All-in-One Portable Workshop!
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- Опубліковано 2 жов 2024
- All in One, Ultra-Portable Workshop! MicroShop - the most capable miniature workshop ever!
Get the Plans here: oneminuteworkb...
Like these videos? Support me on Patreon: / oneminuteworkbench
Building the MicroShop, Part 1: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 2: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 3: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 4: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 5: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 6: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 7: • Building the MicroShop...
Building the MicroShop, Part 8: • Building the MicroShop...
Make a Saw Track WITHOUT a Table Saw: • How to Make a Saw Trac...
Have a question? Hit me up on social media:
Facebook & Instagram: @oneminuteworkbench
Twitter: @oneminworkbench
Find more cool stuff at: oneminuteworkb...
Music:
Ballon Animals by Matt Large
#OneMinuteWorkbench
#MicroShop
If you add a removable screw attachment to the extending support arm, it could double as a moxon vise. Great job friend!!!! I started designing my own micro shop after seeing yours. Thanks for the inspiration.
Awesome idea! Good luck with your project!
This is pretty amazing. You were able to incorporate all this functionality into a single small package along with safety features built in. Those are usually missing from almost all other projects like this.
Thank you very much, Allen! I'm glad you dig it!
Honestly, I am almost done my build after purchasing the plans. Just love it. Read the plans, watch the videos. ALSO, do not cheap out on the plywood, I will eventually redo the whole thing with good quality wood, but so far brilliant. LOVE it. Hoping to see what you have in mind for a mobile stand.
wow. that is a super impressive build. that must've taken a LOT of time to completely figure out (design, build, etc). Very cool. Well done, sir.
Thanks! And yes....it's been a long, painful journey 🤣
This looks perfect. Like, totally amazing. Holy cow.
Thank you, Robert!
Awesomely amazing
Thank you!
Great result, great design! I've never seen such a small "All-in-One-Shop". Greetings from Germany, Robert
Thank you!
I built one of these and it’s really a perfect tool for small jobs. Everything you need is right there and pretty convenient. You can add drill press mounted sanding drums and you’re able to sand both inside and outside corners. It’s a bit of a pain to build if you don’t have a shop but the result is worth it.
I’m glad you’re happy with it! Thanks for sharing!
Isn't it heavy with 3 layers of plywood for the tabletop?
@@kevinphoenixx9068 it weighs about as much as a good 10” table saw (aluminum table and plastic body). It isn’t too bad.
@@kevinphoenixx9068 is more like 1 layer of 1/2” plywood and 1/2 layer of 1/4” plywood. It’s not very heavy.
@@jellyrollhonkey I thought 3 layers of one 12mm and two 18mms on d top.
Looking forward for the version with dust collector! Would be great for an apartment :))
I added collection for the table saw. Here's a link: ua-cam.com/video/fBgYm0i8SoQ/v-deo.html I hope this helps!
This would be my dream work kit
great build. My shed is small so this is perfect for me.
This is great, I guess the only thing that could really “improve” it for mobile/remote use would be to power with a 20v lithium battery, 1 big one (like a 6 or 8 amp hour) wired to all the tools. I know, it would be extra work, but it would make it usable off grid with just a small solar panel to keep the battery charged up 🤔
Bravo
Thanks!
Very smart and inspiring. Thank you! Regards from Spain
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you, man! An amazing work. I'll build one for me right now!
Good luck with the project!
Now I want to watch a video with one with dust collection
Great job @oneminuteworkbench This is the most perfect complete, diy, multifunctional, table saw, sanding disc, drill press, bandsaw/jigsaw package. A++ I'll gladly pay for plans.
To any and all concerned citizens/ "hey man, just my 'professional' critique..." (🤢)
One question:
Where's yours? 🙇🏾♂️
Thank you for letting me know you dig the project! I don't understand the question though...can you clarify?
OMG!!!!!! I NEED THIS ASAP!!! But miniature one. Please build for miniature project. It took me days just to cut my wood.
Even more miniature?! What size would be ideal?
@@OneMinuteWorkbench LOL. YES!! My project can't use yours.
