Thank you for sharing your modifications. I especially like the fold-out base with casters. It looks fairly simple to build, but I would appreciate it if you did a follow-up video showing how you built the base.
Great work Bob...love how you got everything on wheels and able to store nice and compact. Thanks also for being so humble, positive and bold about sharing God and His love for all. I'll look forward to seeing more of your work in the future.
Kudos on your mods. Solves some of the issues I've had with working on less than perfectly even surfaces using the original sawbuck stands and being mobile is just awesome. Bonus points for the low buck/ high function pie-tin light reflectors.🤘🏻
I really like the wheels option, and the storage vertically with wheels on it as well. This finally makes sense to use in my own garage workshop. Thanks for sharing!
Great build and excellent demonstration! I wish all the DIY videos spent as much time on showing how their creation works as they do on how much sawdust they generated creating it.
Wow. That looks amazing. I'm in the process of building one myself but haven't figured out the base yet. I think I'm going to incorporate some of your ideas. God Bless!
Bob - terrific version of Ron's work. The light bridge is ingenious, and I had to laugh at the pie tin light reflectors - equally ingenious - congratulations on your highly effective frugality! It is always such a treat to see what is coming out of the minds and shops of my fellow professionals.
I like that idea with the overhead lighting and storage! I have to make something like that for my mftc, so I can keep my chargers and battery's off the table... thank you for the inspiration...
This is an excellent version of the Ron P. workbench. I can see a similar version as my own regular everyday workbench. No need for the attached table and chop saws but having the option to mount them and fold away the bench whenever I want is a desireable feature. Keep the great videos coming! Be encouraged to share your God given talent. As for the few critics out there who nitpick at the minor things I say this ... You are all visualizing the bench in the way you would use it, and as such you have some valid points; however, different types of wood working have different requirements. He said in the video that he is a trim Carpenter. While you can't rip a whole sheet of plywood without removing the light and the chop saw, not all woodworkers need to work with full sheets of plywood. Use your creativity to modify the bench to suit your own needs. Not everyone is going to need the light but it's easily removed. Not everyone will need the chop saw or table saw, so modify the bench for the one you use or neither of them. Anyway, this is a fantastic bench as is, and I know that I can adopt the ideas in it to suit my own needs. Thanks
Love it! Keep going! I like that you didn't use any MDF, which is heavy and not durable. I like Paulk's clamping holes, but I didn't drill but a few in my bench. I laid out a pencil grid for the entire 10 million holes, but only drill them as needed. Had my bench for about 6 years, drilled only a about dozen holes so far.
Hope my subscription is the last one to convince you go on with your fantastic idea. That a great hack of PAULK BENCH! My best compliments from Italy. Ciao! Bravissimo!!!
like it - might you have plans- I saw this video randomly- but it was the lighting top that caught my eye- even though I don't have any need for it, myself... perfect for my tight workshop confines- plan to tie in other tools as well- God Bless
+CAMXposurePhoto / I highly recommend buying plans from Ron Paulk. Purchase one extra sheet of 1/2 inch plywood. ( get the good stuff) once the table is built, you'll have no trouble building the lighted hood.
That's awesome Bob, I just got a miter saw and am planning to make your sawhorse stand. You have great ideas and videos (tho I prefer talking instead of music.) I hope you'll keep making videos.
Haha well thanks for your opinion! I'm still working on what works for me. Music, talking.... i thought the silent film idea might work well on this one. Editing is my bane. Takes too long. Glad you learned a new trick!
+Matthew Ross / Use the same template as for the sides just shrink the top and bottom to all fit onto one sheet of ply. PS. DO NOT CHEAP OUT ON THE PLYWOOD! Also, consider the thickness of your power strip then add 1/2 inch to the plywood side to protect it during storage. My power strip sits a little below the sides so I have to store it upside down.
I like this riff on it! I just finished building mine to spec, but I love how you added your own take. I may add casters to mine, that is a great idea!
I saw the flashlight and said, "Hey, thats the same flashlight I use!". Fits in a toolbelt perfectly and get even brighter if you get the Li-ion type of AA batteries. The back of the package shows what kind to get. Amazon has them and the charger. I also love the clip, but hadn't thought of using it on the side of the hat, I've been clipping mine to the top of the bill the whole time.
THANKS. I make it a habit to wheels on everything of any size if possible. I work in people's garages and is nice to get the wife's car back inside at the end of the day. it's only 39" wide, but that little extra is nice to have. I started by using 9" of the 4ft. sheet to build the support extentions. Then I thought, why cut 3" off?
