Need Any Helpful Hints/Tips For Reloading Bench

Dad's work is never done! LOL
I'm going to be building a new reloading bench for
one of my sons (probably only supervising a lot!) and
I was wondering if anyone had any pointers that they
have discovered/found helpful when they built theirs.
I built mine about twenty five years ago but don't use
it any longer - it's become a great gear shelf for other
ongoing projects that never seem to get completely
done.
The compartmentalized shelving behind the bench I saw
on a thread on the Reloading Forum looked like a winner.
I just have one shelf and that was always overflowing with
manuals and junk.
Any helpful tips/hints/photos would be appreciated.
... on the thread or send to:
silver_(<-- underscore)cld@yahoo.com
0
-
It seems that everyone is posting on the General side so I'll be different and post here. These are pictures from others that I've known and found online. Do a search online for "pictures of reloading rooms" and you'll find a thread that has something like 18 pages of pictures and comments on another forum. 



0 -
All of those benches are making my mouth water! They are nice.
I uses a kennedy reloading bench with the butcher block top. I have the presses permentally mounted to the bench. I mounted my powder measures, case trimmer, and scale to pieces of 1/2 inch wood that I can C clamp to the edge of the bench to save space. Anything with lots and lots of storage and drawers and shelves are always a great idea. Maybe integrate a small hazmat steel cabinet to store your powder in?0 -
I'll be needing the same thing zipper so I'm subscribing to this topic. I've moved around alot in the last five years and had a variety of work areas so been taking notes the last year or so to narrow down efficiency/convenience to construct what I hope to be the last one. Also if you discover a great alternative outside the forum here could you e-mail me about the details? 
"Yeah but will it hold up in court?" TLR0
Please sign in to leave a comment.
Comments
3 comments