It is 4 from the back edge of the bench and about 8 from the left end of the workbench.
Spacing dog holes in workbench. The first hole to lay out is the one at the back left. For example if the vise s jaws can hold a board up to 6 1 2 secure any board up to that size between the jaws. The rule of thumb i heard is just more that half the travel of your vise dog. Drilling your dog holes with your inset line marked mark a nice big cross to indicate the center of each hole.
That way you ll be certain that regardless of the length of the material you re trying to hold in the dogs you ll be able to catch it. So i present my foolproof secret to. Ideally space the dog holes so you can secure a board of any width to the workbench ken so start by measuring your vise s capacity. They hate it when you do that.
So seeing as i just built a new workbench myself and had to ask myself this question i thought it was time to come up with something more definitive. Common sense says that the holes should be spaced from the vice in increments that are less than or equal to the maximum opening of the vice so that you can clamp any sized object without needing shims. The center to center spacing of your bench dog holes should be slightly less than the travel of your vise. Either way ditto that too many holes just ain t right in a benchtop.
I spaced mine 4 apart as that s basically the travel of my end vise. To prevent tearout on the backside clamp or screw a scrap of 2x4 underneath your dog hole line. That depends is usually the answer i give and that probably frustrates more than it helps. Don t anthropomorphize your handplanes.
This hole is positioned so that the tip of the holdfast reaches to the right so that it is just in front of your planing stop. Where do i put my dog holes. My dog hole days are over posted on april 8 2015 by jonathan since i seem to have broken just about all of the rules in building my workbench i plan on continuing that habit while drilling my dog holes.


