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Thread: What tools are in your drawers under your bench?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2008
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    MA
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    What tools are in your drawers under your bench?

    I keep my tools in drawers.

    Am building another bench - relatively small one. I plan for it to have drawers for tool storage.

    Which tools should I put there? (key chisels, marking tools, planes, and perhaps an oft used saw are my first thoughts).

    What is under your bench? Pictures would be outstanding. Especially if you keep planes in drawers, how do you arrange them?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
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    Columbus, OH
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    I built wall-hung clam shell tool cabinets to house all the small tools. I designed in places to put shallow (2") drawers to catch all the measurement tools and other delicate tools. I won't say how long ago that was but I have yet to get that done. Still want to though.
    Brian

    "Any intelligent fool can make things bigger or more complicated...it takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." - E.F. Schumacher

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
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    SE PA - Central Bucks County
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    My bench doesn't have drawers under it...only a shelf which is easy to clean. The only thing I keep on the shelf are things like small blocks of wood to use with my holdfasts, an extra air hose, etc. All my storage drawers for tools are literally three feet from the bench. My bench is also adjustable height (Noden Adjust-A-Bench) so that very important feature to me limits what kind of storage I would put under the bench anyway.
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
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    WNY
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    I use two benches \that face each other with about a 4 ft aisle between them. The one bench, which also serves as the off feed from my table saw, is a simple affair, a stout top with bench dog holes drilled in it, a bench vise is one corner, a metal working vise at the far, opposite corner, two drawers under the bench top, a shelf near the bottom, and a small cabinet with router bits under one end. The sides and back are covered with plywood to make the bench stable, and I hang various jigs on the back. That shelf holds most of my portable power tools, like, drills and drivers, routers, and sanders. I keep glue bottles and sandpaper on the shelf, too. The other bench is a Euro style bench with two banks of drawers underneath, as well as an open shelf. I keep my frequently used hand planes on that shelf for easy access. I keep less frequently used and specialty planes in the larger drawers, and squares, marking tools, etc. in the smaller upper drawers.







    John

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2022
    Location
    Northern Colorado
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    1,187
    I love drawers, I have several in my workbench and all over my shop in the form of Husky toolboxes. I loath most things hanging on the wall besides a few clamps and misc items...can't stand the clutter or the dust that collects. We're all different and that's ok, I just find drawers keeps things clean, organized, more efficient and flexible. Everything has an exact home thanks to my OCD . I also know where exactly everything is, so I'm not much of a label guy. Adam Savage and I vehemently disagree that "drawers are where things go to die" but I think he is slowly changing his tune

    Anyway, in the workbench drawers I keep shims, deck of cards, marking gauges, deadblow and wood hammer, small chisels for cleanup, block plane, attachments for my Woodpeckers story sticks, dogs, sanding blocks, cookies (not the kind you eat), painters pyramids, sanding blocks and other hand sanding bits and 20 bandy-clamps and some Kreg Automaxx clamps for the 1545 extrusion around my bench where I can clamp vertically/horizontally as needed while I work on something. Basically everything I use for layout and hardware installation with the exception of my smaller squares, pencils, tapes, etc. that all sit atop my Festool DC cart as that thing is mobile and always within arms reach. Everything is organized and nothing is completely packed so that I can adjust priorities from time to time.
    Last edited by Michael Burnside; 10-23-2023 at 10:57 AM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Millstone, NJ
    Posts
    1,668
    IMG_20200523_070831.jpg
    Top Left are my safety supplies, batteries etc
    top middle are my glueing/finishing supplies/Pyramids/bench cookies etc
    Top right are my chisels and mallet
    middle left is 18 gauge pneumatic and 18 gauge gas pin nailers and brads
    Middle middle is marking/layout(overflowing)
    Middle right are card scrapers and coping saw
    Bottom left is stapler and staples
    bottom middle is 16 and 23 gauge nailers
    Bottom right is all my planes.

