My dad bought one of the 1st ones B&D made. He loved it so much he got me one the next year for Christmas. I used the heck outta that thing. But NEVER EVER let them get wet. Tops need replacing on mine, but I inherited dad's when he passed and I use it as often as needed. Thanks dad.
same here, I have an original that I've recently replaced all the catches on that I inherited from Dad (all the parts are still available and if yo have access to a 3d printer you can print most of them) and a copy that I inherited from Grandad. The copy is Much easier to fold. They both need tops replacing now though!
Overall it’s a decent table. If you’re not using it for big heavy projects. Its gets unstable when using my jigsaw and handsaw. Table starts to shake and lifts off the ground. Maybe I’m doing something wrong?Also the folding mechanic works great ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxyFZUPFEey-PuqsPMxqaykBhgA1LWxFHh when setting up, but I can’t get the table to fold down. It gets stuck 3/4ths on the way down.
Thanks for this. I have an off-brand bench that's been needing this for years, and you've given me a good road map. Plus, I found it kind of humorous that you used the old and busted top to work on the new one.😁
Additionally, those old ones ARE WAY BETTER than recent ones that come from Chinese factories with THINNER steel and lousy non-flat Bamboo tops that come cupped and dished. Shame on present day Black & Decker!
Wow! You did remarkable work on this. Those new oak tops you made are better than anything store bought. I just got an old Workmate from a friend of mine and your video inspires me to attempt what you've done. Thanks for making this really helpful and inspiring video.
My Dad gave me one for Christmas back in '73. I had to replace the bench this past summer after plenty of wear and lots of tear. Luckily, I had two 7 foot bed rails , one of which I used for replacement. I used the old section that was still useful as my template. All in all, it worked out very well. You're right about those screws. Great video. Thanks!
Thanks for watching. Glad yours is still going too. It seems there are a lot of us with these, and it is better to fix the old sturdy stuff than buy the new not sturdy stuff.
The replacement top looks far better than those on brand new workmates. Newest subscriber and now about to binge watch your other videos. A big thumbs up.
New ones come with supossedly nice laminated Bamboo tops... BUT, as B & D makes them in China and subcontracs ALL the work, they come with cupped or dished tops that are unusable and require replacement, even the steel folding base now comes with THINNER and SOFTER low grade sheet steel. I reinforced my two new model WM-1000 by adding thin wall steel conduit diagonals installed with Rivnuts and screws, and held with wing nuts to disassemble quickly. It seems that Stanley-Black & Decker also subcontracted all the work to the Chinese, including the lousy design and choose to save on ANY Quality Control... shame on them!
There is an old one of these left behind by the guy who moved out across the street from me. I already have one of the original B&D Workmates but I think I'll go rescue that one and restore it. Thanks for putting me in the mood.
You're welcome. Thanks for watching. You should do it. Another person commented it is really convenient to have two. You can have two projects going or put them end to end or....
Nice work improving a portable workbench. I have 2 "workmates." One original and one of a newer model with some betterfeatures. Both had less than adequate wooden jaws. They both are now topped eith white oak. A little heavier to carry but so much nicer to use. Oh yeah I also replaced the plastic cranks with aluminum.
I replaced the tops on my 1st-gen workmate some years ago. I used hardwood outer veneered plywood instead of solid wood. Worked out fine. I had always liked my original model Workmate with the cast aluminum frame better than the later ones that were all pressed steel, and I couldn’t see junking it. Thus the top replacement.
You just got a new subscriber!!!! My father-in-law gave me a workmate can't remember which model pretty sure it's this exact one. The top is a little damaged and I was thinking I could do this. Definitely have the ability but this is awesome exactly the idea had in my head and I am so glad you made this video!! Many thanks!!!
You're welcome. Thanks for watching and subscribing. Go for it. I'm glad I did. I use it a lot, and the new top makes a big difference. I like the oak; I have beaten it up a lot already, and it is holding up well.
@@RCWorks that's what I figured but it'll work for now. We inherited our home after my wife's grandmother passed away two years ago right before Easter. Her grandad passed a year or two before that and he had all kinds off stuff. I have a full basement and two garages. I am of the same mindset as you are. If I can reuse it I will.
I got good results just using an old, hard 2 x 6 for the top pieces. The greater mass gave it more stability. I also ripped a piece just slightly narrower than the gap when cranked fully open. I crank it tight between the top pieces like a table leaf, to make a bigger work surface. I added a hinged shelf to the lower cross pieces, that keeps my tools out of the dirt, and folds up nicely when I fold the Workmate.
Completely agree: My old one from around 1990, model WM-200 is firmer and better made than two new ones model WM-1000 from chinese factory, that came made with thinner and softer steel, and worst of all, cupped and dished Bamboo tops. One of them even came with the movable piece wrongly drilled, so it wasn't possible to install it on the PLASTIC sliding bearings... so I had to fill the wrongly placed holes for the screws with epoxy putty and redrill the holes at the right places. WORST LACK OF QUALITY CONTROL from B & D, now a shitty company from the equally shitty Stanley company. Difficult to believe that the old Stanley tool that produced the famous and excellent Stanley-Bailey hand planes, now owns B & D and sells such a lousy product.
@@alfredomarquez9777 Yep, seems everything is going that way. My random orbit sander (the yellow one) only lasted 4 1/2 years. Some day I can hopefully afford the other yellow one, the Mirka.
ha ha ha i spent years trying to find an original blue workmate with the cast parts , i finally found one when e bay started up ..had it ever since ...i have lacquered it for protection and made about a dozen new tops for it but it is STILL going strong and better then a new one
Great woodworking. I have the same thought on straight slot screws, always throw them in the trash. I just repaired mine, a 300 series older one. Made the top out of 2 pieces of plywood glued together. The top made out of used oak is a good idea though. Didn't put in any V grooves though, never used them.