A little set up, smile at camera, a little more set up, smile at camera, turn on a light, smile at camera, turn on another light, big grin... Made me chuckle. Light the lower supports, good idea. Wheels on the single table unit, good idea. The upper unit does kind of loses me. I have to rip wide stock often and think the pole would get in my way. But overall very inventive!
So, i use a circular saw and a 3x6 sheet of pink foam insulation to cut large sheet goods. Set the saw 1/4 inch thicker than the stock. It supports the entire piece so that there is no breakage of expensive cabinet panels.
Starting with foldable rolling stand with built-in lumber racks, this thing ROCKS Bob. I was going to build another version but I love this more compact version for the space I have to work in. The only change I'd make is to have a cover for the miter saw area to level with the rest of the table surface. I'm certain you already have that (you thought of everything else) but forgot to add it into this video. :o) GREAT JOB, BOB!
So, when I need a larger table surface, I use a pc. of 4X8 2 inch pink foam insulation to cover the entire top. It's also great for cutting plywood sheets with the circular saw as it supports the entire sheet and keeps the blade from cutting the table.
Great video and mods. I like how you show off the wheels by spinning the table every time you added to it. I was half expecting a beautiful assistant to appear like i was watching a magic show, lol jk.
As this is modular and meant for breakdown, i assume that you break down full sheets of ply before you put on the over head piece and the miter saw. over all i think its a great retrofit for a more all in one bench.
Bob K. the other day I got to setup a miter bench ....i felt lucky usually it's me and my saw on the floor and the material is hitting an adjacent wall...so I turn the saw diagonally.....ive been in some tight spots as of late...i bought a 7 1/4 miter for casing....i love it...nice and light...yesterday I bought a 10 inch....as it's a compromise between both and will suit most of my cutting needs...thanks for the reply...have a great day
Nice set up. I was just wondering what the large holes are for in the base of you workbench? I utillise that space for the tool im using which keeps my bench clear. Do you not use that space?
Hey Bob, Great mod's on the bench. I just built the base like yours and it occurred to me to ask a question. Given the difference is spacing between Ron's original saw horses and our folding stand (mine goes to about 3" from either end so it's about 5 1/2 feet wide), in using it, have you noticed any sag in the middle of your bench-top? Mine's new so I haven't seen any yet, but I'm curious about how it holds up over time. I also had to fight with the casters on the side of the bench (AWESOME ides by the way). I was concerned that a single sheet of 1/2" ply wouldn't hold up so I doubled it up, which blocked the hole on the side of the bench a little. If your casters are directly into the 1/2" ply, are you having any issues with durability of that side? I don't think Ron designed it to take that kind of torsion and am just wondering how yours is holding up. God bless and thanks for any feedback you can offer. GF There were also a couple of comments that asked about the spec's for the base. Perhaps this might help them. This is what I used for mine ua-cam.com/video/ZIFO7sdBGHM/v-deo.html
+robert montalbano / good question. I used that as a clip board to hold my cut list. Now I clip it in front of my face right on the center support of the hood.
BOB, Great job with this version of Ron's setup. I'm finalizing my tweaks to his design now and love some of yours. I'm curious - I have the same 12" Sliding DeWalt Miter Saw and thought it was too big and heavy for a bench like this, but it seems to work perfectly and looks great on yours. Any feedback positive/negative on it now that you've been using it about a year? Thanks so much! Joe Viola, NY
Nice one ! Good job , it is more portable and mobile , then Ron's , and I'm refer to the wheels , but ... the "saw horses" it deflect a little , meaning that the top of the bench is heavy ... but nice very nice ... At the top beside the lighting , what do you put there , i refer tools , what tools you putting there ? I ask you because in Ron's videos , all of his tools stand "down" in the bench... cheers !
nyc macs. it's so nice to have tons of storage in the hood. anything that'll fit. I clip a cut list right on the front, blades, hand tools, sander, small router etc..all fit in and on top!
Bob i just bought the plans for the PTS, I'd like to build it like yours, do you mind sharing the main modifications in measurements? i am trying to decide how high to make it
What miter saw do you have? Would it fit if you follow Rons plans as they are? I know he uses a Festool but I have a Dewalt 780 and will be building this in the next month.
Kevin Buchanan . I prefer the 10 inch DW717. less blade deflection for more accurate miters. Ron runs a 10 inch. the 12 is pretty heavy too. I would beef up the table if I were running that large of a saw.
