Black and Decker WM536 Dual Height Workmate
3594 ratings
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Price: £58.95
Brand: Black and Decker
Description: Features & Benefits: ● Dual working heights allows use as a workbench, bench tool stand, vice, or sawhorse ● Durable steel construction ● Folds flat for compact storage and easy transport ● Dual clamping cranks increase clamping force and versatility ● Adjustable swivel pegs and jaw retention grooves provide clamping versatility and reliable material hold ● Designed for easy set-up and clean-up ● Rubber feet are anti-slip Specifications: Working heights: 775 /595 mm Folded size (W x H x D): 610 x 740 x 195 mm Vice jaw opening: 0-136 mm Vice jaw length: 610 mm Max table width - Jaws open: 384 mm Vice jaw positions: 1 Maximum load: 250 kg Vice jaw material: Particle board. Black and Decker WM536 Dual Height Workmate - shop the best deal online on diy-compared.co.uk
Category: Diy
Merchant: My Tool Shed
Product ID: 298344
Delivery cost: 7.95
EAN: 5011402100170
RRP: 98.99
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Author: Robin B
Rating: 5
Review: Although the instructions are a little complicated, this is a fairly easy item to put together. It's sturdy enough for what I want to use it for and actually more useful than I initally thought it would be. Certainly a workbench to consider especially if you're, like me, getting back to DIY this is very useful.
Author: R. J. Farrer
Rating: 4
Review: I had a wonderful old light alloy ‘dual height professional’ for 40 years but it became harder and harder to buy spares, so I ditched it and bought this smaller and cheaper bench. It arrived with the metal parts fully assembled but the wooden work top and ‘jaws’ must be added by the purchaser. Mr.Hayes’s excellent ‘one star’ review describes the irritation of trying to follow the truly insane assembly pictures. There is no text, just a series of exploded diagrams, some refer to numbered parts, in other pictures the components are given letters. The parts themselves carry neither letters nor numbers. I threw the instructions away (as advised by four reviewers) and looked online for helpful videos. There is one in English and it is sufficiently clear to finish the job by imitating each step. Once assembled it works fine and seems well made. With a small amount of grease the bench can be put up and lowered more easily. But, as Mr.Haynes says, why can’t it arrive fully assembled, as the old workmates used to be?