Frame left. Notice top lag screws are countersunk so that I have a flat surface underneath the bench top. I also cut the wood as shown to maximize the under bench space for my cabinet. I still wanted all the vertical weight to be born wood-on-wood, as shown, instead of relying only on hardware to hold it together.
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Frame right. I chose a 2x6 sideways to help resist torsion. Press torque is the primary stress.
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Liquid nail on bottom 3/4 pine plywood
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Top 3/4 in Oak plywood clamped to bottom 3/4 pine for liquid nail to set.
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I cut 2 dado cuts in the bench top to mount T-Track. It lets me share the bench space to use multiple presses, a vise, bench grinder, etc. Multi-purpose bench top. I used an ordinary bench saw to make the cuts.
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Next, I built a 5 drawer cabinet to go under the bench. These are the drawer fronts. All plywood was sealed with multiple coats of polyurethane because Houston weather is so humid.
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The drawers are made using Blum Metabox full extension 330M drawer slides. They are 22" deep by 19 1/2 wide, rated for 75 pounds.
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Mostly finished cabinet
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I cut the 48 inch T-Track in half at an angle so that it fit flush in the dado cuts.
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Mounted:
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Finished bench.
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Sense of scale for drawer size. Note that having full extension drawer slides instead of the more common 3/4 extension was important to me.
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Lightweight mount for my Lee C press that I use to resize bullets.
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A heavier mount is 1/16 steel plate backed by 3/4 plywood. This lets me countersink the bolt heads so the mount will sit flush on the bench.
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