Dennis McDonaugh
05-07-2005, 12:39 PM
Here's some pictures of the shop I took last week. No digital camera so I have to snap, develp and scan.
The first picture is of the Grizzly 1018HW jointer and Jet cabinet saw/outfeed table. The saw faces the front of the garage so I can feed long stock from outside the shop. It does have one drawback, I put quite a ding in the tailgate of my truck with a kickback from a piece of white oak.
The second picture is of the sharpening station, router table, portable tool storage, Jet drill press and Woodsucker. Everything is on wheels and can roll out when I need to use it. I need to replace the short radius pipe with a long radius pipe, but haven't got around to it yet.
The third and fouth pictures are of my workbench, front and back. The top is yellow pine. I did a pretty crappy job glueing it up and had to use a scrub, nr. 7 and nr. 4 to flatten it. I still haven't made the drawer fronts after four years, but I did manage to drill a finger hole in the front of each drawer. The drawers hold portable power tools and power tool accessories. I store commonly used clamps on the backside because I don't have wall space for them.
The last shot is Katherine's lathe and scroll saw and the tool chest I posted on the neander site. She does a lot of craft type work and makes parts for larger projects I'm working on here.
The first picture is of the Grizzly 1018HW jointer and Jet cabinet saw/outfeed table. The saw faces the front of the garage so I can feed long stock from outside the shop. It does have one drawback, I put quite a ding in the tailgate of my truck with a kickback from a piece of white oak.
The second picture is of the sharpening station, router table, portable tool storage, Jet drill press and Woodsucker. Everything is on wheels and can roll out when I need to use it. I need to replace the short radius pipe with a long radius pipe, but haven't got around to it yet.
The third and fouth pictures are of my workbench, front and back. The top is yellow pine. I did a pretty crappy job glueing it up and had to use a scrub, nr. 7 and nr. 4 to flatten it. I still haven't made the drawer fronts after four years, but I did manage to drill a finger hole in the front of each drawer. The drawers hold portable power tools and power tool accessories. I store commonly used clamps on the backside because I don't have wall space for them.
The last shot is Katherine's lathe and scroll saw and the tool chest I posted on the neander site. She does a lot of craft type work and makes parts for larger projects I'm working on here.