Thanks, and glad to see others repairing old things. I'm the opposite with the V grooves; I use them all the time. You can get a lot of torque on those slotted screws--if you can keep the driver in the slot. What a pain. I think maybe the square drive are the way to go.
@@RCWorks In Canada we can buy Robertson screws and drivers. They are square bits and allow tons more torque than slotted and don't strip like Phillips. Try some!
@@gsuderman Robertsons are THE BEST! (Too sad greedy Henry Ford wanted the exclusive rights and didn't ended up using them instead of the lousy Phillips head that cams out (a ridiculously claimed as "advantage")...
I have an original (cast aluminum or magnesium) B&D Workmate. It’s probably 40-45 years old. Have rebuilt it twice, and it’s ready for its third rebirth. Can’t imagine working without it.
For some reason people keep pointing out all my equipment. I already own it; it is essential to my business. Why not use it. This project cost only my time. Thanks for watching.
Above the back legs cross brace, wedge in a 1x3 or so. With 4 holes drilled in, it makes a handy place to store your bench dogs. Before I did this to mine, I was always misplacing them,
Nice work. My old Workmate top is swollen and warped from moisture in the garage. Your video is a great inspiration for when I dig up the energy to replace it.
I used a deck board to replace the original ply wood top, looks much better than the original, didn't drill any of the original holes for the pegs as I never used them. I just use my work mate as a seat or small work bench on the job, so far I have replaced two other tops for friends.
Nice job! Liked the use of oak in particular. I did the same thing with mine but used oregan pine at the time.. I've had my "workmate for over 30 years and still use it for projects...
@@RCWorks I have a lot of oregan pine furniture in our home. A lot of it is rustic antique and I've made furniture from reclaimed floor-boards. Love the lustre it gets as it ages.. Agree with you around the durability of oak!
@@markforrestsm Oh nice. Same here, I like how it looks as it ages. That is how I want my house. It is going slowly though because I can't find much old pine around CO.
I did the same thing with my old workmate a few years ago. BEST TOOL I EVER BOUGHT. To the person that said it was boring...I guess wood working is not your area of interest.
I have 4 of these and find them very useful. My favorite trick is to leave the lower legs folded up and use them as doorbucks. The bottoms are scratchy so protect a finished floor, but they are nice and stable and have a flat top for your tools.
I recently replaced my '70s model WorkMate (the old one had rusted-out in places). Soon after putting it to use one of the clamp-boards started to delaminate. The retailer replaced the whole unit and advised me to do whatever I liked with the damaged one. Not wanting to dump a basically new, but imperfect WorkMate, a few phone calls resulted in B&D sending me a pair of clamp-boards gratis.I now have 2 WorkMates! They are definitely more useful than one. So if you need new clamp-boards and you don't have the wherewithal to make them yourself like RCWorks, they can be replaced at reasonable cost by contacting B&D.
I made one of these sometime ago when building a deck and made for use outside rain or shine .,with the manufactured deck wood not affected by the elements not in a shop and outside ,by hand skill saw and drill
I've got one sitting outside and the press board is all swelled and flaking apart. It's also missing one small leg extension that I'll fix by putting it on a wheeled box I can use for storage.
Have the mini table top version from Craftsman, used very little and have noticed chipping on my top as well. Think I might do this as a proactive repair. My top has some 1" square markings on it for layout work, no problem. Find someone with a CNC laser engraver and they can burn any design into the new work surface as well as your personal info for identification( might be good to hide it on the bottom).
Bin the slotted screws from your stock ! I did it several years ago and never regretted it ! They are and have always been a nuisance when you have to put force on the screwdriver. Now I use Torx screws only.
I'm with you. Slotted screws are the fruit of the devil. Great project, by the way. My Workmate's still fine, but I'm tempted to upgrade it preemptively as per your design.
Thank you. True and I don't buy slotted screws now; I just decided to reuse the originals on this project. You must take good care of your bench if the wood is still fine. 👍
Yes, slotted screws are a pain in the proverbial - but a bit less so if you actually have your work at a sensible angle so you're front-on to the screw head.
Nice upgrade.using Hard wood instead of the plywood or particleboard than am with these Workmates... I like the fact that you doubled up on the Jaw faces, Nice Is... If you want to use your Workmates as saw horses just add a Piece of 3/4” Plywood about 3’ or so in length and about 4-5 inches wide on edge to keep work off of the solid surface. Add some carpet to one edge and you can lay a door or similar project to protect its finish... The un carpeted side can become sacrificial in nature(saw cut etc...). No I have to upgrade my four Workmate 400+ (blue in color) Again Nice video, Greg
I saw one of these in a thrift store a couple of years ago, and they wanted 45 bucks for it! No one was buying it because you can get a new one for about the same price. In retrospect it was probably a good deal, because once you replaced the worn out wood and cleaned up the metal, it would probably out perform most of the junk that is currently on the market.
I retopped mine and replaced lower part of one leg which had rusted....it is 40yrs old and sturdy...not so a 2yrs old work bench which is better used as a plank support
Yep, that old stuff lasted. I have a 50+ year old Craftsman belt sander. I replaced the brushes 20 years ago, and have just ordered a replcement for a burned bearing, but it still works fine.
Nice job. I've often said... the two greatest things man ever invented were the Workmate bench and the cordless drill. I need to do the same to mine since I left it outside for awhile and the moister didn't do the press board any favors. Still love mine though.
Very nice job. I've got an old one that looks about where you started (but I don't have one entire "side" of the surface). I've got plywood for the replacement, but that oak you used looks like it really might last forever. Also, replacing those slotted screws must have been no small satisfaction.