Nick B. the diagonal brace across the back is sufficient and necessary. I used 1/2" Plywood to keep it slim enough to store inside the table. thanks for your sub man!
+Vince Baker / pretty simple. I used the same templates that I used for the table. Make the top and bottom 11" wide. The pipe is leftover from building the table saw support. Glad you like it!
I noticed that at the bottom of the base you have large holes cut out? Was that planned? looks like if you didn't cut these out you could use the in between for more storage. Is this something you would change?
Nada Mas. Ron Paulk sells the plans. well worth the money. if you blow one sheet Plywood you'll wish you'd had the plans. AND yes the 1" conduit does flex slightly, however the brackets are adjustable to compensate. this gives you the ability to raise, lower and tilt the saw as needed.
Adjustable brackets I didn't see. Can you elaborate? When you said in the video that the height meets most saws, are saw stands or tables mainly set at a certain height? Is it necessary or advisable if the table saw leans down in the front to possibly bring a brace from the front of the saw to the bottom of the stands lower opening? That would hold it up!
Hi Bob. I enjoyed the video. I noticed a fair bit of flex in the unit. Cutting out the top of the box section to accommodate the scms appears to have weakened the structure. Any thoughts on how to fix that ?
Okay. I have addressed this issue several times but I'll do it again. I cut sheet goods with a panel saw. I don't push a 4x8 sheet across a portable table saw. Quality results are much easier to achieve and I'm not wrestling overly large stock. Also the good comes off when i need a larger table area. Thanks for your comment and maybe I should do video on mutt panel saw next.
Ya, Ron's contribution to the construction worker world is priceless. Nice modifications on your build, buddy!
Thank you for sharing your modifications. I especially like the fold-out base with casters. It looks fairly simple to build, but I would appreciate it if you did a follow-up video showing how you built the base.
This is even better than your other bench.
The torch is cool too.
What an ingenious idea! I really like the folding base and the second layer
Thanks!
Nice bench. Direct and to the point video. Two thumbs up.
Came here from Ron's video and wanted to say that I love your changes to his design. Looks like a really useful setup.
Great work Bob...love how you got everything on wheels and able to store nice and compact. Thanks also for being so humble, positive and bold about sharing God and His love for all. I'll look forward to seeing more of your work in the future.
Beautiful build. And thanks for the heads up on the flashlight.
Awesome mod to an already great workbench. Good work Bob.
Kudos on your mods. Solves some of the issues I've had with working on less than perfectly even surfaces using the original sawbuck stands and being mobile is just awesome. Bonus points for the low buck/ high function pie-tin light reflectors.🤘🏻
I really like the wheels option, and the storage vertically with wheels on it as well. This finally makes sense to use in my own garage workshop. Thanks for sharing!
+V King glad you like it! Thanks for commenting
Great build and excellent demonstration! I wish all the DIY videos spent as much time on showing how their creation works as they do on how much sawdust they generated creating it.
Wow. That looks amazing. I'm in the process of building one myself but haven't figured out the base yet. I think I'm going to incorporate some of your ideas. God Bless!
Bob - terrific version of Ron's work. The light bridge is ingenious, and I had to laugh at the pie tin light reflectors - equally ingenious - congratulations on your highly effective frugality! It is always such a treat to see what is coming out of the minds and shops of my fellow professionals.
Very interesting and flexible take on the Paulk workbench.
Great work. Nice modification
I like that idea with the overhead lighting and storage! I have to make something like that for my mftc, so I can keep my chargers and battery's off the table... thank you for the inspiration...
This is an excellent version of the Ron P. workbench. I can see a similar version as my own regular everyday workbench. No need for the attached table and chop saws but having the option to mount them and fold away the bench whenever I want is a desireable feature. Keep the great videos coming! Be encouraged to share your God given talent. As for the few critics out there who nitpick at the minor things I say this ... You are all visualizing the bench in the way you would use it, and as such you have some valid points; however, different types of wood working have different requirements. He said in the video that he is a trim Carpenter. While you can't rip a whole sheet of plywood without removing the light and the chop saw, not all woodworkers need to work with full sheets of plywood. Use your creativity to modify the bench to suit your own needs. Not everyone is going to need the light but it's easily removed. Not everyone will need the chop saw or table saw, so modify the bench for the one you use or neither of them. Anyway, this is a fantastic bench as is, and I know that I can adopt the ideas in it to suit my own needs. Thanks
Love it! Keep going! I like that you didn't use any MDF, which is heavy and not durable. I like Paulk's clamping holes, but I didn't drill but a few in my bench. I laid out a pencil grid for the entire 10 million holes, but only drill them as needed. Had my bench for about 6 years, drilled only a about dozen holes so far.
