Today was really great! I set out to do some serious work in the shop, which was kind of hard because of the addition of that extra workbench I got free on the street. My "method" was to simply begin doing jobs, shoving stuff out of the way to give myself access to the needed tools. (Everything in the shop is on wheels.) Gradually, the best places for each machine kind of sorted themselves out. One blazing bit of creative thinking (joke) involved deciding that since I am in "non-lathe" mode, get the lathe out of the picture. I moved it out of the shop area and stashed it in what used to be my gun room but now holds camping gear. It can readily be wheeled back out to the shop if a use for it comes up.
Moving that left the possibility for stashing tools two deep in the corner, opening up the floor quite a bit and permitting placement of the new workbench in a usable location. Yippee!
The final arrangement didn't gel until the end of the day, and along the way, I got a LOT of work done. Here are some pix of the new shop arrangement and of the day's work...
What you're looking at here is 5 tools... On the back wall are a Rigid oscillating belt/spindle sander; Grizzly 6x48 belt sander, and Grizzly overhead drum sander. In front of those are a Grizzle pneumatic drum sander and Delta drill press. The drill press is the most used tool and is usable as placed.
Moving and packing the tools into the corner as shown above permitted the placement of the "new" work bench against the wall, with the Grizzly bandsaw and DeWalt contractor saw to either side. Above the bench are some wall mounted bins full of smaller hand power tools, with long items like glass lams and such stored on top of it. Buried deep in the corner alcove behind the bandsaw is some wood storage and heavy shelves holding some power tools that can be gotten out and used as needed... a jointer, chop saw and a scroll saw, plus a bunch of toolboxes dedicated to things like Dremel tools, soldering, refinishing, etc.
Opposite wall, back corner... My regular woodworking bench, with a tall roll around tool chest and against the back wall, a grinding bench. The Grizzly dust collector is in a temporary spot. It will get installed in the furnace room behind the shop, with an overhead duct system.
Forward or front view of that side of the shop... the roll around hot box, with screw and nail bin shelves above and the roll around worktable, which of course can be anywhere.
All of these tools are, as mentioned, on wheels. In any kind of good weather, the paved driveway in front of the garage becomes expanded shop space.
OK... what did I accomplish besides rearranging the lifeboats? Here you go... one good day's work...
You're looking at three complete sets of lams and seven riser blanks. The lams started out as resaws except for a couple of tapers left over from my last order with Kenny. The risers started out as 2x2 and cuts on planks. It took a lot of drum sanding to square all the riser blanks up and make all those lams come out the size i wanted them to. Basically, with final sanding of the fades I'm ready to lay up three bows! All three are close to the recipe for Slowpoke... one below, one identical, and one heavier. I'm now feeling really good, after being down over the setback of the exploding bow last week.