Thanks. Yes, that oak is holding up for sure. Of course, by now it has lots of dings and scrapes, but I can always make another one. Agree. those slotted screws are a pain. You can get a of torque as long as the driver doesn't slip out.
@@RCWorks : May I humbly suggest you try some Robertson square recess hole head screws... Those are truly DELIGHTFUL to use, as they fit snuggly on the square tip screwdriver and don't fall from it even pointing straight down... even BETTER than the quite good Spax brand Torx head screws. Try 'em and you'll love 'em.
@@alfredomarquez9777 I have; you're right. Some day, I may switch. In this case, I wanted to reuse the originals, not bad after I put away the slotted driver and found the hex driver.
@@mainmort neat! By the way, for other readers, the inventor was Rick Hickman. The Workmate, the Imp, and the Elan. What a legacy of a life well lived. He passed away in 2011.
Wonder what weirdo's disliked this video?. The replacement tops are brilliant. I was given a WM700 series but the movable jaw is missing. I think I will follow this pattern, these will last forever. Well done matey.
Thanks. Yes, I can already tell the oak is going to last much longer than the original. I wonder about the dislikes also, and some of the comments. Oh well-it isn't for everyone.
I found it interesting that your were using a push cut on the Radial Arm Saw at 00:10. I have done this even though the normal method is to draw the blade/motor towards you. Does it seem safer doing it that way or gives you a better cut?
That was just an experiment, but it did seem safer and was more comfortable. The down side is that it is more difficult to slide the board into position for the cut. Some day, I am going to try a negative rake blade. Have you tried that? Did it help?
@@RCWorks Just saw this, sorry about the late reply. No need for a negative rake blade. I thought that was a thing as well until I joined the DeWalt RAS forum. They opened my eyes to some of the misconceptions out there. Now just running a standard Diablo blade. ( I have 4 radial arm saws...) Stop by and join the group!
I have 4 B&D workmates model 300. I replaced the tops with 25mm thick birch faced ply and 25mm teak, then 2 coats of oil based varnish. Use the old vice jaws as a drill guide to get the holes in the right position. For the counterbores (where the bolt heads go, use a flat bit FIRST then open up the holes to the dia of the bolt (I think it's 8mm). If you drill 8mm holes first, you won't have any wood to drill the counterbore. (A counterbore is a flat bottomed hole, not to be confused with a countersink, which is a V shaped hole which is 90 degrees.
RCWorks Great, perhaps you can redo this project just using a handsaw, hand drill, carpenter square and pencil - can’t use my workmate as a bench (it needs repairing!). Hopefully yours, Iain.
@@iainrumsey7672 A person could certainly do it with the hand tools you mentioned-plus a plane to get the clamping edges straight and square. Unfortunately, I am not patient enough to do projects with hand tools. James Wright (Wood By Wright channel) is the man if you want to see how it is done.
i used threaded inserts to secure my top with six mm bolts ..i also used them at both ends on the gripping face , this is so i can add a couple of small pieces of steel i cut ..i bolt them on and use them as a metal working vice when i need to for cutting threaded rod etc works a treat
I have two older & different models. No problems with the restore except that for any parts or information I need a model number and a good source. How does one go about finding a model #? Also both sets of vise boards are particle wood and the holes for the bench dogs are way out of size and I do not have any of dogs left. What is an accurate size hole I should make? Appears to be 3/4?
I think you will have to do some research. Mine has no model number on it either. By searching "craftsman portable craft center" I found a parts list at searspartsdirect.com, but none of the parts are available, and one that sold at ebth.com which had a picture showing the tag with a partial model number on top of the work surface-kind of a dumb place to put it. Dogs: Since you need new ones anyway, I think you should decide which dogs you like, buy them or make them, then drill the holes. You are correct that mine are 3/4".
Great job. I need the same thing. Left mine out in the rain and the original pressed wood swelled and warped. I am also fabing a 3/16 welding plate to top mine off. What kind of wood did you use?
Thanks. Oh yea, that rain wrecked it for sure. I like that welding plate idea. My welding area is in a separate space, so my welding table has to be separate. I used red oak because someone gave me a lot of it.
I was looking online and someone said the holes are some specials size is this true? And I would love to make some replacement panels but I don’t have all those tools. Does anyone know a place you can buy replacements? Thanks
I have rebuilt three of these of various years. Also one Craftsman not as high quality as the real Workmates. My original is now in need of replacement tops and, your inspiration has shamed me into doing it right! What size and what type of bit did you use for the Plastic "Dogs"? Beautiful work.
Uuuuh, that is good right? I don't mean to shame. My dogs are 3/4", so that is what I drilled. You know a old Craftsman probably was a Workmate, right? They never built their own stuff, but bought it from the manufacturers.
The B&D holes are 20mm. Bought a 20mm Forstner bit for $7.95 and free shipping from www.mlcswoodworking.com/shopsite_sc/store/html/smarthtml/pages/forsbit.htm
Haha. Yes, what a pain. I no longer keep slotted screws in my shop. Did you notice later in the video I found my hex driver? Those screws do have hex heads on them as well as slotted. Thanks for watching.
03:25: Yes, but no. It's not the fault of the screwdriver but the fault of the screw, or to be more precise, of the person that decided to use slotted-head screws.
My dad bought one of the 1st ones B&D made. He loved it so much he got me one the next year for Christmas. I used the heck outta that thing. But NEVER EVER let them get wet. Tops need replacing on mine, but I inherited dad's when he passed and I use it as often as needed. Thanks dad.
👍
same here, I have an original that I've recently replaced all the catches on that I inherited from Dad (all the parts are still available and if yo have access to a 3d printer you can print most of them) and a copy that I inherited from Grandad. The copy is Much easier to fold. They both need tops replacing now though!