@@OneMinuteWorkbench How bout 6 inch by 6 inch? Or around 10 cm. Really love yours but I cant use them.
@@OneMinuteWorkbench How bout 10 cm by 10 cm?
DIYStarMS If you’re at all being serious, you can completely downscale this to use with a rotary tool such as a Dremel. Basically everything this setup would do, but in miniature scale and you’d have to swap bits and accessories or buy multiple rotary tools. There are even little saw blades available so you could have a tiny circular saw or table saw.
Geat idea. Although it's not for me in its entirety, I am interested in the drill press & jiq saw portions.
Thank you! I'll probably make a separate drill press now that's a little more feature rich than this one, and if I do, I'll be sure to post a video ;-) Also, for the jigsaw table, check this out: ua-cam.com/video/erFEALaKiqs/v-deo.html I hope this helps!
Very nice!
Make the slightly bigger one with dust collection and I'm in!
Thanks for the feedback!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench No problem, great design!
Just found your channel and subscribed. This is what I have been looking for. Wow. Amazing stuff
Thanks for subscribing, and welcome to the channel!
Awesome man
holy shit i never hit the subscribe button so hard so quickly, this is great design !
Thank you, and welcome to the channel!
Very cool
Thanks.... Liked and subscribed :)
Thanks for subscribing and welcome to the channel!
That looks great. I'm really tempted to build it.
Thank you! If you do tackle the project, keep me posted on your progress!
I love it!! Looking forward to the series. It amazes me what you come up with and I enjoy all your videos. Great work!
Thank you, Lisa!
this is amazing!!! so smart. so impressive how many things you fit in such a small area
Thanks, Shannon - I hope you're doing well! When are you going to put out your next video?
One Minute Workbench I’m good! Super busy. How about you? Haha I’ll be posting a video soon hopefully haha. I’m good at filming videos but not the best at actually editing haha so have probably 5 videos of footage I need to edit haha
Quit messing around and post!!!
One Minute Workbench hahaha you are very right. Definitely been putting it off. Okay I promise I’ll post one by the end of this week
Nice!
It looks great! Thanks for sharing this.
Thank you!
Wow, this is so cool - Nice work Tommy!
Thanks Tim!
Sick
Thanks!
Awesome project - quick question, where can you add a Twin Screw Vise to this?
Wow! Bad ass bro!
Thank you!
As usual, yet another brilliant design, virtually out of box thinking. But, i feel $30 is a bit on the high side for a project of this nature, if you are really like to help out guys, who happen to live in small space and on budget for everything. I suggest please review it, if possible.
Thank you, and thanks for the feedback!
30 dollars is fair. For a project with this much thought gone into it. You are on your own now buddy. His time and effort.has to be worth something don't you think?
@@chrisallen9154 I appreciated the video and the project meant for guys who work in small apartments and cant afford space and budget. Author has responded to my feedback and I am happy about it. and others need not bat for him.
I am totally in awe of this build. As compact as it is, it feels like there is very little being compromised on! One question is do have for you is whether you think the extendable arm could also second as a vise, using some wooden knob+thread solution like you have used elsewhere in the build?
Great idea, nicely done. love it!
Thank you so much!
fantastico !!! sarebbe bello vedere lo schema tecnico.
Grazie! Ho piani tecnici completi in vendita sul mio sito web. Sfortunatamente, non sono in italiano, quindi potrebbe essere difficile da capire. Puoi usare Google Translate per leggerli, ma non è mai lo stesso al 100%. Se sei interessato, ecco un link: oneminuteworkbench.com/product/microshop/ Comunque, sono contento che ti sia piaciuto il video!
Very clever!
Thank you, Greg!
I'd be interested in learning exactly how you'd adapt the design of this--as you mentioned--in all three dimensions, and where you'd attach the vacuum tube, to accommodate a dust removal capability.
I second the dust removal version request. I live in a small studio--my workspace is my living space. I'll put up with a slighly larger footprint if it allows dust extraction.
Would this work for me if I were an oscillating fan? 😁
😂
Love this project 😍
Thank you!
