Yeah now that I've seen Terry's bench I feel like I need to do some trim and paint work on my benchLol! Defintely a good looking set up Terry
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Thank you!
Yeah now that I've seen Terry's bench I feel like I need to do some trim and paint work on my benchLol! Defintely a good looking set up Terry
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I don't have pictures but what I have done is each press has a dedicated steel plate that it's bolted to. All the holes in the steel plate match the holes in the table with countersunk nuts into the table so it's just a matter of three or four bolts very quick turn out and you put on a different press was very inexpensive and easy.
I just have 1/4" holes and drop a carriage bolt through the top and spin a wing nut on from below.
I don't think they'd counter sink into oak very well
lots of ways to do it ledd. i just took a one foot square 1/2” steel plate. since my final top on bench was 1/2 plywood i cut a spot out so plate fits flush with bench top. then drill and tap plate for various tools.Yeah now that I've seen Terry's bench I feel like I need to do some trim and paint work on my benchLol! Defintely a good looking set up Terry
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My bench top is 3/4 ply laminated to 1/2 ply, with a piece of 1/2 X 10 X 60 aluminum plate at the front. I drilled and tapped holes for 4 presses. I keep 3 in place, the two Dillons and the Rockchucker. The tapped mounting holes for the shotshell progressive, a Wilson trimtool tool, etc, are all plugged with setscrews to keep the work area flush and clean. If I need to mount anything else I will drill and tap for it.
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These allow presses to be placed in an infinite number of locations:![]()
My bench already looks way worse than Terry's. I don't need more eyesores! Lol![]()
Nice. How much did that big slab of aluminium run you and where did you get it?
OK, I wasn't aware Better Homes and Gardens magazine had started to cover Man Cave decorums.My bench already looks way worse than Terry's. I don't need more eyesores! Lol![]()