    Above the drawers is a nice gap that holds shooting board/bench hook/PVC for glue ups/12- 12" parallel clamps

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
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    Over the years this has evolved. Items not used often have gotten moved farther and farther away. For fun I just went and looked. This sounds like a lot but only takes up a few shallow drawers:

    12' tape, 1-2-3 block, 4" setup bars, 6" rule, rule stops, calipers, marking knife and wheel gauges, bench dogs, bench stops, holddowns, hockey pucks (material elevators), paring chisel, 3 butt chisels, awl, putty knife, pencil, and a shop knife.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    NE OH
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    Here are my under bench drawers:

    DSC_0177.jpg

    Left side top to bottom:

    Rules and straightedges and other measuring tools
    Squares and marking tools
    Screwdrivers, awls, various pliers, knives, scissors
    Striking tools
    Various cordless drill drivers, bits and accessories

    Right side, top to bottom

    Measuring tapes, marking tools, pens/pencils and a bunch of misc stuff like magnifiers, etc.
    Chisels, scrapers, misc.
    Triangles, protractors (digital and regular) curves, circle guides, inside/outside radius gauges, dividers, calipers, etc.
    Machine setup tools: digital height and depth gauges, setup blocks, angle blocks, feeler gauges, etc.
    Planes, shaves, and the like. I'm mostly a power tool guy, so plane selection is pretty basic.

    On top of the drawer unit, I keep a bench brush and various dogs and hold-downs, and also use it for temp place to set tools I'm using to keep them off the bench top. And my assembly bench is a couple feet behind me when I'm working at the bench, so it's handy to set tools and parts to keep them off the bench.
    --I had my patience tested. I'm negative--

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
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    Columbus, OH
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    Quote Originally Posted by Paul F Franklin View Post
    Here are my under bench drawers:

    DSC_0177.jpg
    That's too pretty to be a real work bench Paul.
    Brian

    "Any intelligent fool can make things bigger or more complicated...it takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." - E.F. Schumacher

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
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    NE OH
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Tymchak View Post
    That's too pretty to be a real work bench Paul.
    LOL, that pic was shortly after I finished it...it's not so pretty now..
    --I had my patience tested. I'm negative--

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Perth, Australia
    Posts
    9,506


    Most of the bench drawers have a sliding tray which creates two layers. Marking tools and chisels. Here are a few drawers ... more than this will overwhelm ...



















    Regards from Perth

    Derek

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
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    Falls Church, VA
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    I used to have drawers and cupboards but I just trashed them. My current shop has almost no drawers or cupboards. Almost everything is visible on the wall, up in the floor trusses or on an open shelf. So far, it’s worked out much better for me.

  13. #13
    the germans I knew when apprenticed had a roll cabinet that sat beside their bench. It had drawers and tools and could support them on the bench or roll to other places either beside the work or extra support outfeed on a machine. Each one had a roll cabinet in their own shops in later years same as when they learned.

    My old ulmias have drawers (poorly made) and a support shelf below. Floor cabinets with drawers take up space that machines could occupy, like Roger I put stuff on the wall, you can see and grab it faster than any drawer and in a small space its more efficient to use space that was doing nothing.

    Ive thought about drawers below the ulmias rather than the one they came with, may happen in sometime but ill always use walls for storage.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Dec 2019
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    The old pueblo in el norte.
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    I have cabinets under my old bench. I skipped it on my new one. They saved space, but the work being held was almost always in the way of opening the drawer I needed. Now I work from a chest.
    ~mike

    happy in my mud hut

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Perth, Australia
    Posts
    9,506
    Quote Originally Posted by Warren Lake View Post
    the germans I knew when apprenticed had a roll cabinet that sat beside their bench. It had drawers and tools and could support them on the bench or roll to other places either beside the work or extra support outfeed on a machine. Each one had a roll cabinet in their own shops in later years same as when they learned.

    My old ulmias have drawers (poorly made) and a support shelf below. Floor cabinets with drawers take up space that machines could occupy, like Roger I put stuff on the wall, you can see and grab it faster than any drawer and in a small space its more efficient to use space that was doing nothing.

    Ive thought about drawers below the ulmias rather than the one they came with, may happen in sometime but ill always use walls for storage.
    Warren, I should mention that there is a write up of my underbench build on my website. The intention was to create a manual for drawer building and all these are fine furniture quality.

    Scan down this index page: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/index.html

    Full extension is achieved without mechanical slides.



    Regards from Perth

    Derek

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