Zit is great.
Thank you!
Does the table saw have a safety guard attachment
I want to buy it!
you are a genious
Oh stop!...No, go on!
I would like to purchase the plan and build this but the description scared me! How does one learn to be proficient with a circular saw!? I am a beginner but would like to build this
Thanks for your interest in the plans! It's definitely not for beginners, so if that's where you're at, you'll want to build up your skillset a little before you start this one. If you're an absolute newbie to woodworking, I'd recommend watching videos that cover the basics of how to use common tools, or maybe even take a class (if that's an option for you). I hope this helps give you some direction!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench thank you so much for the quick response. I did not think about searching locally for classes. Looking forward to gaining some skills and creating some of these projects!
I'm really interested in ordering your plans. One question that I have , however, is how essential is it to use the Harbor Freight tools which are specified ? I live in the Philippines, and there is no Harbor Freight stores here, and the local electric is 220v. …. so I doesn't seem to be an option to have them shipped from the U.S., as they would be 110v.. Would using locally sold tools be overly difficult to modify for use ? Thank you !
Nice build, but ugh...I cringed when I saw those small pieces stacking up between the tablesaw and the fence!
I agree. That's just waiting for a material kickback to happen.
Thank you, and thanks for the safety feedback! Have another look, and you'll notice that I have a spacer clamped to the fence. By the time the piece is being cut, it no longer is making contact with the spacer. Kickback happens when the piece being cut is tightly held in between the blade and something else (usually the fence, but can be anything on the opposite side of the piece being cut). So the spacer allows me to make repeated cuts of a certain size, but again, it's far enough back on the fence to make sure that the piece being cut is no longer touching it by the time it starts touch the saw blade. I hope this makes sense!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench well, to each his own i guess, but for me, that's too much risk.
@@OneMinuteWorkbench You are totally correct, but in the future you may want to use a bit wider piece of scrap for your stop block. I used to use a piece of 3/4 for a stop block until a cutoff piece rotated just a bit and got caught between the blade and the fence and went flying across the shop. Now I use a scrap of 6/4 as a stop block and haven't had any more issues. Awesome design altogether and kudos for making your plans available for everyone!
You're absolutely right - I should have been using a thicker piece to reduce the risk even further. Thanks for sharing about your experience...we could all stand to be a little safer!
Thanks so much for this series, Tommy! I've always enjoyed your content. The fact that you share your mistakes and the process you take to problem-solve is a rare treasure in the how-to/diy genre.
I'm finally in a position to start this build, but the website has been down for a little bit now. Will the plans be made available again?
Boa noite. Muito bom este trabalho.
Estou no Brasil e gostaria de receber um tutorial, para fazer uma igual.
Os planos para o projeto estão disponíveis no site oneminuteworkbench.com. Espero que isso ajude!
what if you want to do curve cuts?
With the jigsaw? No problem! Have a look here and you'll see where I do curved cuts with a very similar build: ua-cam.com/video/erFEALaKiqs/v-deo.html Some people have also mentioned that by using thinner blades, they've gotten even tighter curves. Anyway, I hope this helps!
This is a very good idea for small shops. Though the ripping knife is not close enough to the sawblade to be a safety feature. Material can still get caught on the back side of the blade.
Is not a riving knife, is a splitter, two different things. Considering that even commercially available table saws don't come with a riving knife or a splitter, this one having it is really an advantage and a good safety measure. Make it longer and the changes of kickback are reduced.
@@jellyg.8961 I meant a riving knife. My iPhone spellchecker change it. I did not see that. My commercial table saw came with a riving knife. I have never seen a commercial table saw without one. It might be by law here in Denmark. Not sure. I do not care what you call it. It is still not close enough to the blade to prevent kickbacks. That was my point. There is amble space for something to get caught on the back of the blade.
This has to be the most insane design I've ever seen. Srsly how do you come up with these ideas.
Thanks! That's a really awesome compliment!
I know right??! This is incredibly complex and impressive. It should have way more attention
30 dollars is a bit much for me but looks neat
Well I watched this again and decided I should give it a go.