Overall it’s a decent table. If you’re not using it for big heavy projects. Its gets unstable when using my jigsaw and handsaw. Table starts to shake and lifts off the ground. Maybe I’m doing something wrong?Also the folding mechanic works great ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxyFZUPFEey-PuqsPMxqaykBhgA1LWxFHh when setting up, but I can’t get the table to fold down. It gets stuck 3/4ths on the way down.
Thanks for this. I have an off-brand bench that's been needing this for years, and you've given me a good road map.
Plus, I found it kind of humorous that you used the old and busted top to work on the new one.😁
Just working on my old one from the early 80s. I bought a new one but can still use the old one as well!!
Great job.I respect those who can use stuff til it breaks and then fix it rather than buy a new one.
Thank you. That is the way to go. I am frugal and don't like to waste things.
Use it up,
Wear it out
Make it Last
Or You'll do without.....
Additionally, those old ones ARE WAY BETTER than recent ones that come from Chinese factories with THINNER steel and lousy non-flat Bamboo tops that come cupped and dished. Shame on present day Black & Decker!
Wow! You did remarkable work on this. Those new oak tops you made are better than anything store bought. I just got an old Workmate from a friend of mine and your video inspires me to attempt what you've done. Thanks for making this really helpful and inspiring video.
You're welcome. Glad it helps. I love mine. Hope yours turns out great.
My Dad gave me one for Christmas back in '73. I had to replace the bench this past summer after plenty of wear and lots of tear. Luckily, I had two 7 foot bed rails , one of which I used for replacement. I used the old section that was still useful as my template. All in all, it worked out very well. You're right about those screws. Great video. Thanks!
Thanks for watching. Glad yours is still going too. It seems there are a lot of us with these, and it is better to fix the old sturdy stuff than buy the new not sturdy stuff.
@@RCWorks At almost 74, I kind of like old stuff! ;>)
@@mikeprell2747 👍 I'm with ya. That old stuff works better.
The replacement top looks far better than those on brand new workmates. Newest subscriber and now about to binge watch your other videos. A big thumbs up.
Thanks. Yes, better and much sturdier than the press board of the original. Enjoy my videos, and thank you for subscribing.
New ones come with supossedly nice laminated Bamboo tops... BUT, as B & D makes them in China and subcontracs ALL the work, they come with cupped or dished tops that are unusable and require replacement, even the steel folding base now comes with THINNER and SOFTER low grade sheet steel. I reinforced my two new model WM-1000 by adding thin wall steel conduit diagonals installed with Rivnuts and screws, and held with wing nuts to disassemble quickly. It seems that Stanley-Black & Decker also subcontracted all the work to the Chinese, including the lousy design and choose to save on ANY Quality Control... shame on them!
There is an old one of these left behind by the guy who moved out across the street from me. I already have one of the original B&D Workmates but I think I'll go rescue that one and restore it. Thanks for putting me in the mood.
You're welcome. Thanks for watching. You should do it. Another person commented it is really convenient to have two. You can have two projects going or put them end to end or....
Nice job. I'll bet that oak is worth more than you originally paid for the entire Workmate!
You may be right; I don't know for sure. I received the workmate as a gift decades ago and 200 bd ft of oak from from a friend for free.
Wonderful! An American who does the job - well - without talking about it all the time . . . . . .
Thank you
Beautiful work. If you can believe it I have 3 Workmates. So much fun to use and a great candidate for a small restoration project.
Thank you. Wow, you really like the Workmate.
Refreshing video, straight to the point and no flashy banners or effects.
Thanks. Yes, I am a practical sort of man.
Those clamps you used for glue up look really nice. Good video, thankyou
They are just cheap Harbor Freight clamps. Thanks for the nice comment.
Nice work improving a portable workbench. I have 2 "workmates." One original and one of a newer model with some betterfeatures. Both had less than adequate wooden jaws. They both are now topped eith white oak. A little heavier to carry but so much nicer to use. Oh yeah I also replaced the plastic cranks with aluminum.
Nice, that white oak will last. Yes, heavy; I'm going to add retractable casters when I get around to it.
David, great idea replacing the plastic cranks. Did you make the cranks or adapt something?
@@lp2733 Adapted cranks from an old thoroughly thrashed cheap table saw.
WOW YOUR ONE OF THE FEW THAT USES JOHNSONS PASTE WAX, IVE BEEN USING IT FOR 40 YEARS GREAT STUFF, MOST CARPENTERS NEVER HEARD OF IT
I replaced the tops on my 1st-gen workmate some years ago. I used hardwood outer veneered plywood instead of solid wood. Worked out fine. I had always liked my original model Workmate with the cast aluminum frame better than the later ones that were all pressed steel, and I couldn’t see junking it. Thus the top replacement.
Sounds great. Mine is of pressed steel, but an early model and tough-still going strong. Thanks for watching.
You just got a new subscriber!!!! My father-in-law gave me a workmate can't remember which model pretty sure it's this exact one. The top is a little damaged and I was thinking I could do this. Definitely have the ability but this is awesome exactly the idea had in my head and I am so glad you made this video!! Many thanks!!!
You're welcome. Thanks for watching and subscribing. Go for it. I'm glad I did. I use it a lot, and the new top makes a big difference. I like the oak; I have beaten it up a lot already, and it is holding up well.
@@RCWorks I have a bunch of pine on hand. I'm planning to use it for now. You think that will be okay?
@@joshbaker6488 Sure. I believe in using what you have or reusing wood. It will dent more easily, but it will still work.
@@RCWorks that's what I figured but it'll work for now. We inherited our home after my wife's grandmother passed away two years ago right before Easter. Her grandad passed a year or two before that and he had all kinds off stuff. I have a full basement and two garages. I am of the same mindset as you are. If I can reuse it I will.
