I looking at redoing my gun cleaning bench love to see some of y’all work area
I looking at redoing my gun cleaning bench love to see some of y'all work area
Yeah it's like the pictures you get with a new wallet. Gotta be fakeThat's WAY TOO ORGANIZED. I'm embarrassed.
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Cleaning on the left, reloading on the right
My man cave is share space the computer is in there
Great thoughtsA work bench can be just about anything.
But to be building a dedicated gun work bench requires a lot of thought. Will you be JUST working on guns,, or will reloading be involved? If reloading,, look at every press, or dedicated permanent type mounted item you have. Allow about 2-3 ft of space for each one. I suggested to a friend who was doing the same thing to allow for 2-3 ft between each press, powder measure, etc. He went with a 2-1/2 ft spacing & says it works quite well. Then allow for the addition of at least (2) more presses or machines. Allow a 2 ft depth at least for comfortable spacing. If you are going to have table top items like scales, or other such items,,, add at least a foot. So a 3 ft wide,, by whatever length you need will be quite nice.
For the gunsmithing/tinkering space,, I like a minimum of 5 ft, but 6' is better. Again, about 3 ft depth.
GOOD (LED preferred,) lighting.
VERY sturdy shelves mounted above AND below allows for putting bullets, primers, brass,, loaded ammo books etc on. A tool box that can be rolled UNDER the bench,, yet pulled out for easy access is a great option. Especially if it has a top you can use as a shelf for a place to temporarily lay something. (Kinda like the bottom half of a stack-able tool box system.)
Build to a height that allows for a comfortable chair to be used for extended times of work or loading.
Add on's,, such as a magnifier, a vise (or two), need to be considered as well.
These are a few ideas to assist in planning on how to build a GOOD comfortable work space. But my buddy,, well, he did as I said,, yet he soon ran out of space as he found out he wanted to add stuff. So I chuckled at him,, saying; "I told ya it wasn't big enough!"
NDIH, but I like a lot of Inline Fabrication's products.
https://inlinefabrication.com/
Lots of neat quick-change mounts, various height stands, etc. If you have a press or tool that he doesn't have a quick-change base for, I believe he can make a plate off of a drawing that you provide. He also has blank plates for his quick-change system, where you can drill your own holes for your equipment.
Great if you have limited bench room, and don't want to devote a 3' wide space for the specialty press that you only use sparingly.
Not the cheapest stuff, but I've been impressed with the items that I've purchased. Everything I've seen from him has been well thought-out, and very nice quality.
I'm sure that others here are also using his products.
Pictures can lie.Winner, winner, chicken dinner!"
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That setup is thing of beauty, Jim.
Be proud of your level of organization!![]()
Hey! He is one of us after all!Pictures can lie.
The previous picture shows what it looked like that day when I was doing some reloading and had cleaned it up so I could work safely.
This is what it normally looks like. Taken today.
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Me TooThat's WAY TOO ORGANIZED. I'm embarrassed.
Thanks it is fun now That I retired I do things a little slower before you only had so much time and it’s back to work so yes it fun been on this project for about a week just trying to get organized ha haI really like projects like this. Building a bench that works for YOU.
Have fun.
Cheers,
JAYDAWG