I'll be ordering the plans soon, but I do have one question.
How long did it take (not including mistakes if any) to complete the whole project from start to finish?
I think it took me 3 weeks, of relatively normal to long work days/work weeks. However, my projects usually take me about 3 times as long when I’m filming as opposed to when I’m not filming. Also, I was encountering the mistakes in the blueprints that needed to be repaired during that “prototype” build. If I were to build it from the plans, with no errors, I think I could do it in under a week. All that said, it’ll depend on your skill level...customers who are just following the blueprints often beat the timeframe I would think possible (I guess I’m a slow worker 😂). Many people have built the one Minute Workbench V.2 is just a day or two, and lots of people build the smaller plans (all the $5 plans) in just a few hours. No one has mentioned how long this one takes yet though, so I’m still sort of waiting to see what the general consensus is. So...I guess the answer is a big fat “it depends”....probably not what you were after 😂, but I hope it helps!
Holy shit! This is probably the best all-in-one table I've seen. Great design! 😁👍
Thank you!
Thanks so much for this! I'm going to hold off for a version with dust collection (don't mind the extra inches), then you can have my thirty bucks! Is there any possibility that an add-on of some kind can be constructed? I'd be willing to pay extra for the dust-collection add-on...
Bill, no problem! I am going to try to squeeze dust collection into this original design, but no guarantees. If I do manage it, I'll offer those instructions as a free upgrade to those who've purchased. If I have to do a whole new design, I'll charge for those. Again - NO GUARANTEES, but I'll try. I hope this helps!
It's been 3 weeks!! WHERE ARE THE BUILD VIDEOS!?!?
Working on it!
My jaws were down. Every time you do something I'm surprised the way you make your projects. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you! That's a really great compliment!
This is an incredible project, Tommy! I know you mostly used HF tools but how difficult would it be to use my own corded power tools or ones that I can acquire from FB/OfferUp, etc? I just built a workbench and ready to start on this project next!
Thank you! It would just depend on the size of your tools. If they are about the same size as the ones I used (or smaller), you should be able to get it to work. If you look at the sales page for the plans, there is a diagram of the tool sizes to help you figure it out - here's a link: oneminuteworkbench.com/product/microshop/ Another thing to think about is that Harbor Freight tools are very inexpensive. So if you can find one the right size on OfferUp, in a worse case scenario, new tools still won't cost much. Anyway, I hope this helps - best of luck!
You should tape a dust buster to the side of it for dust collection.
Hi Tommy, I am not very happy about this video. It's come about 18 months too late!!! LOL. This project looks amazing. Where do you get your ideas from? If I needed one of these, $30 for the plans is an absolute steal. Cheers, Huw
😂 Thank you - I'm glad you dig it!
How can I get these plans to build this .... AWAOME VIDEO BRO
Thank you, I’m glad you dig it! You can get the plans here: oneminuteworkbench.com/product/microshop/ I hope this helps!
I've managed to build out my shop quite a bit over the past couple of years, so I don't really need anything like this. That being said, I can't wait for this build series. I've incorporated a lot of your ideas into my shop already, and I'm just fascinated by your ingenuity. This is an incredibly clever idea that could get a lot of folks making some sawdust.
Thank you so much for letting me know you're getting something out of the channel - I appreciate it!
Holy engineering, Batman! I think we should call you something, like, "Tommy Edison," maybe, or "One MInute Mastermind." And a couple of good estate/garage sales might lower the cost of the tools, or at the very least, get you some older, higher quality tools that would work well for the MicroShop.
Thank you, Bonnie! You're too kind :-)
That's 'feckin' brilliant - well done. Should be taught in high school wood shops
Thank you!
Seriously
This is a great shop project for high school courses, it could fit in any dwelling space effectively for years to come afterwards. Very well done.
I could see it on a turntable as adding even greater efficiency to the work flow when you incorporate it on a stand.
Thanks for the awesome compliment, and sharing the turntable idea!