@@joshbaker6488 Grandad would be proud because that generation were practical people. Same with my dad, from whom I got a lot of stuff.
I got good results just using an old, hard 2 x 6 for the top pieces. The greater mass gave it more stability. I also ripped a piece just slightly narrower than the gap when cranked fully open. I crank it tight between the top pieces like a table leaf, to make a bigger work surface. I added a hinged shelf to the lower cross pieces, that keeps my tools out of the dirt, and folds up nicely when I fold the Workmate.
The leaf is a good idea. I could use that. I also have a lower shelf.
Great idea adding a hinged shelf. Will you share a couple of pictures to me - lperez@bellsouth.net 👍
You have inspired to replace the boards on my 20+ year old Workmate, but putting if off the last couple years......Thanks.
You're welcome. Go for it. Thanks for watching.
Wow. I wish I could do something like that . Congratulations
Thank you. You could I'm sure. Just start on something, and keep growing.
Nice job 👍
Yep, that’s when Black & Decker tools were a trusted, well made, non Chinese product. My WorkMate is a “1978” still going strong.
Thank you.
Don't know how old mine is, but probably around there, or early 80s.
Completely agree: My old one from around 1990, model WM-200 is firmer and better made than two new ones model WM-1000 from chinese factory, that came made with thinner and softer steel, and worst of all, cupped and dished Bamboo tops. One of them even came with the movable piece wrongly drilled, so it wasn't possible to install it on the PLASTIC sliding bearings... so I had to fill the wrongly placed holes for the screws with epoxy putty and redrill the holes at the right places. WORST LACK OF QUALITY CONTROL from B & D, now a shitty company from the equally shitty Stanley company. Difficult to believe that the old Stanley tool that produced the famous and excellent Stanley-Bailey hand planes, now owns B & D and sells such a lousy product.
@@alfredomarquez9777 Yep, seems everything is going that way. My random orbit sander (the yellow one) only lasted 4 1/2 years. Some day I can hopefully afford the other yellow one, the Mirka.
ha ha ha i spent years trying to find an original blue workmate with the cast parts , i finally found one when e bay started up ..had it ever since ...i have lacquered it for protection and made about a dozen new tops for it but it is STILL going strong and better then a new one
Nice work. My Workmate needs a new top, too.
Great woodworking. I have the same thought on straight slot screws, always throw them in the trash. I just repaired mine, a 300 series older one. Made the top out of 2 pieces of plywood glued together. The top made out of used oak is a good idea though. Didn't put in any V grooves though, never used them.
Thanks, and glad to see others repairing old things. I'm the opposite with the V grooves; I use them all the time.
You can get a lot of torque on those slotted screws--if you can keep the driver in the slot. What a pain. I think maybe the square drive are the way to go.
@@RCWorks In Canada we can buy Robertson screws and drivers. They are square bits and allow tons more torque than slotted and don't strip like Phillips. Try some!
@@gsuderman Yep, they work great; I have used them. I just thought this time I would reuse the screws since they were sitting right on my bench.
@@gsuderman Robertsons are THE BEST! (Too sad greedy Henry Ford wanted the exclusive rights and didn't ended up using them instead of the lousy Phillips head that cams out (a ridiculously claimed as "advantage")...
@@alfredomarquez9777 I didn't know that. I never understood why the US uses mostly Phillips. Cheers
I have an original (cast aluminum or magnesium) B&D Workmate. It’s probably 40-45 years old. Have rebuilt it twice, and it’s ready for its third rebirth. Can’t imagine working without it.
Wow you've gotten a lot out of it. Keep it up. Thanks for watching.
A really neat well conceived job, well done
Thank you, and thanks for watching.
wonderful and creative, half a dozen pieces of scrap wood and about £10,000 worth of equipement
For some reason people keep pointing out all my equipment. I already own it; it is essential to my business. Why not use it. This project cost only my time. Thanks for watching.
Above the back legs cross brace, wedge in a 1x3 or so. With 4 holes drilled in, it makes a handy place to store your bench dogs. Before I did this to mine, I was always misplacing them,
Thanks, good idea. Mine always get buried under stuff on the lower shelf.
A relatively inexpensive source for clear, kiln-dried oak boards are stair risers.
Thanks. I'll keep that in mind for when I run out. Someone gave me about 200 bd ft.
That's a brilliant source for excellent quality oak! Thanks for the tip!
Doesn't he mean treads.
@@donaldshimkus539 Huh, he did say risers. I automatically thought treads. I'm sure that's what he meant.
@@donaldshimkus539 no. risers - the vertical piece for each step
Well done, great skills. Good demonstration of how to use various tools. Interesting to watch and a great finish for a woodworking tool.
Thank you for the nice comments--and for watching.
Nice work. My old Workmate top is swollen and warped from moisture in the garage. Your video is a great inspiration for when I dig up the energy to replace it.
Thanks. Go for it. It makes a huge difference. I used red oak. White oak would be better for the moisture issue, or another resistant wood. Good luck.
I used a deck board to replace the original ply wood top, looks much better than the original, didn't drill any of the original holes for the pegs as I never used them. I just use my work mate as a seat or small work bench on the job, so far I have replaced two other tops for friends.
Sounds good. Deck boards must work well; others have also told me they used them. I use my dog holes all the time.
Looks Awesome. more like fine furniture. I want to refurbish my Workmate now. Thanks for The Great Video.
Thanks; that is a fine compliment. Glad I have inspired you.
quality workmanship
Thank you.
Nice job! Liked the use of oak in particular. I did the same thing with mine but used oregan pine at the time.. I've had my "workmate for over 30 years and still use it for projects...
Thanks. I like the oak for its durability. I like the look of pine better. In some of my other videos, you will see I'm using it in my house.