Hope my subscription is the last one to convince you go on with your fantastic idea. That a great hack of PAULK BENCH! My best compliments from Italy. Ciao! Bravissimo!!!
+christian buzio / Wow Italy. Thanks. Greetings from colorful Colorado!
Awesome variation Bob , love it !
ty! bob's comes from 5 generations of engineers and architects 😊 and w 4 boys he knows space can be precious
like it - might you have plans- I saw this video randomly- but it was the lighting top that caught my eye- even though I don't have any need for it, myself... perfect for my tight workshop confines- plan to tie in other tools as well- God Bless
+CAMXposurePhoto / I highly recommend buying plans from Ron Paulk. Purchase one extra sheet of 1/2 inch plywood. ( get the good stuff) once the table is built, you'll have no trouble building the lighted hood.
That's awesome Bob, I just got a miter saw and am planning to make your sawhorse stand. You have great ideas and videos (tho I prefer talking instead of music.) I hope you'll keep making videos.
Haha well thanks for your opinion! I'm still working on what works for me. Music, talking.... i thought the silent film idea might work well on this one. Editing is my bane. Takes too long.
Glad you learned a new trick!
I had already purchased his plans but glad i hadnt started on it yet. Great take on this dude!
+Matthew Ross / Use the same template as for the sides just shrink the top and bottom to all fit onto one sheet of ply. PS. DO NOT CHEAP OUT ON THE PLYWOOD! Also, consider the thickness of your power strip then add 1/2 inch to the plywood side to protect it during storage. My power strip sits a little below the sides so I have to store it upside down.
Well done! Especially like the casters and lighting/storage rack.
I enjoyed your take om Ron's work bench.
God Bless my friend.
Yeah, man, love the base idea. Haven't made one yet, and I wasn't planning on one for the chop saw, but this is motivating.
Man - there are some clever people in this world -Well done!!
Came over to you from our friend Ron.
I like your touches on rons design. Keep up the good work!
I like this riff on it! I just finished building mine to spec, but I love how you added your own take. I may add casters to mine, that is a great idea!
And God bless you too! Love it.
came here from tons page love your lite set up
great idea and project.
Thank you!
Enjoyed the vid
Thanx for sharing
Interesting mods, good job
Nice job, buddy...Great modifications for light & storage...thanks for sharing your version...Jim
Killer setup.
nice take on Rons design.
I saw the flashlight and said, "Hey, thats the same flashlight I use!".
Fits in a toolbelt perfectly and get even brighter if you get the Li-ion type of AA batteries. The back of the package shows what kind to get. Amazon has them and the charger.
I also love the clip, but hadn't thought of using it on the side of the hat, I've been clipping mine to the top of the bill the whole time.
I just today saw the new package that recommends using the li-ion batteries.
I'll have too pick some up asap.
thanks for your comment!
Nice work love the customization
Well, I just figured out that I made the base for my worktable the WRONG WAY. I really like yours!!
that's my favorite flashlight too.
THANKS. I make it a habit to wheels on everything of any size if possible. I work in people's garages and is nice to get the wife's car back inside at the end of the day.
it's only 39" wide, but that little extra is nice to have. I started by using 9" of the 4ft. sheet to build the support extentions. Then I thought, why cut 3" off?
A little slice of heaven
Nice job Bob!
A little set up, smile at camera, a little more set up, smile at camera, turn on a light, smile at camera, turn on another light, big grin... Made me chuckle.
Light the lower supports, good idea. Wheels on the single table unit, good idea. The upper unit does kind of loses me. I have to rip wide stock often and think the pole would get in my way. But overall very inventive!
So, i use a circular saw and a 3x6 sheet of pink foam insulation to cut large sheet goods. Set the saw 1/4 inch thicker than the stock. It supports the entire piece so that there is no breakage of expensive cabinet panels.
Cool work😎👍
Starting with foldable rolling stand with built-in lumber racks, this thing ROCKS Bob. I was going to build another version but I love this more compact version for the space I have to work in. The only change I'd make is to have a cover for the miter saw area to level with the rest of the table surface. I'm certain you already have that (you thought of everything else) but forgot to add it into this video. :o) GREAT JOB, BOB!
