Chipboard isnt great, its a habit of slowly crumbling away. And putting screws into it also have a habbit of pulling out or not being able to use the same hole time nad again mounting stuff the the bench.
Old fire doors, or the council type that are just strip laminates. Those are 2" thick solid timber
Plus with solid, as the top becomes damaged, stained or covered with paint, glue and the like, you can belt sand the whole thing clean.
Mine here is 44mm thick top made from standard cheapo pine, with the front overhang(need an overhang to get clamps and the like onto) of 8" being another 44mm plank screwed on to thicken it and add a bit of support and less bounce, when bashing into things with hammers and the like.
So you could add a flat plank or some strips of 18mm mfd glued together and placed under :?
TBH I'd never had the time to construct a proper bench. I'd love to spend some time making one, given the big cabinetmakers benches can be £2000 to buy.
Front view and camera turned around to the rest of the pigsty
Some rather tasty work stations out there well planned and executed. Google.
Old fire doors, or the council type that are just strip laminates. Those are 2" thick solid timber
Plus with solid, as the top becomes damaged, stained or covered with paint, glue and the like, you can belt sand the whole thing clean.
Mine here is 44mm thick top made from standard cheapo pine, with the front overhang(need an overhang to get clamps and the like onto) of 8" being another 44mm plank screwed on to thicken it and add a bit of support and less bounce, when bashing into things with hammers and the like.
So you could add a flat plank or some strips of 18mm mfd glued together and placed under :?
TBH I'd never had the time to construct a proper bench. I'd love to spend some time making one, given the big cabinetmakers benches can be £2000 to buy.
Front view and camera turned around to the rest of the pigsty
Some rather tasty work stations out there well planned and executed. Google.