@@RCWorks I have a lot of oregan pine furniture in our home. A lot of it is rustic antique and I've made furniture from reclaimed floor-boards. Love the lustre it gets as it ages.. Agree with you around the durability of oak!
@@markforrestsm Oh nice. Same here, I like how it looks as it ages. That is how I want my house. It is going slowly though because I can't find much old pine around CO.
I made a new top for my workmate 30 years ago. Still on the job. Hint: be sure of where your saw blade is going.
great job bro, gonna restore mine now, thanks for the inspiration
Glad to help. Go for it; it will be great. Thanks for watching.
Been wanting to renew mine, this makes me want o do it sooner.
@@autoadjuster 👍
I did the same thing with my old workmate a few years ago. BEST TOOL I EVER BOUGHT. To the person that said it was boring...I guess wood working is not your area of interest.
Nice, keep it going with a new top. Mine was certainly worth the price for me; I don't know what my dad gave for it. 8-)
I have 4 of these and find them very useful. My favorite trick is to leave the lower legs folded up and use them as doorbucks. The bottoms are scratchy so protect a finished floor, but they are nice and stable and have a flat top for your tools.
That's a good idea; they are heavy enough to hold a door stable.
Mine has plastic covers on base that contacts floor when legs R folded. A model detail difference?
And yes, another vote for the lower position platform!
I recently replaced my '70s model WorkMate (the old one had rusted-out in places). Soon after putting it to use one of the clamp-boards started to delaminate. The retailer replaced the whole unit and advised me to do whatever I liked with the damaged one. Not wanting to dump a basically new, but imperfect WorkMate, a few phone calls resulted in B&D sending me a pair of clamp-boards gratis.I now have 2 WorkMates! They are definitely more useful than one. So if you need new clamp-boards and you don't have the wherewithal to make them yourself like RCWorks, they can be replaced at reasonable cost by contacting B&D.
Oh nice! You can have two things going at once, or put them end to end to work on a long piece--lots of possibilities.
I made one of these sometime ago when building a deck and made for use outside rain or shine .,with the manufactured deck wood not affected by the elements not in a shop and outside ,by hand skill saw and drill
Good idea. Several people have used deck wood. I imagine that will hold up well.
@@RCWorks 4 years now keeps me from running back to my shop when working outside
La mejor restauración en video de una mesa de trabajo. Congrats.
Thank you.
Excellent video. Interesting and easy to follow. Very explanitive 👍
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it.
Awesome! Definitely one of my future projects. I like your attention to detail.
Thank you. Glad to see another person repairing something instead of tossing it.
Sauvage Christian
now if he has to give up something, he gives up the frame! congratulations, beautiful wood and beautiful work
Thank you. Yes, the wood will last for many years.
guy could use a screw gun
@@jerrybettis5720 Screw gun would be wild on slotted screws. I reinstalled the screws with a nut driver. That works well too.
I've got one sitting outside and the press board is all swelled and flaking apart. It's also missing one small leg extension that I'll fix by putting it on a wheeled box I can use for storage.
Yes, good idea on the storage box part.
Nice job. I have to rework mine. Boards, handles. Now I’m gonna do it. Thanks
Thanks for the compliment. Glad you are inspired.
Have the mini table top version from Craftsman, used very little and have noticed chipping on my top as well. Think I might do this as a proactive repair. My top has some 1" square markings on it for layout work, no problem. Find someone with a CNC laser engraver and they can burn any design into the new work surface as well as your personal info for identification( might be good to hide it on the bottom).
Yes, I've seen that model, but never used it. Maybe humidity changes caused it to delaminate?
Bin the slotted screws from your stock !
I did it several years ago and never regretted it !
They are and have always been a nuisance when you have to put force on the screwdriver.
Now I use Torx screws only.
You're right, I don't buy slotted screws now. Those just happened to be on the bench already.
CXensation yep torx all the way
@@MetalMayhem1978 yep, torx are better for sure.
@@RCWorks screw gun?
@@jerrybettis5720 Nut driver this time, but no more slotted screws.
I'm with you. Slotted screws are the fruit of the devil. Great project, by the way. My Workmate's still fine, but I'm tempted to upgrade it preemptively as per your design.
Thank you. True and I don't buy slotted screws now; I just decided to reuse the originals on this project. You must take good care of your bench if the wood is still fine. 👍
Yes, slotted screws are a pain in the proverbial - but a bit less so if you actually have your work at a sensible angle so you're front-on to the screw head.
@@ianker7924 true, I should have turned it upside down on the floor. Thanks for watching.
Nice idea with solid lumber. My MDF top is getting in pretty bad shape.
Thanks. Go for it. Mine is working great.
Great upgrade to a workmate thank you for sharing your knowledge
You're welcome. Thank you for the compliment and for watching.
I want that for my old workmate, never gunna happen.
Bien travaillé ! J' ai fait exactement la même chose mais j' ai utilisé des lames pour terrasse. Le résultat est parfait !
👍 Good job. A lot of people have used deck boards.
Nice upgrade.using Hard wood instead of the plywood or particleboard than am with these Workmates... I like the fact that you doubled up on the Jaw faces, Nice Is... If you want to use your Workmates as saw horses just add a Piece of 3/4” Plywood about 3’ or so in length and about 4-5 inches wide on edge to keep work off of the solid surface. Add some carpet to one edge and you can lay a door or similar project to protect its finish... The un carpeted side can become sacrificial in nature(saw cut etc...). No I have to upgrade my four Workmate 400+ (blue in color) Again Nice video, Greg
Thanks, that's a good idea.
I saw one of these in a thrift store a couple of years ago, and they wanted 45 bucks for it! No one was buying it because you can get a new one for about the same price. In retrospect it was probably a good deal, because once you replaced the worn out wood and cleaned up the metal, it would probably out perform most of the junk that is currently on the market.