So, when I need a larger table surface, I use a pc. of 4X8 2 inch pink foam insulation to cover the entire top. It's also great for cutting plywood sheets with the circular saw as it supports the entire sheet and keeps the blade from cutting the table.
Thanks. I would swap the table saw/ router position on my next one. The right wing support gets in the way when ripping
Cool Bench, nice job!
This was amazing!
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing. Some neat ideas there
Great mods, I'll be building one soon and will use some of your ideas, thx.
Nice design.
Kudos this is very nice and cool.
this is cool... keep it up..
Man that is a awesome work station.... I like that flashlight there at the end too Have a great week buddy
Great video and mods. I like how you show off the wheels by spinning the table every time you added to it. I was half expecting a beautiful assistant to appear like i was watching a magic show, lol jk.
nice flashlight =) new subscriber here
Great Bench!
total awesomeness!
Very cool.
Great video thanks.
Sweet, I love it.
Jorge Gutierrez . thanks Jorge, and thanks for the sub!
Where do you store the poles when you fold it up or don’t need the light/power bridge at
Great idea !
wow, do you have plans for that station ? that will work perfect on my jobs
Wish I did but I just kinda winged it. I would highly recommend getting Rons plans and then modifying it on paper first
great job!!
As this is modular and meant for breakdown, i assume that you break down full sheets of ply before you put on the over head piece and the miter saw. over all i think its a great retrofit for a more all in one bench.
awesome man....i don't know if it's practical...i rarely get enough real estate..to set something like that up
+styles,unlimited / i know but that's why it's on wheels and short of times I'll only use 1 extension after i get all the door case cut
+styles,unlimited check out this other bench i built on the fly. ua-cam.com/video/XOK6J7SntjU/v-deo.html
Bob K. the other day I got to setup a miter bench ....i felt lucky usually it's me and my saw on the floor and the material is hitting an adjacent wall...so I turn the saw diagonally.....ive been in some tight spots as of late...i bought a 7 1/4 miter for casing....i love it...nice and light...yesterday I bought a 10 inch....as it's a compromise between both and will suit most of my cutting needs...thanks for the reply...have a great day
Sweet!
VERY INTERESTING..
Any chance of plans?
Subscribed and belled.
Hey thank you! Paulk has plans. I build cabimets so i just went to it
@@hugavet3049
Thanks for the speedy response..... 🤔
I've gone ahead and bought Ron's plans
Nice set up. I was just wondering what the large holes are for in the base of you workbench?
I utillise that space for the tool im using which keeps my bench clear. Do you not use that space?
The large holes allow for the dust to fall through and access to install the router. I do leave large shelf areas for tool storage.
Nice!!!
Brilliant
Would love to see plans for this. Do you have video on how you built this?
Thanks! But no, i didn't draw anything up. Take the concept and build to fit your saw and comfortable working height.
Hey Bob, Great mod's on the bench. I just built the base like yours and it occurred to me to ask a question. Given the difference is spacing between Ron's original saw horses and our folding stand (mine goes to about 3" from either end so it's about 5 1/2 feet wide), in using it, have you noticed any sag in the middle of your bench-top? Mine's new so I haven't seen any yet, but I'm curious about how it holds up over time.
I also had to fight with the casters on the side of the bench (AWESOME ides by the way). I was concerned that a single sheet of 1/2" ply wouldn't hold up so I doubled it up, which blocked the hole on the side of the bench a little. If your casters are directly into the 1/2" ply, are you having any issues with durability of that side? I don't think Ron designed it to take that kind of torsion and am just wondering how yours is holding up.
God bless and thanks for any feedback you can offer. GF
There were also a couple of comments that asked about the spec's for the base. Perhaps this might help them. This is what I used for mine
ua-cam.com/video/ZIFO7sdBGHM/v-deo.html
I'm curious about the little swing out at 1:10
What is that for?
+robert montalbano / good question. I used that as a clip board to hold my cut list. Now I clip it in front of my face right on the center support of the hood.
BOB, Great job with this version of Ron's setup. I'm finalizing my tweaks to his design now and love some of yours. I'm curious - I have the same 12" Sliding DeWalt Miter Saw and thought it was too big and heavy for a bench like this, but it seems to work perfectly and looks great on yours. Any feedback positive/negative on it now that you've been using it about a year? Thanks so much! Joe Viola, NY
Nice one ! Good job , it is more portable and mobile , then Ron's , and I'm refer to the wheels , but ... the "saw horses" it deflect a little , meaning that the top of the bench is heavy ... but nice very nice ... At the top beside the lighting , what do you put there , i refer tools , what tools you putting there ? I ask you because in Ron's videos , all of his tools stand "down" in the bench... cheers !
nyc macs. it's so nice to have tons of storage in the hood. anything that'll fit.