Question:
I see that you only have Part 1, Table Saw plans available are the moment with parts 2&3 to be delivered shortly. Before I buy, can you tell me the cost of materials for just building the Part 1 portion? It’s present buying season, and knowing what the minimum I need to spend to get a table saw completed would be really helpful for budgeting. Thanks!
-Nick
Let's see, you'd still need to buy the plywood and the circular saw.... probably around $120-150. I hope this helps!
Tommy, this is pretty impressive. And 30 sounds reasonable for all your hard work and thoughtful planning. Thanks.
Thanks Anne! I'm glad you think so!
I don't have the suggested table saw skills right now but I hope I will in the next 6 months. I like your approach and commentary. I know I'm not alone in the never gonna have a "several thousand dollar workbench" club.
I'm sure you will ;-) And you never know...you may be in the multi-thousand dollar workbench club. It only takes winning the lottery once!
Would you be able to sell me a plan just for what is need to build the table saw
Beautiful, Tommy. Just curious - how much does it weigh?
It weighs exactly 80 lbs when all of the accessories are loaded into it. Being a spry (relatively) young guy, I can move it around pretty easy, but it's definitely easier to move if you remove all the accessories. I hope this helps!
Are you still selling this micro shop already assembled? Where can it be purchased?
Sooo how bout you build me one and ship it. I would pay for a setup like this already done and pay whatever the price would be. 😎
I started building it few weeks ago and I have been documenting my journey with the micro shop for anyone interested. :) It's going well so far, being nearly finished - and I've learned a lot! Thanks for that Tommy!
Awesome! Can’t wait to see it!
i really love your project. one question: can you imagine a possibility to install a lathe (like you built in another video)?
I guess you could add just about anything in there you'd like. It just becomes a matter of what's most important to you, and the overall size of the unit. Either way, good luck!
LOVE this design!!!! When will you post the video for the bench you mentioned?
Also, (sorry for all the questions) do you already have plans for the bench that goes underneath?
And you mentioned you could add dust collection if you made the box a little bigger...do you already have plans for the bigger box with dust collection for each tool?
Hey tommy you sell those ?
Not yet!
This looks really cool... would love to see dust collection and a stand incorporated.
I don't have the space to tie up for equipment that i don't use regularly, but if this could pack up and roll into the corner when not in use...
Look up the power8 workshop
@@pottersmiles7238 I actually just did. The ratings of the Power8 workshop aren't good at all. 1 star. based on what I saw, I'd definitely favour the one from One Minute Workbench over the power8.
@@mfatalthanks for your reply. It was just a suggestion. I dont have one myself but I saw it on Dragons Den UK. On amazon it has 34 reviews and is rated 3.3 stars. Theres also a Pro version and im sure there will be other brands of similar style to research before purhase. Good luck ☺
@@pottersmiles7238 hmm overall it may have 3.3, I looked mainly to the all the recent reviews that all seemed 1.
The advantage of the DIY all in one portable is that you can use whatever tool (and replace the tool) where the other one is tailor made tools. (Or so it seems)
Mass production idea... but then they wouldn’t make any money..nice ideas
Glad you dig it!
I think this just may be my saving grace for my newly formed apartment life.
Let me know if it turns out to be, because that would be awesome!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench will do. Gonna get the plans and start on it my next day off.
Ok, I'm sold. I'm having issues worth my shop/garage not having enough room. I'm disposing of big stuff and going small. I need me some videos... ;)
I'm glad you found it helpful! Build videos are coming soon!
Awesome project, but dust collection would be really great! Any immediate plans to extend that? If so and if I purchase the current plans, would you include the dust collector extension for free (in a future update)?
Thank you! We'll just have to wait and see about dust collection. If I'm able to squeeze it into the original design, I'll just offer it as a free upgrade...if I have to redesign the whole thing, then I'll probably have to charge for it in order to make the redesign worth the time it takes. Anyway, I hope this helps! Thanks again!
Wow,I would so love this! I love to make stuff myself, made a tool chest type thing for my tools and mini sander.
How much is the instructions to make this and also could I made a handle on it so I could pick it up as I live in a small flat and have to carry my tools outside to do the work (got too much dust in my place in the past lol).