No doubt. If the new one is only $45, it will likely fall apart within the year. Thanks for watching.
Waxing, lubricating screws not to be underestimated ..
Absolutely, especially in hardwood. Thanks for watching.
I retopped mine and replaced lower part of one leg which had rusted....it is 40yrs old and sturdy...not so a 2yrs old work bench which is better used as a plank support
Yep, that old stuff lasted. I have a 50+ year old Craftsman belt sander. I replaced the brushes 20 years ago, and have just ordered a replcement for a burned bearing, but it still works fine.
Nice job. I've often said... the two greatest things man ever invented were the Workmate bench and the cordless drill. I need to do the same to mine since I left it outside for awhile and the moister didn't do the press board any favors. Still love mine though.
Thanks. Ha, yes, water and press board don't mix. Mine has always been inside; I just finally wore it out.
now if something breaks the frame breaks! congratulations, beautiful wood and beautiful work. the translator translated as he wanted
Yes, that wood will last a long time.
Man that thing is exactly like the one I "re-topped" last year. 2) 2X6s and done.
Cool. That will work just fine.
Great video. My UK Workmate has flat multiply wood Jaws that are flat ( not steeped like yours) is this just an alternate model?
Excellent Job, Better than new, I made mine into a SADDLE STAND, 4 when I repair saddles. ✝️⚾🙃
Oooooh, fantastic. Most original idea I have heard, and I get it; I grew up a cowboy, then went on to other adventures.
I have a B&D Workmate I need to upgrade. I leave it outside and the fake wood flakes and absorbs water, using treated oak will fix the issue.
Yep, oak will last longer. Mine is holding up well.
It looks too beautiful to use. I’d want to put it in the lounge and serve coffee on it!
Make sure you use a coaster. Thanks.
My laugh for the day, thanks.🤣
The hard part is finding a drill bit to match the size of the peg holes. If I recall correctly, it's 13/16, though possibly a metric size.
True, 13/16 would be odd. Mine is plain ole 3/4. Maybe some variations or different years had a different size; I'm not sure about that.
Yes, those are 20 mm holes.
@@alfredomarquez9777 Must be metric on the newer ones.
Very nice job. I've got an old one that looks about where you started (but I don't have one entire "side" of the surface). I've got plywood for the replacement, but that oak you used looks like it really might last forever. Also, replacing those slotted screws must have been no small satisfaction.
Thanks. Yes, that oak is holding up for sure. Of course, by now it has lots of dings and scrapes, but I can always make another one.
Agree. those slotted screws are a pain. You can get a of torque as long as the driver doesn't slip out.
@@RCWorks : May I humbly suggest you try some Robertson square recess hole head screws... Those are truly DELIGHTFUL to use, as they fit snuggly on the square tip screwdriver and don't fall from it even pointing straight down... even BETTER than the quite good Spax brand Torx head screws. Try 'em and you'll love 'em.
@@alfredomarquez9777 I have; you're right. Some day, I may switch. In this case, I wanted to reuse the originals, not bad after I put away the slotted driver and found the hex driver.
Great work. I hope this one stays this nice.
Thanks. It is still as sturdy as ever. However, it does already have a few dings and belt sander marks in it.
when you were trying to get the slotted screws out you should have put the workmate thing upside down on a workmate thing to make access easier.
Haha. Do you have an extra workmate thing?
*Show Off! With all your equipment I'd a made it out of Hickory & Cherry and make it thicker chopping blocked designed!*
WOW!!! You did an awesome job for this. Taking notes so in the future mine gets damaged this will be ideal :)
Thanks, and glad it helps you.
Awesome job, thanks for sharing!
Thank you.
Great film, hopefully I'll fix my workmate 😊merry Christmas
Thanks. Yes, fix it; it was worth it. Merry Christmas to you too.
just a suggestion....next time if you have to replacee the boards, make it 6 inches wider and add moe holes down the middle you'll love it
Hmmm. Never thought of that. Wider would be nice sometimes.
Camera on sled, good shot.
Thanks.
My Workmate is now twenty years old. I replaced the sorry particle board with 2x8 boards. Works great.
Excellent.
Mine had the same sorry stuff as yours. Thanks for watching.
The original Workmate was designed by a guy who worked on the research and development of the Hillman Imp.
Interesting--multi talented.
And the fabulous Lotus Elan!
@@bobmcl2406 👍
@@bobmcl2406 My cousin Derek Sleath worked with him on the Imp and the Elan.
@@mainmort neat! By the way, for other readers, the inventor was Rick Hickman. The Workmate, the Imp, and the Elan. What a legacy of a life well lived. He passed away in 2011.
Wonder what weirdo's disliked this video?. The replacement tops are brilliant.
I was given a WM700 series but the movable jaw is missing. I think I will follow this pattern, these will last forever. Well done matey.
Thanks. Yes, I can already tell the oak is going to last much longer than the original.
I wonder about the dislikes also, and some of the comments. Oh well-it isn't for everyone.
Good job
Thank you.
Great idea using paste wax on the screw threads, I've never seen that!
Yes, thank you. Always in hardwood so they don't break off in the wood.
You're probably not 60 yr old yet. Lol.
@@donaldshimkus539 Haha. Can't remember where I got it-probably from Norm.
I had one of those for about 30yrs. Towards the end I treated it too rough, busted it, threw it away. It sure as hell didn't owe me anything.
Haha. Well 30 years is a good run.
I found it interesting that your were using a push cut on the Radial Arm Saw at 00:10. I have done this even though the normal method is to draw the blade/motor towards you. Does it seem safer doing it that way or gives you a better cut?
