Before I start blogging about what I do in the workshop, I should probably show it to you. So here it is.
This is the two-car garage of my home in Maryland. It hasn’t actually housed a vehicle since November 1997, when I first moved in. After my first shop, which was about an 8×10 section of semi-finished basement adjacent to the laundry room, this feels luxuriously spacious, though I find that floor space is at a premium.
Highlights of the shop (along the walls, left to right):
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In the middle of it all is my table saw. It’s a Delta 34-444 Contractor’s Saw (original model), bought new in 1996, though it’s been so heavily modified that it may not be immediately recognizable. The original base, stamped steel extension wings, and Jetlock fence are all gone. I built the base cabinet and new extensions myself to better support the 50-inch Vega fence system I added in 1998. Drawers in the base store my dado, spare blades, and a lot of the handheld power tools and accessories that I use the most.
The right extension is a torsion box with a 1/4-inch plywood top and a layer of high-pressure laminate for smoothness and easy sliding of material. The open shelf underneath that is where I keep push blocks, the Vega stop block and stock pusher accessory, and the router table’s auxilliary fence. (And a tape measure, sometimes a clamp or two, a pencil, the remote on/off control for the dust collector, etc …)
The left side extension is my router table — one of these days I’ll take a photo of it. It also has a plastic laminate top, and the typical rectangular mounting plate for the router. Drawers store my router bits (1/4-inch shanks on the left, 1/2-inch on the right) and the accessories — wrenches, collets, what have you. For a fence, I use a box-style auxilliary fence that I clamp to the Vega fence. It has the usual split-face design and a 2-1/4 inch dust collection port; by clamping it to the Vega fence I get to use Vega’s micro-adjust mechanism for fine positioning. The router itself is a venerable Porter-Cable 690, for which I have all three bases; the plain base gets used in the table, while the D-handle and plunge bases are used for hand-held routing tasks.
I know it’s a bad idea, but I do tend to use the tablesaw’s long table (it measures a little shy of 7 feet) as an assembly table and a finishing table, too. I cover it with plastic sheeting for finishing and wipe up glue from the laminate when necessary.
In front of the saw (from the photo’s angle, anyway) is a rolling cart that I use for storage of small hand tools, sharpening gear, and miscellaneous stuff. I have another one just like it tucked into the corner with the cutoffs, but it’s mostly empty.
The rest of the garage, not visible in the photo, is mixed use storage. There’s a wooden shelf unit that doubles as my wood rack, where I store the boards I buy for each project and the milled parts that I make from them while the piece is taking shape; the usual assortment of snow shovels and garden tools; a few automotive things (though I have zero car mechanics aptitude so it’s really a minimal few things); the trash and recycling bins, of course. We have a full-sized freezer to supplement what’s in the kitchen and a dorm-size refrigerator where I keep a few cold drinks handy. Nothing worth a photo, in other words.
So there’s the 50-cent tour. Now you know where the fun takes place.
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