Love what you do, keep it up 👆!
Thank you! You could definitely make handles for it, but I think you'd be better to make a container that doubles as a bench or coffee table. You could add handles to that. Either way, it's $30, and here's a link to the plans: oneminuteworkbench.com/product/microshop/ I hope this helps!
Ok nice idea! And thanks again for the link... I actually found it after I posted my comment lol.
Love the videos, keep them coming!
😁
Ептваю... Половину ролика ждал криейта, а тут просто реклама
Very nice! And you used one of my favorite tool brands- Harbor Freight! Take that, tool snobs.
lol 🤣
how much for that?
The entire build, including the tools, cost me about $430. I hope this helps!
Hi Tommy, do the plans come with metric system also?
Thanks.
John, yes they do! I hope this helps!
That’s what I was gonna ask about the dust collection. Won’t the storage be covered with dust?
Yes...it gets dusty as hell! Well, actually, I don't know how dusty hell is ;-) either way, I've been using compressed air to blow it out every now and then, and that's been working. Anyway, thanks for stopping by to comment!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench Probably not that dusty since dust is explosive and Hell is supposed to be a lake of fire. Of course the dust might be the fuel, keeping it going.
😂
I love it!!!! How heavy is it? Oh, thats what casters are for.
Awsesome job, keep it up
It's around 80 pounds with all the tools, and all the components inside the box. Being that I'm (relatively 😂) young, I can carry it fairly easily. If I was going to move it a lot, I'd probably put it on casters (as you mentioned) or have some sort of dolly arrangement for it. I hope this helps!
Tommy, modify that table saw extension to double as a clamp!
Great idea!
The elephants are gonna love this...
😂
Including Balooo ..The Bear !!! Lol !
...now...to do some Serious Bit of Sanding !
Come on man, stop using the miter with the fence in place. Learn some basic safety.
Thanks for the feedback! Have another look at the video; you'll see that I'm using a spacer to provide clearance between the workpiece and the fence. I hope this helps!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench it doesn't make it safer, that's a common myth. The piece could still twist or vibrate into the blade. Small pieces like that shouldn't even be made on a table saw.
Thanks for sharing your opinion!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench It's not my opinion, it's decades of reported accidents and safe practice from people who have learned what works. Good luck.
I want to make this, but from 8020! :)
If you do, be sure to email me pics!
Could you not fit a belt sander onto it? lol
Nice build though
lol - I'm glad you dig it!
love the arm for large material...wish my $2000 table saw had that (and it looks like your mitre gauge is better too LOL)
well done.
I hear ya! I felt that if I was building my own, I might as well give it the features I always wish my table saw had - I huge support arm, and a ridiculously large miter gauge. The miter gauges they send with table saws are a complete joke! Although I didn't show it in the video, I also make another accessory for that slot: it's a permanent 90 degree "L" that extends all the way over to the blade. So it's basically a one-sided sled. It's really handy for cross-cutting small pieces. Anyway, thanks for stopping by to comment!
@@OneMinuteWorkbench well, you did it good man.
yeah, from that description I think I have a similar "L" for cutting panels square...my mitre gauge didn't quite cut it ;)
keep up the good work
멋집니다.
대단해요
좋은영상 감사합니다.
고맙습니다! 나는 당신이 그것을 좋아해서 기쁘다!
This thing is slicker than snot on a polished brass doorknob.
I'd be willing to bet that you could whittle the costs down, a bit, if you search around Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace, LetGo, etc., for the appropriate powered hand tools that the project requires.
😂 thanks for the compliment!
Smooth, strong and accurate. Love this guy. He should teach some math to nasa scientists.
lol - thanks again!
What? No jointer/planer? Just kidding. That is a BRILLIANT design. I am really blown away by the on/off switch mechanism. WELL DONE sir!
Thank you, David! I have to admit....I'm pretty proud of those safety switches. Store bought ones are SO expensive!
Can you make it so the tools can be taken out within a minute so you can still use the tools
I'd have to redesign certain parts, but it could be done. Thanks for sharing that idea!