Must Have Shop Items

   / Must Have Shop Items #1  

flyerdan

Veteran Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
1,724
Location
Salem, OR
Tractor
Hyster H50 Bobcat M700
Thought it might be interesting to see what everyone considers must have items for a shop to be useful. Of course some of us are far beyond the minimal requrements to get things done, I'll start off with what I'd consider minimum, and why it's necessary.

Power - You really need to have power available to run a drill or battery charger, much less any of the other necessities.

Air - If nothing else, just being able to air up a tire or blow off an piece of equipment, compressed air is a must. Depending on capacity, you'll soon have an abundance of cheap, but surprisingly good, air tools for all kinds of tasks.

Hydraulic press - You can pick up a press pretty reasonably, and can often snag one off craigslist that's perfectly fine. The ability to press a bearing on, or separate something that doesn't want to come apart will quickly pay for itself vs. lost time and taking it somewhere that can.

Fairly sturdy workbench - Can be temporary if need be, I was driving along and saw a stack of free house doors on the curb. Loaded them up and stripped the hardware, they make a great extra table on some sawhorses for laying out bigger projects, and if you need to nail on some stops for fixtureing it won't hurt as much as defiling your main bench.

Vise - Sooner or later you'll run out of hands, or need to bend or squeeze something. Plus, the vise won't curse if you hit it with a hammer.

Tools - End wrenches, sockets, pliers and screwdrivers for what you mostly work on, of course. Drill bits, tap and die sets, torx drives are just about must haves anymore. A universal puller, they will do most of what needs pulled, and HF has one that isn't that expensive.

Assortments - These are absolutely wonderful. Nothing irks me more than not having some simple thing to finish up a project due to loss or breakage. Grease fitting, snap rings, woodruff keys, automotive fuses, roll pins, O-rings,there is a kit for it. Some extra hardware, like nuts, bolts and washers.

There's probably more; what motivated me to do this thread was all the posts where people ask how to do something; we all approach the answer from what we have to work with. There is working in the dirt with a bent screwdriver and broken pair of pliers to having a 3 phase Bridgeport and multiple two post lifts, most of us fall somewhere in the middle. What do you consider mus have items?
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #2  
I think you covered 95% of the basics, Dan. Good list.
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #3  
A torch, welder, & other metal working stuff.

Also some woodworking tools.
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #4  
The older I get the more the list changes. I'm not quite to AC yet but it crosses my mind. :)
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #5  
Good lighting....you have to be able to see what you are working on. It makes the whole shop thing more enjoyable too.
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #6  
The older I get the more the list changes. I'm not quite to AC yet but it crosses my mind. :)

Ya, that is must these days:)
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #7  
A couple of good hammers of assorted sizes. :laughing:
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #8  
Aside from all the usual stuff, I stumbled onto one very useful shop item- a wheeled, hydraulic lift table that is infinitely adjustable, height wise, with its foot pump. Things that I've used it for so far:

Back your pickup up to the garage, slide your load onto the table, set at tailgate height, and roll the load over to wherever you want to work on it.

Use the table as an extended work support, setting its height to match the main table you are working on. For example, supporting a long piece steel at the height of your chop saw. If the main table is higher than the max height of the hydraulic table, use some 4x4 as shims.

Set the height of the table so that your workpiece on it is at a comfortable working height.

As above, but set a heavy vise on the table to clamp the workpiece. I've done this for holding a piece to be welded at a comfortable height. The vise can be set on the table without bolting it down if it's heavy and there's not much side force involved.

Plus, it's a handy surface on rollers, even if you don't need the lift.

This looks similar to the one I bought from a roving semi truck tool show. Mine leaks down eventually but the frame can be blocked at a certain height with the proper length of wood:

5 lbs. Capacity Hydraulic Table Cart
 
   / Must Have Shop Items #9  
Hand cleaner and rags.
 
   / Must Have Shop Items
  • Thread Starter
#10  
All good ideas, I've got the ball-pein set, the soft face set, rubber mallets as well as claw and drilling hammers. And the sledge for when nothing but a bfh will do. With the advent of cheap led shop lights, you can easily have good lighting now, and they start right up in the cold. While not necessary, I have a parts washer and a drill press, both are nice to have.
Metal cutting band saw and the 12" disc sander are great metalworking items to have. The hydraulic service cart would be nice; I've got the forklift with the extended forks made from 4x8 I-beams which works fairly well for a table extenuation or raising something to a more comfortable work height.
Some adjustable stands are the only way to go if you routinely build 50+ foot stuff on a 20 foot table.
51footcant.jpg
 

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