The $110 Workbench

Jay Bates builds a solid and dead-flat workbench out of 2x10s.

1 MIN READ

Using nothing but 2×10 southern yellow pine, Jay Bates built a traditional workbench – at a cost of about $110. He mills the stock using a table saw, a thickness planer, and a jointer. For the top, he aligns the pieces using a domino and floating tenons (a biscuit joiner would also work). Legs lock into the top via through-tenons and wedges, which he trims after assembly. Once everything is put together, he uses a hand plane to fine-tune the top. He adds vices to the bench in this video.

This isn’t a high-end bench by any means. If you’re interested in building a more heirloom-quality piece, check out Samurai Carpenter’s workbench build here. He uses maple, walnut, Garry oak (Oregon white oak), and red oak – and traditional joinery cut with power and hand tools.

About the Author

Chris Ermides

Before joining Tools of the Trade as an editor, Chris Ermides was a project manager for a custom home builder, a carpenter and remodeler. These days when he’s not writing or editing, he’s testing tools as he renovates his 1850 farmhouse in upstate New York.

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