Erin Burke
Well-Known Member
(I posted this over on BF... thought y'all might be interested as well.)
This is going to be a long, photo-intensive thread.
This year I got a smokin' tax refund and decided to pick up a couple of tools that I've always wanted. The first thing I pick up was a Millermatic 212 Mig. The second thing on my list was a bench-top mill. I decided on the Sieg X3 model sold by Grizzly (G0463). This thread chronicles some of my adventures - so far - in getting this mill.
The first step in the process was finding space, and building a station on which to place the mill. My shop is in the basement of my house and is VERY small (about 9'x21' if I remember correctly). The photo below shows the north wall of my shop before I started.
You can see my drill press in the far left corner. The roaster on the two horses is filled with Parks 50, and right next to it is my kiln. As you can see, I have some work to do.
So I went to my local recycled cabinetry store and bought 57" of old kitchen cabinets for my new bench. While there, I also found two 1-1/2" tabletops that fit perfectly over the cabinets. I figured I'd double them up to make a nice, 3"-thick heavy-duty bench-top to support the mill's 353lbs of advertised weight. The problem with the two tabletops, however, was that they were only 1-1/2" thick around the edges. In the middle, they were only 3/4" thick. The photos below show my solution to the problem.
That's right... those are 2x4's in the middle. As we all know, a 2x4 is actually 1-1/2" thick... a perfect fit for the hollow space between the two table-tops. They are glued...
... and screwed together. AWESOME...
And there's also a meaty surprise underneath the new top. It seemed to me that the weak point in the cabinets was between the two big drawers/doors. There was just not much support in there. So I took two lengths of 1-1/4" pipe with flanges on the ends and placed them so that they run vertically between the drawers/doors from the underside of the bench-top down to the concrete floor beneath. I wish I had taken a photo before I put the top on.
I did however take a photo of me testing the bench's load-bearing capacity... you know... just for fun.
The photo speaks for itself.
This is going to be a long, photo-intensive thread.
This year I got a smokin' tax refund and decided to pick up a couple of tools that I've always wanted. The first thing I pick up was a Millermatic 212 Mig. The second thing on my list was a bench-top mill. I decided on the Sieg X3 model sold by Grizzly (G0463). This thread chronicles some of my adventures - so far - in getting this mill.
The first step in the process was finding space, and building a station on which to place the mill. My shop is in the basement of my house and is VERY small (about 9'x21' if I remember correctly). The photo below shows the north wall of my shop before I started.

You can see my drill press in the far left corner. The roaster on the two horses is filled with Parks 50, and right next to it is my kiln. As you can see, I have some work to do.
So I went to my local recycled cabinetry store and bought 57" of old kitchen cabinets for my new bench. While there, I also found two 1-1/2" tabletops that fit perfectly over the cabinets. I figured I'd double them up to make a nice, 3"-thick heavy-duty bench-top to support the mill's 353lbs of advertised weight. The problem with the two tabletops, however, was that they were only 1-1/2" thick around the edges. In the middle, they were only 3/4" thick. The photos below show my solution to the problem.

That's right... those are 2x4's in the middle. As we all know, a 2x4 is actually 1-1/2" thick... a perfect fit for the hollow space between the two table-tops. They are glued...

... and screwed together. AWESOME...
And there's also a meaty surprise underneath the new top. It seemed to me that the weak point in the cabinets was between the two big drawers/doors. There was just not much support in there. So I took two lengths of 1-1/4" pipe with flanges on the ends and placed them so that they run vertically between the drawers/doors from the underside of the bench-top down to the concrete floor beneath. I wish I had taken a photo before I put the top on.
I did however take a photo of me testing the bench's load-bearing capacity... you know... just for fun.

The photo speaks for itself.