards through a sanding planer, squaring them off with a big big table saw, and glueing them together to form worktops that I cut to shape. I used lamellos/cookies to strengthen the bond between the boards and the gnarliest tears and knots got filled with clear epoxy. I sprayed on one coat of clear laquer before bringing them home to see how they fit before bringing them to work again to finish them with a few more coats of laquer. I’ll fit a simple plinth under the bookcases to raise them up to the required hight, 9cm should do it.
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• #8
Result: lost minimal floor space, minimal visual clutter, gained minimal work spot...
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• #9
Oo, that's lovely. Top work!
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• #10
wow. that's really nice. Bravo.
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• #11
Vice restoration then. Soaked this nut in plusgas but it wasn't shifting, so it got snipped.
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• #12
Citric acid took some of the rust off, there was still quite a lot of paint left. A wire wheel sorted this.
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• #13
Masked, painted and a new split cotter pin for the spring assembly.
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• #14
Greased and reassembled. I'm not sure whether or not to highlight the lettering in white, and need to decide where it's going on the bench but in very happy.
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• #15
After painting my garage/workshop floor I’m starting to renovate the workbench. I’ll strip of the old paint that the previous owner used and then think about what finish to go for. Loving the patina look so far. Why do people over up such good looking wood?
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• #16
Love the green colour. Came out well
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• #17
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• #18
I'm not sure whether or not to highlight the lettering in white
I'd say leave as is, highlighting could look a bit much? Well done, looks really nice.
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• #19
I'd keep it as is. Great job. Makes me want to do something similar to my old Record no. 5.
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• #20
Just bought this! Maybe I should start a project thread?
Plan is to turn it into a camper/tiny house for the family. It's a Scania vabis from 64.
Need to update my drivers licence also.
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• #21
Maybe I should start a project thread?
Definitely.
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• #22
Definitely start a thread - the route number worries me slightly
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• #23
YES PLEASE
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• #24
Needs a photo-heavy thread please
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• #25
OK, I'm picking it up Saturday, will try to start a thread then
I don't think my garage potterings are interesting enough for their own thread, so here's a catch all for odd little bits you're up to.
I just picked up this Woden 186B/3 with a view to a cleaning it up a bit and giving it a coat of paint.
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