That was just an experiment, but it did seem safer and was more comfortable. The down side is that it is more difficult to slide the board into position for the cut. Some day, I am going to try a negative rake blade. Have you tried that? Did it help?
@@RCWorks Just saw this, sorry about the late reply. No need for a negative rake blade. I thought that was a thing as well until I joined the DeWalt RAS forum. They opened my eyes to some of the misconceptions out there. Now just running a standard Diablo blade. ( I have 4 radial arm saws...) Stop by and join the group!
I have 4 B&D workmates model 300. I replaced the tops with 25mm thick birch faced ply and 25mm teak, then 2 coats of oil based varnish. Use the old vice jaws as a drill guide to get the holes in the right position. For the counterbores (where the bolt heads go, use a flat bit FIRST then open up the holes to the dia of the bolt (I think it's 8mm). If you drill 8mm holes first, you won't have any wood to drill the counterbore. (A counterbore is a flat bottomed hole, not to be confused with a countersink, which is a V shaped hole which is 90 degrees.
Four workmates, wow! You must love them. Which holds up better, the birch plywood or the teak.
Great if you’ve got a fully equipped workshop
Don't let that stop you. I've seen people make something perfectly functional with fewer, more common tools.
RCWorks Great, perhaps you can redo this project just using a handsaw, hand drill, carpenter square and pencil - can’t use my workmate as a bench (it needs repairing!). Hopefully yours, Iain.
@@iainrumsey7672 A person could certainly do it with the hand tools you mentioned-plus a plane to get the clamping edges straight and square. Unfortunately, I am not patient enough to do projects with hand tools. James Wright (Wood By Wright channel) is the man if you want to see how it is done.
That extra lip is great
Yes, works well. Thanks.
i used threaded inserts to secure my top with six mm bolts ..i also used them at both ends on the gripping face , this is so i can add a couple of small pieces of steel i cut ..i bolt them on and use them as a metal working vice when i need to for cutting threaded rod etc works a treat
Good idea for metal working. I hadn't thought to use it for metal, but I have a separate metal shop.
Nicely done!
Thank you.
4:25 what is the name of these screws? I can't find them anywhere
Try this: slotted washer hex head
@@RCWorks not seeing any that come with that dual thread
@@IcanCwhatUsay Thought you just needed wood screws. Search for Tapcon screws. They are concrete screws, but the only ones I know with that thread.
@@RCWorks bingo! That’s them! Thank you very much. I would have never found them otherwise
@@IcanCwhatUsay 👍
Great..except I don't have a router to do the edge 😕
Thanks. Oooh, sanding the edges will be a drag. Do you have a block plane? You would still have to sand the dog holes.
I have two older & different models. No problems with the restore except that for any parts or information I need a model number and a good source. How does one go about finding a model #? Also both sets of vise boards are particle wood and the holes for the bench dogs are way out of size and I do not have any of dogs left. What is an accurate size hole I should make? Appears to be 3/4?
I think you will have to do some research. Mine has no model number on it either. By searching "craftsman portable craft center" I found a parts list at searspartsdirect.com, but none of the parts are available, and one that sold at ebth.com which had a picture showing the tag with a partial model number on top of the work surface-kind of a dumb place to put it.
Dogs: Since you need new ones anyway, I think you should decide which dogs you like, buy them or make them, then drill the holes. You are correct that mine are 3/4".
What router bit did you use to make the groove for each vise jaw?
A V bit
@@RCWorks, for V bit, do you use the 60 degree or 90 degree router bit?
@@gauhdrung 90 degree
Great job. I need the same thing. Left mine out in the rain and the original pressed wood swelled and warped. I am also fabing a 3/16 welding plate to top mine off.
What kind of wood did you use?
Thanks. Oh yea, that rain wrecked it for sure. I like that welding plate idea. My welding area is in a separate space, so my welding table has to be separate. I used red oak because someone gave me a lot of it.
Can I ask what the little router was that you were using? Thanks.
It's called a trim router. Mine is Porter Cable, but lots of manufacturers make them. Thanks for watching.
Love this channel.
Thank you. Glad you're enjoying it.
I was looking online and someone said the holes are some specials size is this true? And I would love to make some replacement panels but I don’t have all those tools. Does anyone know a place you can buy replacements?
Thanks
The holes are not special; they are 3/4". Can't help you with replacements. Thanks for watching.
Cam Shaft Amazon sells them.
I have rebuilt three of these of various years. Also one Craftsman not as high quality as the real Workmates. My original is now in need of replacement tops and, your inspiration has shamed me into doing it right! What size and what type of bit did you use for the Plastic "Dogs"?
Beautiful work.
Uuuuh, that is good right? I don't mean to shame. My dogs are 3/4", so that is what I drilled. You know a old Craftsman probably was a
Workmate, right? They never built their own stuff, but bought it from the manufacturers.
The B&D holes are 20mm. Bought a 20mm Forstner bit for $7.95 and free shipping from www.mlcswoodworking.com/shopsite_sc/store/html/smarthtml/pages/forsbit.htm
Fantastic
I say the same thing every time I use a slotted screw!
Haha. Yes, what a pain. I no longer keep slotted screws in my shop. Did you notice later in the video I found my hex driver? Those screws do have hex heads on them as well as slotted. Thanks for watching.
É gratificante ver um trabalho desses?
Thank you. Glad you liked it.
Regarding the notches you routed into edges of both sides, would it not work as well to close up the top and drill a comparable hole?
It should work with a comparable sized hole--too big a hole and it wouldn't hold smaller pieces.
03:25: Yes, but no. It's not the fault of the screwdriver but the fault of the screw, or to be more precise, of the person that decided to use slotted-head screws.
Ha ha ha. Good point. They were already there, so I reused them. I could have switched for something better.
@@RCWorks you're right! Just the nitpicker in me :))