I just sweep them under the bench. The split top helps with that, and the vinyl floor. Push broom, dustpan and brush, quick and quiet.
Bench.jpg
I just sweep them under the bench. The split top helps with that, and the vinyl floor. Push broom, dustpan and brush, quick and quiet.
Bench.jpg
Nice bench. What kind of vise is that?
Great legs baby!
David
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
I am retired, so the possibility of visits to HR are now no longer a part of my daily life. My own conscience has replaced HR as a moderator of my own life and it is wrapped way, way looser than the wrapped-way-to-tight beings at all of the HR's in my past. Question? Why do all HR's see themselves as sitting next to the Right Hand of God (president) and think that they trump project managers (revenue generators in the food chain)?
David
It is often like this in business hierarchy. If a department makes their system more efficient, they may not need all of their employees or more assets (funding). The bean counters are always looking for more beans to count. This may be half the reason many companies run with archaic systems. Though there is always someone scheming to promote their own agenda…Question? Why do all HR's see themselves as sitting next to the Right Hand of God (president) and think that they trump project managers (revenue generators in the food chain)?
THERE ONCE WAS A PLAN
In the beginning there was a plan
And the plan begat the assumptions
Yet the plan was without substance
And the Assumptions were without form
A darkness was upon the face of the working mass
And they spoke amongst themselves, saying,
“This is a crock of $#!+, and it stinketh”
And the workers conferred with their Supervisors and said verily,
“It is a pail of dung, and none may abide the odor thereof”
And it came to pass that the Supervisors visited the Managers , saying,
“It is a container of excrement of such strength that
none may abide by it”
And the Managers greeted their Directors, saying,
“It is a vessel of fertilizer, and none may abide its strength“
And the Directors spoke amongst themselves, saying one to another,
“It contains that which aids plant growth, and it is very strong”
And the Directors said onto the Vice President,
“It promotes the growth of our plants, and its strength is unchallenged”
And the Vice President embraced the President, saying,
“The plan will promote growth and vigor
within the company, with effects most powerful”
And the President looked upon the Plan, and saw that it was good
And the Plan became Policy
And this is how $#!+ happens
jtk
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
Cool bench Tom I like it.
Aj
I had been sweeping them into a pile then using the cyclone dust collector to get them up. Then I realized that I need to re mulch the front planting bed... so I started sweeping them up and depositing there.
Then the lawn crew (who spot weed said planting bed) decided it must be garbage and cleaned it all up. ...I tried.
usually, all the shavings I get will wind up in the 35 gal. trash can.....when full, it gets hauled upstairs, and out to the firepit.....usually all the cardboard boxes as well.....put the wire lid on, and light it up...also, any un-usable scraps go along....and up in smoke.
Nice bench, and practical floor!! I'm wondering about that handwheel under the top though.
When working in the basement of this old house, we put down plastic, and then Masonite on top of that. When we left, we didn't have to clean the brick floor underneath-just folded the taped together plastic sheeting, and folded it in. This was between cleanings while working.
I did that in my previous house. Was the simplest way to get rid of planer chips. I laid down a layer 2" thick and topped with 1" regular mulch. Kept weed away for over a year. It was all Doug fir chips from my bench build.
Said that be careful where you put them. They are a fire hazard in summers. Thin shavings dry super quickly and burn even more quickly.
I use the tool well for shavings. I don't like a lot of shavings on the floor; those things burn like gunpowder.
I'm more interested in the vinyl floor and how that works. I've been thinking of vinyl over my concrete floor but wondered if it would be too slick and whether the few, very heavy power tools I have on mobile bases/castors would dent the vinyl.