My bench begins with a 7' executive desk that is 42" deep. The desk is up on blocks since the orginal legs wouldn't support a third of the weight it has on it now.
24" deep shelves 6' long are held up with home made spacers made from 2X4s.
Painted my special shade of Candy Apple Flat Black.
I paid $60.00 US for the desk, getting it home would have been a problem but the used office furniture store delivered it for free.
There is all kinds of potential good deals for workbenchs out there just waiting to be had.Is that a halli sitting on the end of your desk?
If you want to get rid of all that obsolete stuff above your desk let me know.
This is just my packing, assembly and test area. It's also my workbench for trying out new things. But I have another desk for my computer workstation, and down in the garage a CNC machine for light metalwork duties, and another workbench with drill press, brake, etc.
Test equipment placement is not ideal, but it's better now than it was before where I had to take my project to another bench to do testing/powering up. Then back here to change values, then back there again, rinse and repeat. The small size of the Rigol scope is very nice, I can put it on the bench if I need to. But still keeping my old Tek 2465A as backup.
I put together a 7 shelf bin on wheels and I organize projects I'm working on, with each project having its own bin. So all parts, documents, boards related to that project is in one place. It used to be these projects were in boxes stacked on the floor but if I have to get to the bottom box, I have to move everything on top of it. Now that everything is on a shelf, it's more convenient, and I can roll the whole shelf elsewhere to access area behind it (another workbench that is not utlizied, just crap of stuff on top of it.)
I have a toaster oven, on top of my audio analyzer... also a TV + NTSC camera for SMD board inspection.
All my "hand tools" related to soldering are to my right (3 soldering irons, hot air gun, hakko desolder gun, solder paste dispenser + air compressor)... all sitting on top of a small fridge, to store my solder paste.
@ fivefish, really impressive lab. What are your krk ref monitors?
I had some 8 foot plywood boards that I used as shelves. The shelves sit on the book shelves. On the top shelve I zip tied a metal rod and to this I zipped tied a Costco LED light. I think the whole thing was less than $150 including the light.
I put my together my workbench starting with a Costco folding table and two Costco shelves used at the ends of the table at 90 degrees.
I had some 8 foot plywood boards that I used as shelves. The shelves sit on the book shelves. On the top shelve I zip tied a metal rod and to this I zipped tied a Costco LED light. I think the whole thing was less than $150 including the light.
2x12s could be used as shelves. No tools needed.
The only fasteners I used were zip ties, so very easy to take apart. The top shelf is on empty plastic boxes and I put lightweight stuff on it in case of earthquake.
Sorry for the mess, I am working on another project on the other side of the room
As I had to tidy up my desk a bit for a small batch of boards, I thought it would be the right time to take a picture of my relatively tidy desk...
As I had to tidy up my desk a bit for a small batch of boards, I thought it would be the right time to take a picture of my relatively tidy desk...
Due to serious lack of space (my entire electronics room is a mere 3.2 Metres x 1.6 Metres - About 10x5 feet in American money), I have to keep things as compact as possible. There's a further desk to the left for my PC and test area. On the right there's a desk with my SMD oven, a drill jig and circular saw for PCB cutting.
McBryce.
What kind of microscope is that? I have been thinking about a cheap stereo scope
That should be a Bresser 58-02520 http://it.rs-online.com/web/p/microscopi/7187337/
PIC Programmer: PICkit2
Oscilloscope: B&K precision 2540
USB Logic analyzer: USBee SX
PowerSupply: Old Computer ATX PSU, +5v 15amp, +12v 6amp, -12v 0.3 amp, -5v 0.3 amp
DMM: Some Cheap meter from lowes.
DMM: Some Cheap meter from radio-shack.
Soldering irons: Cheap ESD 15Watt, Cheap 30Wat, And a ECG 45watt De-soldering iron
Breadboard: about 5000 contacts
And a small collection of parts.
The bench is a bit of a mess.
The room is about 8feet by 10feet, and this room is my bed room, I sleep over-top of the work-bench.
I live in a single wide mobile home.
That should be a Bresser 58-02520 http://it.rs-online.com/web/p/microscopi/7187337/That is the Bresser Biorit ICD CS. Read the first line of the description.
Found a B&W image of my home lab about 1985-1986 or thirty_ish years ago.
Bernice