I clip a cut list right on the front, blades, hand tools, sander, small router etc..all fit in and on top!
Do you happen to have plans? I love your modifications, keep making videos man, great job!
Look good but kinda limits your table space with those poles going through the middle
Bob i just bought the plans for the PTS, I'd like to build it like yours, do you mind sharing the main modifications in measurements? i am trying to decide how high to make it
What miter saw do you have? Would it fit if you follow Rons plans as they are? I know he uses a Festool but I have a Dewalt 780 and will be building this in the next month.
Kevin Buchanan . I prefer the 10 inch DW717. less blade deflection for more accurate miters. Ron runs a 10 inch.
the 12 is pretty heavy too. I would beef up the table if I were running that large of a saw.
So many with the DeWalt 745 series want to be able to rip 4x8 plywood how's that possible with your station?
Don't get me wrong it's a nice set up but defeats the purpose with that pole in the way. No way to make A 36 inx 4ft cut out of my table saw!!!
I use a panel saw/ track saw, NOT the table saw for large stock. It's waaaaay easier and more accurate.
that looks awesome. do the fold out lets have much sideways bracing?
i really like this take on it. great job mate
Nick B. the diagonal brace across the back is sufficient and necessary. I used 1/2" Plywood to keep it slim enough to store inside the table. thanks for your sub man!
WOW Bob that's assume!!! do you have plans for your version?
+Vince Baker / pretty simple. I used the same templates that I used for the table. Make the top and bottom 11" wide. The pipe is leftover from building the table saw support.
Glad you like it!
Where can I get plans for yours. I have Paulks already but haven't built it yet
That is "COOL"!!!!!!!!
What type of wheels did you use ? ( source)I like how effortlessly it moves around
home depot stock 3 inch red
your miter is not bolted down? what keeps it from tilting or moving when your cutting?
+Chicken Friedfish / I push a couple shims on the left side or squeeze clamps but that's only needed for repetitive accurate cuts.
I noticed that at the bottom of the base you have large holes cut out? Was that planned? looks like if you didn't cut these out you could use the in between for more storage. Is this something you would change?
Nice.
Wow! Do you have plans for this version?
Al Stodolski I do not. Buy the plans from Ron. Well worth the time you'll save and it's his baby.
my hood is 9x11 to pack up well
Do you have the plans drawn? The table saw on the end of tubes, don't they cause the table saw to tilt down?
Nada Mas. Ron Paulk sells the plans. well worth the money. if you blow one sheet Plywood you'll wish you'd had the plans. AND yes the 1" conduit does flex slightly, however the brackets are adjustable to compensate. this gives you the ability to raise, lower and tilt the saw as needed.
Adjustable brackets I didn't see. Can you elaborate? When you said in the video that the height meets most saws, are saw stands or tables mainly set at a certain height? Is it necessary or advisable if the table saw leans down in the front to possibly bring a brace from the front of the saw to the bottom of the stands lower opening? That would hold it up!
Nada Mas watch Ron's video for details on those brackets. you can see them at the 2 minute mark in my video.
Is the saw stable on the conduits, do you find some rocking acceptable?
Sivan Mozes. it is stable enough. anytime I'm cutting very large stock or Plywood I'll use an out feed support anyway. glad you asked!
Check out my other videos!
ua-cam.com/video/bPzFSpFP_-s/v-deo.html
Please share a link to your flashlight... Greg
Sorry so late but I found it at HOME DEPOT
Hi Bob. I enjoyed the video. I noticed a fair bit of flex in the unit. Cutting out the top of the box section to accommodate the scms appears to have weakened the structure. Any thoughts on how to fix that ?
Looks good however the upright post for the top section appears to hinder the tablesaw outfeed.
Did you make plans?
Who’s the stalker at the window? Lol
Future UA-cam sensation. Juan Abee.
I see a a problem here. The pipes that hold the light/storage area would interfere with cutting sheet stock on the table saw.
Okay. I have addressed this issue several times but I'll do it again. I cut sheet goods with a panel saw. I don't push a 4x8 sheet across a portable table saw. Quality results are much easier to achieve and I'm not wrestling overly large stock. Also the good comes off when i need a larger table area. Thanks for your comment and maybe I should do video on mutt panel saw next.
What’s your email ? I have a few questions